The U.S. economy contracted in Q1 2025. GDP declined, and headlines warned of economic slowdown. Yet business lending remained robust. Enova reported steady originations, Square and Wayflyer continued strong output, and PayPal's SMB funding arms showed resilience. Why did small business financing remain strong despite macroeconomic headwinds? The answer reveals something important about how entrepreneurs think.
The GDP Contraction: What Actually Happened
U.S. GDP contracted in Q1 2025, marking a pullback from broader economic growth. This is the kind of news that typically triggers caution. Traditionally, when the broader economy slows, business lending slows with it. That's the historical pattern.
But that's not what happened in 2025. Despite the contraction, small business borrowing remained strong. This disconnect is worth understanding because it tells us that small business owners have a different worldview than macro-economists.
Why Small Business Lending Stayed Strong
Several factors explain the resilience:
- Financing is defensive: When the economy slows, businesses need working capital more, not less. Cash flow becomes critical. Short-term funding helps bridge uncertain periods.
- Growth is opportunistic: Slower economies create opportunities. Stronger businesses can acquire competitors, gain market share, and expand. This requires capital.
- Business is structural: Most business financing isn't discretionary. It's operationally necessary. You need to pay payroll, restock inventory, replace equipment. These needs don't disappear in downturns.
- Optimism persists: Despite macro slowdown, individual business owners remain optimistic about their own prospects. This localized optimism drives financing demand.
Consumer Spending: The Real Story
Despite macro slowdown, consumer spending remained resilient. Even with tariff concerns and inflation worries, Americans kept spending. For business-to-consumer companies, this meant steady revenue, which translated to continued financing demand. Companies with strong sales have no reason to postpone growth investments.
The nuance is important: consumer spending strength doesn't eliminate recession risk, but it does explain why SMB financing remained solid. Businesses with steady sales have less financial stress and more appetite for growth capital.
Tariff Concerns: Financial Hedging
2025 brought tariff uncertainty. Businesses worried about future import costs saw an incentive to inventory ahead, purchase equipment before potential tariff increases, or stockpile key inputs. This created genuine financing needs beyond pure growth ambitions. Working capital was often financing a defensive strategy against future economic uncertainty.
CFPB Enforcement Halt: Regulatory Relief
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) halted enforcement of the Small Business Lending Rule (CFPB 1071) in 2025. This regulatory relief removed compliance uncertainty for lenders and likely encouraged more aggressive lending, knowing they weren't facing imminent new reporting requirements.
For borrowers, this meant lenders remained in the market and were willing to fund. Without regulatory headwinds, market conditions for financing remained favorable despite broader economic slowdown.
During economic slowdowns, businesses with strong fundamentals often face less competition for capital. Weaker competitors may pull back from borrowing, reducing your competition for the best lending terms and fastest approvals.
Lender Positioning: Doubling Down
Major lenders didn't retreat during Q1's contraction. LendingClub purchased its headquarters—a clear signal of confidence in market demand. Ready Capital continued originating SBA loans at strong volumes. These moves signal that lenders believed SMB lending would remain resilient even if broader economic growth slowed.
What This Really Means for You
The Q1 2025 experience—contraction but resilient SMB lending—teaches several lessons:
- Financing tracks business need, not GDP: Your business financing decision should be based on your operational needs and growth opportunities, not macro headlines.
- Downturns create opportunities: Slower growth environment doesn't mean you shouldn't invest. It means you should invest strategically to capture market share.
- Lender appetite remains: As of early 2025, lenders remained actively willing to fund businesses with solid fundamentals.
- Working capital matters more in uncertainty: During uncertain times, access to flexible capital (lines of credit, working capital loans) becomes more valuable.
The Bottom Line
Macro contraction and strong SMB lending aren't contradictory. They reflect the reality that small business financing is driven by operational necessity and local opportunity, not just national economic conditions. If you're considering financing, the Q1 2025 data shows that lenders remain willing to fund businesses with solid fundamentals, even when broader economic growth slows.
The key is having clear use case for the capital. Lenders were willing to fund working capital needs, inventory builds, and growth investments in 2025. Frivolous borrowing would face resistance, but strategic financing remained available.