The most compelling reasons that financial institutions use participation loans are as follows: • Selling loan participations allows the lead bank to originate an exceptionally large loan that would otherwise be too large for it to handle by itself. By engaging other banks as participants, the lead bank can remain within its own legal lending limits and still come up with sufficient cash for funding. • Banks that buy loan participations share in the profits of the lead bank. If a lending institution isn't doing much business on its own, or is in a slow market, it can team up with a profitable "lead bank" in a healthier market to generate more lending income. • Buying participation loans is a way for banks to diversify their
assets. By investing a variety of loans in different locales, they reduce their
risk and exposure to potential losses if a calamity, such as a natural disaster or severe
economic depression, were to strike their particular community. • Selling loan participations allows a bank to reduce its
credit risk to a customer or specific community that entails greater than average risk. • Selling participation loans allows the lead bank to keep control of more of an important customer relationship or even an entire customer relationship of large customers of the bank, instead of sharing the relationship with other competing banks. == See also ==