CAPITAL ADVANCE

This is a search result page



What Recovery? Small Businesses are Still Suffering

August 23, 2011
Article by:

Experts claim the economy is getting better, but average Americans have yet to claim the same. According to the March Discover Small Business Watch Survey, 54% of small business owners said the U.S. economy is getting worse. The sentiment seems to fly in the face of the stock market’s surge forward, as well as a declining unemployment rate. As of the latest March jobs report, unemployment ticked an inch downward to 8.8%. Sadly, the official unemployment rate does not count individuals that have been unemployed for an extended period of time or have given up looking for work altogether, traits that characterize many of the ACTUAL unemployed in this country. (Find out who the labor force consists of)

The unemployment rating system loses accuracy in prolonged recessions and therefore 8.8% is not valid, nor worth comparing to previous months. In an Interview with Reuters, Bill Cheney, the Chief Economist at John Hancock Financial Services stated, “It is always possible that as the job market improves, people will start looking again and the unemployment rate could go up.” That being said, the one true measure of the economy is the voice of the people.

As a member of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the Merchant Cash Advance Resource is constantly tuned in to the issues of small business owners. And guess what? We’re not hearing much positive feedback there either. The lending and capital markets continue to be a pressing factor, but federal, state, and local government regulations are stymieing innovation and expansion as well. From the Chamber, “With increasing uncertainty and government barriers threatening America’s economic recovery–Congressional leaders are reaching out to business owners to hear what is hindering their growth and what can be done to remove barriers.” (Watch the videos and interviews here)

In the face of discouraging news, access to capital is slowly making a comeback but not from the banks. Alternative financial firms providing a product known as a Merchant Cash Advance will buy your future credit card sale receivables in exchange for a big chunk of cash today. Different from a loan and becoming widely accepted, businesses all over the country are taking advantage of the most innovative form of financing available. In a true level playing field, ‘mom and pop’ shops are just as eligible as the major franchises to receive up to $250,000.

Next month, the experts could claim an unemployment rate of 0%. So long as the statistics fail to reflect reality, it becomes more frustrating for Americans who continue to live through a recession that never actually ended. High unemployment, scarce capital, and job killing regulations still plague commerce. We’re not experts ourselves, but if 54% of business owners testify that things are getting worse, they probably are. With the Dow at a 52 week high, now is a great time to sell…

– The Merchant Cash Advance Resource

www.merchantcashadvanceresource.com

Credit Card for Business Owners? Forget it!

August 23, 2011
Article by:

Posted on April 4, 2011 at 9:59 PM

“Anyone that owns a small business is automatically declined,” revealed an inside source at a major credit card issuing bank. A friend of ours that we’ll call Dave (name changed), is an underwriter in charge of approving credit card applications. We were discussing tighter credit standards for consumers, an issue we felt to be of little relevance to business credit, until it got interesting.

According to Dave, and the bank doesn’t make this information public, small business owners and the self-employed are issued automatic declines for cards. “Just to get a simple credit card?”, we asked. Dave explained that their data indicates consumers are less risky than the self-employed. We dug deeper and were told his:

  • Employed consumers are more likely to have a fixed budget and steady income.
  • Business owners experience continuous ups and downs. During a down, they are more likely to supply their employees with their steady paychecks and skip out on the credit card payment until cash flow improves. If they did it the other way around, they would lose their employees and the business wouldn’t last.
  • Employed consumers are better equipped to prove their income since they have verifiable documents such as W-2s or paystubs.
  • Business owners are less able to verify their income, more likely to show losses on their tax returns, and less willing disclose their true financial status. Though this may serve them well come tax time, it works against them on credit applications.

But that shouldn’t discourage small business owners from applying. Dave concedes they’ll consider extending credit to businesses open longer than 20 years so long as the applicant has above 720 credit. Ouch!

The Ugly Face of Business Credit Cards

So if you don’t make the cut, or even if you do, credit cards aren’t so attractive these days anyway. The Credit Card Act of 2009 made major changes for consumers but NONE for businesses. In an article by creditcards.com, titled “10 ways business credit cards are different“, is a list of many dangers to look out for. If you’re a business owner, these are the pitfalls:

  • A teaser rate can be as short as 6 months, 3 months, or even 1 day. That attractive 2% rate can be increased on a whim as soon as you sign up or start using the card.
  • There is no minimum amount of time to notify you of a payment due. Consumers are required to receive their bill at least 21 days in advance of the payment due date. For business owners, you might not get the bill until the day before!
  • Your due date can change every month. Don’t get too comfortable paying on the 30th every month, your card company can switch it up to throw you off and entrap you with late fees.
  • There are no late fee penalty limits.
  • Payments are applied to the balance with the lowest interest rate first, instead of to the highest interest rate like consumer cards.
  • The business owners are usually personally liable for the business card’s debt.

What’s the Alternative?

It’s bad news galore but there’s light at the end of the tunnel. A unique financial product known as a Merchant Cash Advance (MCA) offers all the positive features of a credit card and spits out the negative. Any business that accepts credit/debit card payments from their customers is eligible. Different than a loan, a MCA provider purchases the future card revenues of the business in exchange for a lump sum of cash today. The benefits and differences are truly astounding.

  • Good credit is not necessary.
  • Funds can be received in under a week. (You can barely get a credit card that quick)
  • A business can qualify with as little as 3 months in business.
  • The “rate” or the cost of the funds can’t change. Once the cost of funds has been established and executed, it remains the same. The balance does not increase with time nor is there any element of interest.
  • Because the balance is only reduced by withholding a percentage of card sales, less funds are withheld in slow periods, and more in strong periods. This tackles the issue of business ups and downs.
  • There are usually no personal guarantees.
  • Additional funds can be made available before the balance has been reduced to zero.
  • Personal income does not need to be verified, just the monthly credit/debit card sales volume.
  • Your credit can’t be negatively affected since it is not a loan.

Becoming a First Choice Option

A Merchant Cash Advance is not a last resort method of financing and is quickly becoming a first choice pick in the business world. Certainly better than business credit cards, they also rank better than SBA Loans. [SBA Loan vs. Merchant Cash Advance]

Before you fill out that credit card application, just remember what our friend Dave said. “You’re automatically declined.” Say goodbye to the card issuing naysayers and SBA Loan ploys. The lending system is too far broken to be aggravated about it anymore. If your business needs capital, you can simply sell your future card sales in exchange for cash today. Check out the true direct funding sources in our directory and walk away with flexible financing your business can depend on.

– The Merchant Cash Advance Resource

www.merchantcashadvanceresource.com

Banks Still Not Lending But Don’t Take Our Word For it

August 23, 2011
Article by:

Originally published 4/21/11

We’ve preached that banks aren’t lending and we feel confident in that assessment.  This was today’s news headline:

According to Fortune, the four largest banks have reduced their loan balances by $210 Billion over the past year. Now about three years out from the height of the financial crisis, capital is becoming harder to access, not easier. “That’s partly because banks must put the worst mistakes of the bubble era in the rearview mirror, by taking losses on bad loans and letting other low-quality portfolios run off. Both those moves lead to lower loans outstanding.” With no tolerance for anything but the highest quality borrowers, business owners have few places to turn.


Now just might be the time to look into a Merchant Cash Advance...

– The Merchant Cash Advance Resource

www.merchantcashadvanceresource.com

Two Additional Direct Funders Added

August 23, 2011
Article by:

Two direct providers of Merchant Cash Advance have been added to the directory. They are:

  • Empire Merchant Advance
  • Genesis Capital Enterprises


That brings the total to 29.

Bank Loan Advertisements are nothing but a bait and switch

August 23, 2011
Article by:

We stay in touch with many people in the financial industry, and not just Merchant Cash Advance. Back in late March we learned that lending was so tight, that credit cards were barely attainable. That was when the unemployment rate was 8.8% and as of May 2011, it’s back up to 9.1%. That was when the economy was expected to grow by 2.9% in 2011 but is now on pace for 2.7%. The point? If it was impossible to get a loan back in March, then how much worse could it get?

An insider shares it can get worse, much worse. Our friend Tim (name changed) is the manager of the small business lending unit of a major national bank. Any loan less than $1 Million dollars is considered to be for small business. Tim’s unit is on track to do more loans this year than last year and none of them are going to retail stores or restaurants. Did we hear that right?

“Retail stores and restaurants are too flakey to give money to.” That wasn’t just his opinion either because that’s actually part of the bank’s underwriting policy. They are completely prohibited from lending to those business types. So we had to ask…

What if they had 25 years in business? Declined.

What if the guarantors had 800 credit? Declined.

What if they had $5 Million in cash reserves in the bank? Declined.

What if…? Declined. Declined. Declined.

There is no criteria that would make them eligible, period. Tim admits that the interest charged on a loan is not profitable by itself anyway so to take any degree of default risk even if it’s small, is not worth it. Instead, they rely on their loan clients to open a business checking account with them, use their merchant processing, and sign up for other services on which they can charge fees and earn income. Their unit has an average turnover time of 3 months from the time the application is submitted to the time the loan is funded.

“We usually get a jump on setting them up with all our services right when they apply for the loan, so we can start earning on them right away,” Tim said. We wondered why they wouldn’t let restaurants and retail stores apply then. “Oh we let them apply for loans… we just don’t tell them they’re declined until after we’ve locked them into other fee generating services. They’re unlikely to pack up and change banks after that so it works out for us.”

There’s a term for this tactic and it’s called a ‘bait and switch.’ There really seem to be no loans for the businesses that need them, an assertion bolstered by the Small Business Administration’s 2011 1st Quarter report. Lending to small businesses has fallen by $15 Billion.

So where’s the money?

There are still alternative sources available, but we’ve yet to find anything that rivals the speed and flexibility of a Merchant Cash Advance (MCA). Too many small businesses hold out the hope that a bank will help them and pass up the opportunity to obtain alternative financing like a MCA. But how many missed opportunities will it take until it’s too late? How many businesses will sign up for checking accounts and expensive merchant processing, only to find out that no loan is coming and all they’ve acquired is an expensive long term contract for no value in exchange.

If you’re a restaurant or retail store, you can research our directory of verified funding providers HERE. Don’t wait for the bank to approve a loan they’re not allowed to approve and instead get what’s most important, the capital to grow.

– The Merchant Cash Advance Resource

http://www.merchantcashadvanceresource.com

True Interest Free Loans

July 19, 2011
Article by:

We thought we’d heard it all: Free credit card machines, free POS systems, and now there’s even FREE money. According to their recent press release, Merchant Money in Spring, TX is now offering a 90 day INTEREST FREE loan to businesses that switch to their processing service. The catch? the loan is capped at 15% of their average monthly processing volume with a maximum loan of $5,000.

That means a business processing $10,000 on average can get a $1,500 loan just for changing their merchant account. That’s not that impressive and neither is the rest of the fine print, which includes the following:

  • Minimum FICO score of 650
  • Minimum 2 years in business
  • Minimum $3,500 a month

$10,000 is enough to qualify for $12,000 to $15,000 on a Merchant Cash Advance. Though a Merchant Cash Advance is not free, it does allow the business owner to obtain enough capital to do something worthwhile. Not too mention there is no fixed timeframe for repayment.

So what is 15% of volume for a 90 day fixed term? Chump change. Maybe an interest free loan will make for good public relations but we think once their goodwill campaign starts facing defaults and losses, they’ll change their tune. Nothing spells disaster like an “interest free loan”. We wish them the best of luck.

Their site: http://www.interestfreebusinessloan.com

 

– The Merchant Cash Advance Resource

http://www.merchantcashadvanceresource.com

The Most Sincere Form of Flattery – MCA Forums News

April 17, 2011
Article by:

On April 16th, 2011, the MCA Forums announced their plan to expand content beyond the realm of a simple discussion board. Traditionally a place for Merchant Cash Advance industry insiders to converse, it seems the site will be adding “resources.” It’s an interesting word of choice considering there’s already a Merchant Cash Advance Resource, and that’s us. Perhaps they are trying to capitalize on our success since there is no shortage of that word in their public statement. As seen here:

“We would like to thank you for making MCA Forums the largest online community for your Merchant Cash Advance Resources & Merchant Cash Advance Networking! We’d love to hear your feedback. MCA Forums will be adding more valuable content, resources, and upgrades to the MCA Forums over the course of the next few months. Some key items we’d like your feedback on:

  • Your ideas and resources you’d like to see on MCA Forums
  • Contribute articles and resourceful information our readers would find of value in exchange for FREE backlinks and promotions to your services”

They say imitation is the most sincere form of flattery and we’re happy to see them expand their somewhat popular site. Spreading the word about Merchant Cash Advance, sharing perspective, and providing the most accurate information is key to mainstream acceptance of this financial product. The MCA Forums success should benefit the industry as whole.

Similar to us, but yet strikingly different in the sense that they are revenue driven, whereas we have stuck by our mantra of Free Unbiased Resources. There is a cost to advertise on the MCA Forums. While it’s true, there are a few google banners on our site to cover the cost of web hosting, we remain committed to our independent outlook. It has served us well. Founded more than two years after the Forums, the Merchant Cash Advance Resource ranks better with visitors according to Alexa.

Comparatively, our readers peruse through 6x more pages on each visit, spend more time per page, and are twice as likely to navigate the site beyond the initial page they accessed. With our thousands of visits every month, funding providers, ISOs, and lead sources mentioned throughout our site benefit from click-throughs on a daily basis. we enjoy doing this at no cost to any of the parties involved.

The Merchant Cash Advance Resource is a member of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, has authored over 100 industry relevant articles, and is proud to provide the public with unbiased information. Other sites may try, but there is only one place to get your “resources,” and that’s here. Thanks for reading!

– The Merchant Cash Advance Resource

www.merchantcashadvanceresource.com

Financing Business Startups: What ISOs Should Know

December 22, 2010
Article by:

This is the exact title of an article published in December’s issue of The Green Sheet. It informs the merchant processing industry that businesses have several financing options available to them and wait for it…. wait for it….. it talks all about bank loans. Thank you Green Sheet for neglecting to state the most feasible, obvious solution for both businesses and merchant processing reps, Merchant Cash Advance (MCA).

The author advises that ISOs should partner up with bankers to help their merchants obtain loans and then contradicts his argument by saying that partnering up with banks is a far fetched idea that isn’t likely to work. An excerpt: “One of the best contacts you can cultivate as an ISO or MLS is a local lender who specializes in Small Business Administration financing. Generally, this will be a “community bank,” typically a small, local financial institution. A small business will almost always start at a community bank and only graduate to a larger bank because it needs a line of credit that is bigger than the bank’s legal lending limit. But even a community bank SBA officer may not be able to make a loan happen…”

So what is a processing rep to do? The article reads; “Find one that does these loans – and does them well. The bank has to “sell” loans to the nearest SBA district office, and banks get a semi-permanent reputation there for either understanding or not understanding credit risk. Required documents include a written document stating the reason for the loan request, history of the business, lease agreements, percentage ownership breakdown, estimated profits and cash flows, and projected opening day balance sheet. An existing small business applying for an SBA loan needs to include three years’ financials, aging of accounts receivable and accounts payable, and debt schedules. Keep in mind that most small businesses do not want to pay taxes, so they minimize profit – not good when you are applying for a loan. For the same reason, they will not have audited financials.”

That can be summarized as “Go find someone who can help and helps you well.” Not very informative, nor does the rest of the paragraph inspire any confidence in being able help solidify financing for your merchant.

The Green Sheet is very familiar with the MCA Industry. Therefore the idea that MCA would be left out of a small business funding discussion for processing reps was hopefully an intentional omission. The article seems to be one overextended segue to promote “The Receivables Exchange,” a live online marketplace for Accounts Receivable factoring. Not that we have anything against it, but if the article is going to be titled What ISOs Should Know, then they Should Know that MCA is the the easiest, fastest, and most flexible financing product you can offer to a merchant.

A relationship with a community bank is great but if you can’t leverage that relationship to actually get your client the capital, you’re not adding any value. A MCA carries no fixed payment terms or collateral. The underwriting process is quick and credit is not a major factor.

You may now think that our long winded bashing of The Green Sheet article was just a segue to promote the Merchant Cash Advance industry. Ironically you’re right, but then again if you’re in the merchant processing industry and need to know about financing young businesses, then MCA is What ISOs Should Know.

AltFinanceDaily

../../