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National Funding Deploys $1.5B, Beefs up Automated Underwriting

July 26, 2016

California-based small business lender National Funding said that it has deployed $1.5 billion in capital, funding small businesses with short-term working capital loans. 

The 17-year-old company funded $152 million in loans in the half of 2016, up 45 percent from the same period last year. The company’s customers include general contractors, medical services and trucking companies that average about $1 million in sales annually.

While 80 percent of the loans are for working capital, the company has seen demand for equipment leasing slowly resurge after the financial crisis. “After 2008, the market turned negative in LA and we had to shrink our company,” said CEO Dave Gilbert.

The company is also preparing for a technology overhaul, trying to get access to data pools to automate underwriting. “We need to be tech driven,” he said. “As deals get smaller, we need to automate them to make it affordable.”

National Funding generates 25 percent of its loan volume through brokers. “Given everything that’s happening in the industry, a lot of lenders will be forced to become balance sheet lenders,” he said.

The company hired Geoff Howard from Intuit to lead its technology efforts and aims to automate underwriting for 40 percent of its deals, doubling up from its present rate of 20 percent.

The average size of its loans is $50,000 and the company also plans to launch its first long-term loan product later this year.

Direct Mail Still Very Effective, Says National Funding President Torrie Inouye

April 16, 2016
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Torrie Inouye National FundingWhen I met with San Diego-based National Funding President Torrie Inouye at Lendit, I was surprised to learn that the company had quietly funded $293 million to small businesses in 2015, enough to earn them a spot on AltFinanceDaily’s top 10 alternative business funder list. The company isn’t new. They were founded in 1999, which puts them in the same category as CAN Capital, a 90s era relic that has not only survived but has continued to evolve and quite literally be a leader of the pack.

Inouye graduated from Stanford University in 2001 with a BA in Economics and started at National in 2004 where she worked as a Corporate Strategy Analyst. After 3 and a half years, she went on to play key roles at Union Bank and Intuit before returning back to National in the Fall of 2014. With a strong background in data analytics, Inouye took over as the company’s president just last week. Dave Gilbert, the company’s founder, has been the CEO since the beginning.

“Dave has always understood that data is valuable,” Inouye said, adding that she had been tasked with harvesting it.

“One of the trends that we’re seeing in our data is our direct mail response rates being much higher than what other people might expect,” she said. “We’re still surprising really good at direct mail.”

Others within the alternative lending space have made similar assertions, which ironically kind of undermines the concept of online lending itself. For Inouye, she says the online part is “the product.”

“You can control the message and you can control who you’re talking to with direct mail,” she explained. Though in a way the offline tactic is driving people to engage online. “A lot of our direct mail response comes through our website,” she said.



An expanded version of our interview will appear in AltFinanceDaily’s May/June 2016 edition scheduled to come out in early June. Subscribe FREE here.

National Business Capital & Services Expands into Cannabis Funding with CannaBusiness Financing Solution

October 15, 2019
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Cannabis BillboardToday National Business Capital & Services (NBC&S) announced it has begun serving cannabis companies. Through its new program, CannaBusiness Financing Solution, NBC&S is now accepting applications for loans starting at a minimum of $10,000 from firms in the industry that are over one year old.

“The CannaBusiness Financial Solution will allow business owners to seamlessly obtain the capital they need, and allocate funding toward either hiring new employees, purchasing inventory, marketing strategies, or any other business need right away, without government regulations hindering growth opportunities or having to give up equity,” explained NBC&S President Joseph Camberato. “We’re not a bank and the lenders we work with aren’t banks either, so it falls into a different area of commercial lending.”

CannaBusiness is available in the 33 states where cannabis is legal, be it for medicinal or recreational uses, as well as in Canada.

“WE’RE NOT A BANK AND THE LENDERS WE WORK WITH AREN’T BANKS EITHER, SO IT FALLS INTO A DIFFERENT AREA OF COMMERCIAL LENDING”

“It’s a rapidly growing space, no pun intended,” joked Camberato when asked about the differences in funding cannabis companies compared to the industries NBC&S has served in its 12 years of business. “It would still be underwritten, just like one of our normal businesses. But we’re definitely going to want to know a little bit more about the business and understand what exactly they’re doing, how they’re operating, and exactly what are they’re focused on.” They’ll also examine if the business is in compliance with state laws. Qualifying cannabis companies must be in business for at least 1 year, with a minimum of $10K in monthly revenue. There is no minimum FICO score requirement.

Marijuana Dispensary SignWhile it’s not the first funder for cannabis companies, NBC&S views the move as a step in the right direction to “get ahead of the curve” according to Camberato. “We’re living through a modern-day prohibition, I think in 20 years we’ll look back on it and talk about it with our grandchildren and be like, ‘wow’ … I don’t think people realize how big of a deal this really is, but it is a business and it is another industry that has bloomed in front of us, again no pun intended. I think it’s fascinating that we get to witness this and that we’re really at the forefront of it and helping folks get the funds they need to grow.”

Jumping off from the politically charged word of ‘prohibition,’ NBC&S’ Vice President of Marketing, T.J. Muro, noted that he believed cannabis legislation to be one of the few issues that can be bipartisan, saying, “Out of everything today in our political climate, I think it’s the one thing that has unified people in the political parties. The liberal side appreciates the cultural influence and significance there, and then on the more conservative side it’s the tax revenue.”

The upcoming Senate vote on the SAFE Banking Act will put this theory to the test. The bill, which would allow the cannabis industry wider access to banking, has already passed the House.

Funding Circle UK Now Simpler, Leaner After Selling US Arm

September 5, 2024
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Funding Circle published its first financial statements since divesting its US business. The international small business lender’s primary market had always been the UK. In its latest shareholder presentation, Funding Circle explained that 92% of its income comes from fees.

Specifically:
53% transaction fees
27% servicing fees
12% drawdown fees

Overall, the company’s financial picture was pretty good for the first half, generating £79.9M in revenue and a small profit (before tax). The company should be well on its way to continued profitability given its plan to reduce headcount by 120 while focusing more on management layers and productivity, a plan which includes generative AI tools. One slide explains that it is now a “simpler, leaner and profitable business.”

Funding Circle pioneered peer-to-peer lending in the small business finance market. iBusiness Funding, a subsidiary of Ready Capital is the company that acquired its US business.

“Something’s Happened” – How a funding platform weathered a shocking crisis and is flourishing

June 21, 2024
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frankfurt germany“[The CEO] called me just before seven in the morning…but [he] would never call me at that hour, so I picked up the phone and he goes ‘Paul, something’s happened, it’s very serious.’ and I’ll never forget, he says ‘you need to take care of our company.'”

That’s how Paul Vega, Senior Operations Manager at Funders App, retold the story of a phone call he received in June 2021 that would shake up everything about the small business finance company he was working at. At the time, the business was known as 24 Capital, Funders App was a platform they were developing internally, and Mark Allayev who was the CEO, was riding high from having weathered all the uncertainties of startup life and the Covid era. With Vega having played a key role in that success and the business running smoothly, Allayev felt he had earned a much needed vacation and traveled to Europe with some friends.

“And it was just five days,” Allayev said. “But one of our friends had an event in New York and we just had to come back, and the only flight to New York was with a layover in Germany, in Frankfurt. So we got to flying and it was supposed to be a two hour layover in Germany, but came out to be an eight month layover in Germany.”

“THEY ARRESTED ME FOR 8 MONTHS.”

funders app mark allayev
Mark Allayev

That’s when the fun and life as he knew it came to a grinding halt. The German authorities never let him get on a plane to the United States. Instead, he was placed under arrest when his name registered as a match with Interpol. Despite his insistence that it was all some misunderstanding, he was directed to a local jail and told he’d soon be extradited to the country that wanted him, Russia. Allayev, then 31 years old, who had been born in Soviet-era Tajikistan and at the time enjoyed dual American and Russian citizenship, had not been to Russia at all since he moved to the United States in 2015. He had, however, previously worked at a family business in Russia as a youngster that found itself ensnared in the unique political environment. Allayev said that his family’s business had been the victim of fabricated allegations and they had left as a result. As an American citizen he had enjoyed international travel for years without issue, and he had almost forgotten about it all. That is until this moment in June 2021 that would change his whole world view and send his family scrambling to save him. While those efforts would eventually enlist help from Democratic Reps. Debbie Wasserman Schultz of Florida and Greg Meeks of New York, Allayev was swiftly cut off from being able to manage his business and was no longer able to contact Paul Vega directly.

“I was aware of what had happened years ago with him and his family because he was transparent with me from the first day we met,” Vega said. That fateful phone call he received that morning lasted all of 3 minutes. “I was like, Okay, I guess this is what’s happening,” Vega recalled.

For Vega, the realization hit that the company had nearly two dozen employees at the time, all of whom depended on it for their livelihood, and all of whom were probably going to question the circumstances their boss was in. Nevertheless, crisis management is how Vega had been introduced to the business from the beginning. Vega started at 24 Capital in January 2020 with about six years of industry experience under his belt, with the objective of completely revamping the underwriting process.

“I think it was actually perfect timing, I think it was meant to happen that way,” Vega said. For instance, family members living across the globe had tipped him off that Covid was going to be much worse than the oblivious American media was making it out to be. Vega was also operating out of an office in New York City where a potential doomsday scenario was a lot easier to imagine than where Allayev sat in South Florida.

“When I first expressed this idea [to Allayev] of the possibility of the universe being shut down, I know that Mark was questioning whether he had made the right decision in bringing me on because here I am brand new to the company and I’m telling him that, ‘hey, the US is going to shut down,'” Vega said. Despite having come across as alarmist, Vega felt that it was better to act on his conviction and plan for the impossible.

“Behind Mark’s back I started to research the idea of remote work, and nobody knew what remote work was back then,” he said. Vega proceeded to set up staff with home computers and began testing out software they had never used before.

“By the time they shut down the city, we were well situated to just literally flip a switch and be able to process and run the business from home,” he said.

And ready they were because not only did the company never stop funding but it also never let anyone from the company go during that time. Through it all Vega and Allayev formed a really trusting relationship with each other, the kind that would only make survival of the company possible once Allayev was detained in Germany the following year.

“IT WAS REALLY A FIGHT, MY FAMILY WAS WORKING DAY AND NIGHT.”

As days turned into weeks and weeks into months, Allayev’s extradition to Russia seemed inevitable despite a growing lobbying effort to free him. Then Russia invaded Ukraine. Once that happened, the politics in Europe changed, and Allayev was suddenly freed in March 2022 and put on a plane back to the United States. The emotional journey and the circumstances that enabled his return became a big news story in the newspapers, one of many about people whose fortunes changed for better or worse as a result of the war.

Once he was reunited with family and had the opportunity to acclimate back into life, he looked toward his business, which he now had a newfound perspective on. “Before, all I cared about was just working and just living my own life,” Allayev said. “So I think what changed is me understanding that probably your family’s the most important part and you need to focus and spend more time with your parents, your siblings, all your loved ones. I think that’s the thing that really changed my mindset.”

Of course, it wasn’t as if this perspective was shaped by losing his business in the process, because it had somehow managed to continue running like normal during the eight months he was away, thanks to Vega. Even the employees stayed on, as everybody stood in supportive solidarity with Allayev.

“So one thing that I learned that was funny when I came back is that the company could be run without me,” Allayev said. “And I think that Paul and all the other team members did an amazing job, keeping everything in place and keeping the funding amounts pretty decent.”

Today, the brand Allayev and Vega are under is known as Symplifi Capital. The company’s internal infrastructure platform has also blossomed into its own publicly licenseable service known as Funders App for companies that want to be their own funders. Allayev says that Funders App provides technology, underwriting services, collections, accounting, servicing, distribution of funds, contracts, white label services, and more. It can be customized to provide just what one needs. A sizable number of companies are already using it, to the point where last year Funders App announced it had collectively originated $500M in funding to small businesses since inception.

“I think there’s so many talented kids and young people that have the vision to create their own companies but they just have absolutely no help and no backup,” Allayev said, “and this is what we want to create with funders. We want to help those people, we want to get them in, train them, help them, and provide them with the right tools, the infrastructure, and even with leverage, even the money because you need capital to become a funder.”

Allayev drew some of this inspiration from how he started in the business in late 2016, when he talked to numerous companies about what they could provide to help him launch his business and felt like nobody could provide all the pieces. As for the trajectory forward, their eyes are on efficiencies and growth.

“As you know speed is kind of the name of the game here,” Vega said. “If the typical lending house is taking three to four hours to put out an offer, make a decision, ask for additional information, our goal is to have a file from submission to funding in that three-to-four hour timeline where most people are just getting an answer back to the ISO. So we’re hoping to have the merchant funded in that timeline. And that’s going to create just a huge competitive advantage for us.”

That’s the kind of thing they’re working on today. The backdrop with what happened to Allayev is now just part of the company’s founding story. For Vega, there was never any question that it wouldn’t work out. Referencing the early months of Covid when companies were doing mass layoffs, he expected that Allayev would ultimately, through no fault of his own, do the same.

“[Allayev’s] the only person that I know in the whole industry that actually said, ‘I’m not doing that, I’m keeping everybody’ and kept his word,” Vega said. “That day he sold me. That’s a big portion of the reason why I have so much trust in him, because he’s a man of his word.”

Maxim Commercial Capital Doubled Fundings in Q3 2023

October 19, 2023
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LOS ANGELES, CALIF. (Oct. 17, 2023) – Maxim Commercial Capital (“Maxim”) announced robust demand across its diverse financing programs for the third quarter of 2023. The hard asset secured lender reported a 100% year-over-year increase in truck financings for the period. Furthermore, it experienced a surge in demand for second-lien mortgages to refinance Merchant Cash Advance (MCA) loans and to support working capital. Maxim is a national provider of loans and leases from $10,000 to $3 million collateralized by class 6 and 8 trucks, trailers, heavy equipment, and real estate.

“The current climate of healthy residential real estate valuations, coupled with low-cost first mortgages and conservative banking practices, makes our Real Estate and Structured Finance programs highly appealing,” noted Michael Kianmahd, Maxim’s Executive Vice President. “Many homeowners don’t realize they have liquidity in their homes that can be tapped to grow their businesses, often at significantly less expense than MCA loans.”

Notable fundings during the period include a $400,000, 5-year second-lien mortgage at a 60% combined loan-to-value (LTV) for an experienced optometrist with four business locations in Los Angeles. The funds were used to pay off MCA loans, reducing monthly debt service by $15,000, and for working capital. Maxim also funded aa $125,000 second-lien mortgage to an experienced construction project manager in Las Vegas at 58% combined LTV to fuel business growth and pay off an expensive MCA loan.

Maxim’s credit matrix featuring lower down payments for truck owner-operators, ranging from better credit to subprime borrowers, continued to prove popular among loan brokers and truck vendors in Q3 2023. Truck financings during the period included 75% purchase financing for an experienced owner-operator with a 607 FICO to buy a 2018 Peterbilt 579 with 399K miles for $58,695; 68% purchase financing for an owner-operator with a 593 FICO to buy a 2019 Peterbilt 579 with 547k miles for $62,250; and 71% financing for a start-up owner-operator with a 618 FICO to buy a 2020 Freightliner Cascadia with 465K miles for $51,275.

“Fortunately, the used truck market has softened in light of the current economic volatility “We are committed to helping hard-working truck drivers stay on the road, earning a living,” noted said Behzad Kianmahd, Maxim’s Chairman and CEO. “The current economic volatility has improved truck pricing while also causing some lenders to retract, creating an opportunity for Maxim to fill a void.”

About Maxim Commercial Capital

Maxim Commercial Capital helps small and mid-sized business owners nationwide by providing loans and leases (“financing”) from $10,000 to $3 million secured by trucks, trailers, heavy equipment, and real estate. It funds equipment purchase financings and leases, working capital, and debt consolidations. Maxim’s more creative financing structures leverage equity in real estate and owned heavy equipment to facilitate growth and preserve customers’ cash. As a leading provider of transportation equipment financing, Maxim supports startup and experienced owner-operators and non-CDL small fleet owners by funding loans and leases for class 8 and class 6 trucks, trailers, and reefers. Learn more at www.maximcc.com or by calling 877-776-2946.

###

Contact:
Michael Kianmahd
Executive Vice President
Maxim Commercial Capital
michael@maximcc.com
(213) 984-2727

Alliance Funding Group Upsizes Corporate Note to $39 Million

July 25, 2023
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Tustin, CA – Alliance Funding Group (“AFG” or the “Company”), one of the largest privately-held equipment finance companies in the U.S., today announced the successful upsizing of its corporate notes to $39.0 million. The new issuance was assigned a BBB rating by a nationally recognized statistical ratings organization (NRSRO). Proceeds from this transaction will be used for working capital purposes and to finance growth, including potential future acquisition opportunities.

AFG is a market-leading vendor direct specialty finance company that provides small-ticket and middle-market equipment leasing, financing and working capital solutions to a broad range of businesses throughout the U.S. Since inception, the Company has funded more than $2.0 billion to over 25,000 businesses.

“We are grateful for the continued support from a core base of institutional investors that have demonstrated strong conviction in our growing platform,” said Brij Patel, founder and President of AFG. “As competitors tighten their credit boxes, we recognize an outstanding opportunity to pick up market share, both organically and through potential synergistic acquisitions.”

Brent Hall, Senior Vice President – Capital Markets, stated: “Following our successful securitization placed earlier in the year, this recent financing helps further fortify our balance sheet. We are experiencing significant demand from our customers and this additional capital will enable us to continue to meet their financial needs in a volatile economic environment.”

Brean Capital, LLC served as the Company’s exclusive financial advisor and sole placement agent in connection with the transaction.

About Alliance Funding Group

Alliance Funding Group was founded in 1998 and has grown to become one of the largest privately held equipment finance companies in the U.S. AFG provides leasing and financing solutions to a wide variety of businesses across a defined spectrum of credit types. AFG currently operates out of its headquarters in Tustin, California with offices in Los Angeles and Carlsbad, CA, Portsmouth, NH, Austin, TX, and Tacoma, WA. For more information, visit: www.afg.com.

Sales, Tech, Funding, and the Law in California

July 7, 2023
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deBanked sat down with three individuals from across the spectrum of the small business finance world in Southern California.

With David Austin, an attorney and Managing Partner at Austin LLP, we discussed merchant cash advance law and the importance of legal counsel to run one’s business correctly.


With Trey Markel, VP Sales & Marketing at Centrex Software, we discussed corporate finance, AI, blockchain, tech, and more.

With Justin Thompson, Chief Revenue Officer at National Funding, we talked about what’s changed in sales and the state of selling.

They’re all on AltFinanceDaily TV or listen to them on Spotify!

And don’t forget to register for AltFinanceDaily CONNECT San Diego!