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Dedicated Financial GBC Announces Office Relocation and Appoints Jay Keckhafer as President

February 9, 2024
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Shoreview, Minnesota – February 9, 2024 – Dedicated Financial GBC, a leader in the financial services industry, is proud to announce two significant milestones in its growth. The company has recently relocated its office from Roseville to Shoreview, Minnesota, and concurrently, Jay Keckhafer has been appointed as the new President of Dedicated Financial GBC, effective January 2024.

The decision to move to a spacious 15,000+ square foot building from the previous 3,000 square foot location is in response to Dedicated Financial GBC’s remarkable growth. The company has tripled in size, necessitating a larger facility to accommodate expanding teams and enhance capabilities in first-party servicing, third-party collections, litigation management, bankruptcy servicing, account scoring, and asset management services.

Founder and CEO, Shawn Smith, emphasized the strategic nature of the relocation, stating, “This move supports our expanding team and aligns with our commitment to meeting the rising demands of our clients. We are excited about the enhanced workspace that will not only increase productivity but also prioritize the well-being of our dedicated team members.”

The new office space is designed with employee engagement in mind, featuring sit-stand desks, larger common spaces, additional meeting rooms, offices, and amenities. Dedicated is also actively undertaking initiatives to brand the interior of the office, contributing to the development of a robust and vibrant company culture.

Most notably, Dedicated Financial GBC is excited to announce the appointment of Jay Keckhafer as its new President. With over two decades of experience, Jay brings a wealth of expertise to his new role, having served as the Executive Director of Operations and Legal Outsourcing for the past six years. His extensive career includes notable roles such as Director of Collection Operations at OPTIO Solutions, LLC, and Director of Collections at AscensionPoint Recovery Services.

As president, Jay will oversee the strategic direction and day-to-day operations of Dedicated Financial GBC, leveraging his skills in business analysis, operations management, financial analysis, and business strategy. His leadership is expected to drive the company’s growth and success in the financial services industry.

Shawn Smith, founder and CEO, expressed his excitement about Jay’s appointment, stating, “We are grateful to have Jay Keckhafer as the President of Dedicated Financial GBC. His background in operations, legal outsourcing, and business operations makes him the perfect leader to guide Dedicated to new heights. We look forward to the innovative strategies and insights he will bring to our team and the leadership he will bring in support of our mission to use business to make the greatest impact on people in need locally and globally.”

Dedicated Financial GBC remains committed to providing unmatched financial services to its clients. The office relocation and Jay Keckhafer’s appointment as President mark a monumental moment in the company’s journey as it expands its capabilities and solidifies its position as a leader in the industry.

About Dedicated Financial GBC:

Dedicated Financial GBC shatters the stereotype of a financial services portfolio management company by providing innovative financial and asset solutions to commercial funders. As a single resource, Dedicated offers a complete range of services to the financial sector, including portfolio servicing, first-party solutions, collections, equipment remarketing, voluntary and involuntary repossessions, litigation and bankruptcy management, account scoring, and consulting. Dedicated Financial GBC’s values are grace, growth, significance, and excellence. They drive their mission of using business to change the world on a local and global scale and drive their team toward success for their clients. For more information, please visit dedicatedgbc.com.

Idea Financial Upsizes its Credit Facility to $112M

February 23, 2023
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Idea FinancialIn just eighteen months since Idea Financial closed on an $84M warehouse facility with the Specialty Finance Division of Synovus Bank and Hudson Cove Capital Management, the company has gotten it upsized to $112M and the term extended by another 3 years. Idea Financial provides small businesses with lines of credit while its sister company LevelEsq finances the cost of lawsuits mostly undertaken by lawyers that work on contingency.

Co-founders Larry Bassuk and Justin Leto say that the upsizing news is “a testament to our discipline and our focus on risk management.”

The company has around 50 employees, less than what might be expected, but Bassuk and Leto say that technology has helped make tremendous efficiency possible while emphasizing that they have a human underwriting team that reviews every single loan before it goes out.

Jayan Krishnan, Managing Director of Synovus Bank, said that they were “very happy to provide them with the growth capital they need.” Synovus is the senior debt in the arrangement. Krishnan said that they love to work with companies that are thoughtful, mindful, and conservative and that Idea fit that criteria.

Fred Wang, a Co-Founder and Partner at Hudson Cove, said his firm is pretty selective on mezzanine within the small business lending asset class but that Idea’s performance has been very strong and consistent. “We’ve gotten a very good feel for them as a management team,” Wang said.

Both Synovus and Hudson Cove are well-versed in the commercial finance space.

“We’re obviously growing and they’re happing to be growing with us,” said the two founders of Idea Financial. “We run our company risk management first and sales second.”

IOU Originated Whopping $74.2M in Q3

November 21, 2022
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iou homepageIOU Financial experienced a strong third quarter, reporting total loan originations of $74.2M, a 25.8% increase over Q2. The year-to-date total now stands at $192.7M.

“IOU Financial continues to grow revenues and invest in scalability while reducing its adjusted operating expense ratio,” said Robert Gloer, President and CEO, in an official announcement. “We remain laser focused on scalability and growth while maintaining consistent underwriting standards, and we expect to build on this trend in the months and quarters to come.”

IOU attributes the growth to “healthy demand from borrowers” and “continued demand from investors seeking high quality loans.”

Notably, the company said that collections had been in line with expectations and it had “not seen significant increases in delinquencies, defaults or loan modifications.”

NextPoint Financial Formally Announces End of LoanMe Business

June 23, 2022
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nextpoint financialLess than a week after word spread that LoanMe had stopped originating business loans, NextPoint Financial, LoanMe’s parent company, confirmed it in a formal announcement.

“Given current market conditions, the Company announces that LoanMe, Inc. (“LoanMe”), a subsidiary of the Company, will cease loan originations,” the statement read. “As a result, LoanMe has reduced its workforce and will continue to service outstanding loans that were previously originated. The Company decided to make these strategic changes to the business of LoanMe to better reflect the areas of focus and growth at NextPoint and to take into account existing market dynamics.”

The circumstances with LoanMe have apparently contributed to NextPoint’s failure to file its year-end 2021 and Q1 2022 financials, which are claimed to be forthcoming. NextPoint is publicly traded on the Toronto Stock Exchange. The sunsetting of LoanMe is oddly timed given that NextPoint only just acquired LoanMe last year and because LoanMe was one of its two primary business operations. NextPoint was a SPAC that also acquired Liberty Tax at the same time.

Although NextPoint cites “current market conditions,” a recent lawsuit filed by LoanMe against a loan servicer suggests that there may have been other issues at play as well.

Grand Opening of Latin Financial’s New Office Joined by Public Officials, Family, and Friends

June 4, 2022
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Connecticut Farm Bureau BuildingJust a few miles outside of Hartford, cars exited the highway and advanced towards a quieter part of Connecticut. The aptly named “Beaver Road” is home to Wethersfield’s US Postal Service building on one side and the Connecticut Farm Bureau building on the other. Drivers veered towards the latter and pulled into a parking lot situated behind a literal babbling brook. There are other tenants besides the Farm Bureau in the expansive brown-bricked commercial-use building as indicated by a sign outside, but the business that people had come to celebrate hadn’t even been added to it yet.

Nevertheless, the blue and white balloons waving in the wind outside the back entrance were a clue that this was the right place. Inside, on the first floor, a line of people found the large plated logo of Latin Financial, a small business that helps other small businesses obtain working capital.

Already personally acquainted with the firm led by Sonia Alvelo, she led myself and others on a tour of the company’s new space. Latin Financial employees were easily identifiable by their blue company shirts, but others wore green to signal that they were part of a sister company named Sharpe Capital. Sharpe is spearheaded by Brendan P. Lynch.

Both brands previously operated in nearby Newington but outgrew what they had. When the ceremony officially kicked off with some impromptu speeches, the prominence of those assembled became evident. It included, among others, the Better Business Bureau, the local Chamber of Commerce, and the Connecticut Children’s Hospital.

Wethersfield’s mayor, Michael Rell, was also there. Rell welcomed Latin Financial to the neighborhood, echoing the note sang by other government officials.

Connecticut State Senator Matthew Lesser shared his appreciation for Alvelo and her company’s mission to provide capital to underserved small businesses both in the state and across the nation. Lesser explained that the state legislature had recently decided to delay a proposed commercial financing bill (Senate Bill 272) so that it could further assess the input from companies like Latin Financial and the potential impact it would have before moving forward. A version of the bill will be reintroduced next year.

Meanwhile, Joseph Rodriguez, Deputy State Director for US Senator Richard Blumenthal’s office, said that he was impressed by the company’s accomplishiments and contributions to the community. He presented Alvelo with a Certificate of Special Recognition signed by Blumenthal in honor of her new office and for her service to Connecticut Small Businesses.

Latin Financial Grand Opening

Werner Oyanadel, Latino and Puerto Rican Policy Director at the Connecticut General Assembly’s Commission on Women, Children, Seniors, Equity & Opportunity, said that Alvelo had “been a good partner of [their] work at the Capitol” and that “Latin Financial is filling a big void assisting new businesses and Latino entrepreneurs’ access to needed reources.”

Employees of both Latin Financial and Sharpe appeared excited by all the fanfare while friends and family members were proud to share in the moment. Alvelo ceremoniously cut a blue ribbon for the cameras and in conversations that followed it became known that they were hiring.

Alvelo has previously spoken at Broker Fair in New York and AltFinanceDaily CONNECT Miami. She has been a primary source of information for AltFinanceDaily since 2016 on matters regarding small business financing in Puerto Rico.

BNPL Survey says 25% of Customers are “Financially Vulnerable”

April 3, 2022
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buh now pay laterThe Financial Health Network, an organization that attempts to quantify the nation’s financial health, recently released the results of their first truly nationally representative survey titled Buy Now, Pay Later: Implications for Financial Health. The survey seeks to understand who uses Buy Now Pay Later (BNPL) and their experiences with the service, and touched on what kind of financial habits are coming about for those BNPL use.

“Buy Now Pay Later could be a mixed bag for consumers–on the one hand it provides a convenient and low-cost way for consumers to finance purchases, but there are customers who are using BNPL to make purchases they would not otherwise make,” said Meghan Greene, director of research at Financial Health Network.

According to the release, the data found that roughly one in four users of BNPL are financially vulnerable. Out of this group, a quarter of BNPL users reported struggling to make payments. With this, the survey later mentions that 92% of users reported no difficulty making payments, and 99% stated that they understood the terms and conditions of the product.

“It’s still too early to know the full impact of BNPL on the financial health of consumers, but we do see potential warning signs in the number of consumers,” Greene said. “Particularly those who are already financially vulnerable, who report struggling to make repayments.”

Out of those surveyed, 47% said they would not have made a purchase or spent more than they otherwise would have spent had BNPL not been available. With this being said, it seems that BNPL executives are getting exactly what their product is marketed to retailers to do.

There are many types of plans using the BNPL label ranging from plans which divide payments into four installments with no interest charge (“pay in four”) to longer-term installment loans. Companies like Ikea, Walmart, Urban Outfitters, and thousands of other global businesses have gotten into offering these financial products.

Other interesting finding from the survey are below-

Short-term BNPL users reported owing an average balance of $330.

10% of households report having used BNPL in the 12 months prior to November 2021, a significant deviation from other published estimates. Of these, 70% report using a short-term, no-interest BNPL plan.

Younger and less financially healthy households are more likely to use BNPL. Financially Vulnerable households, as measured using the Financial Health Network’s innovative FinHealth Score(R), are nearly four times more likely to use BNPL than Financially Healthy households (18% vs. 5%). In fact, almost one-quarter (24%) of BNPL users are Financially Vulnerable.

Despite the recent emergence of BNPL in the United States, almost half (46%) of users had used BNPL three or more times in the previous 12 months, as of November 2021.

Total U.S. consumer spending on interest and fees from BNPL in 2021 is estimated at less than $1 billion, a small fraction of the estimated $95 billion spent on revolving credit card balances.

Over 20% of BNPL users do not have or do not use credit cards (roughly the same as non-users).

More than 40% report having subprime credit scores.

One in three users of BNPL report that they would not have made the purchase if BNPL were not available. Among Financially Vulnerable BNPL users, over 60% said they would not have made the purchase without BNPL.

IOU Introduces the “Cash Back” Concept to the Small Business Loan Market

August 4, 2021
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iou financial cash back loanImmediately following news of a management shakeup, small business lending company IOU Financial introduced a first-of-its kind offering to eligible customers, cash back.

“Available only to qualified new clients,” as the announcement says, the IOU Cash Back Loan enables borrowers to benefit from perfect payment history by receiving 3% of the original loan back in the form of a cash rebate.

According to Carl Brabander, the new EVP of Strategy, this is not a gimmick where the rebate can only be applied to a future loan or loaded up onto a gift card.

“The merchant would receive the cash back amount by ACH directly to their bank account,” he writes, “provided they (a) have a perfect repayment history and (b) apply for the rebate within 30 days of repaying the loan, using the cash back certificate we would have sent them when the loan closed.”

Translated into dollars, this reward could be sizable given that IOU’s average loan size hovers around $100,000 and can go much higher.

“The IOU Cash Back Loan gives us the opportunity to give something back to new clients that put their faith in us to fund their growth plans,” said IOU CEO Robert Gloer in a public statement.

The cash-back loan concept was developed scientifically through focus group testing, the company claims.

The sudden flurry of activity emanating from IOU can probably be attributed to a deal struck last year when Neuberger Berman, an investment manager with $374B under management, acquired a 15% stake in the firm.

Brabander says that IOU is very bullish on the rest of the year and 2022.

“We see small business coming back strong now that the 2nd round of PPP has finished working its way through the system,” he says. “That’s why we’re investing heavily in products (ex. Cash Back), technology (our IOU360 platform) and distribution right now…”

The Death of A Thousand Financial Companies

April 28, 2021
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Unfortunately, Deleting Your Business May Not Be An Option One Can Risk.

This story appeared in AltFinanceDaily’s Mar/Apr 2021 magazine issue. SUBSCRIBE FREE

Grim ReaperIn March 2021, AltFinanceDaily revealed that 7.5% of DailyFunder’s user base that had existed in March 2020, was lost during the pandemic. DailyFunder, of course, is the most widely used forum for small business finance brokers and the statistic offered one of the most compelling insights into the damage inflicted on the industry.

A loss was defined as a user whose email address ceased to exist. It was either deleted or the domain name was not renewed. It was a startling revelation. And yet, in a sign of optimism, DailyFunder added more new users in that 12 month time frame than were lost.

And yet, is anything ever truly deleted in the digital age? And how did it come to pass that the owners of these companies believed deletion to be a preferable outcome to transference? Surely as a thousand brokerages closed, there would have been an eager buyer to scoop them up, even if the sales price was for pennies?

And so I arrived at a theory, that companies that simply wound up and disappeared rather than sold themselves off, probably left behind a digital footprint that still drew in prospective customers, a path that ultimately led nowhere. A competitor might rejoice at that outcome but it’s not exactly a net gain because that customer may have decided to go somewhere else or nowhere else instead. Someone else’s loss wasn’t their win. Even the customer was a net loser. That could be resolved, of course, if the competition simply acquired the expired domain names of their fallen competitors, something that could be reasonably achieved for the price of ten bucks through any domain name registrar.

THEORETICALLY ONE COULD ACQUIRE THE WEB TRAFFIC OF 410 FAILED BROKERS FOR ROUGHLY $4,000

Outside of the small business finance industry, such tactics are commonplace. One can simply go on Godaddy’s domain auctions to see the never-ending revolving door of expiring domains which are often ranked and priced on the basis of how much traffic they stand to generate, mainly because of the past owners’ efforts.

According to WhoIsHostingThis, 70% of all web domains fail to be renewed 1 year after they’re purchased. “[41% of these expired domains] go on to be snapped up and registered by other users to potentially benefit and profit from,” they say. And there is nothing controversial about this. This is simply a standard of the world wide web. Your fallen online business is recycled as someone else’s marketing tool.

Applying that math to the small business finance industry at hand, that would mean that of 1,000 brokerage failures, 41% of the expired domain names are going to be acquired by someone else or they already have been. And if the expired domain only costs $10 (and they’re not all this cheap), then theoretically one could acquire the web traffic of 410 failed brokers for roughly $4,000.

WHOA.

The realization led me to conduct a controlled experiment, one in which I would try to prove this theory for a AltFinanceDaily story.

I bought roughly twenty expired domains, intentionally leaning toward older ones, domains that had been expired for 2-10 years rather than recent casualties of the pandemic. Once completed, I jotted down my hypothesis, that these domain names probably produced some level of prospective customer traffic.

When my experiment concluded, I became alarmed, even sick, over what the results taught me. Deletion, I learned, is an outcome that no business, let alone a financial services company, can afford to surrender themselves to.

Here’s why:

Among the first steps taken was to create a “catch-all” email account on each domain so that if a former owner of a domain came along and tried to contact me, I would get it no matter which address they tried and that I would be able to tell them that I had acquired it accordingly and even tell them my theory!

No marketing or anything was done for any of the domains. I simply acquired them and let them sit stagnant. I did not resurrect whatever their old websites were. And yet, I received thousands and thousands of emails, none from what I could tell were from former owners.

It’s important to state that I did not use these accounts to actually do anything, but that these vulnerabilities came to light by virtue of monitoring the inbound emails these domains accrued.

Some domain names still had control of social media accounts like business facebook pages and twitter accounts. Someone could not only acquire your old domain, but use it to resurrect and use dormant social media accounts, including being able to view all past private correspondence on them. Yikes.

☠️☠️☠️

Some domain names were still attached to active bank accounts, credit card accounts, or financial services. Correspondence regarding these accounts was still being transmitted to them. When you delete a domain, you need to make sure its access is revoked from every account you have, especially bank accounts. Some received NSF notices or were being subject to debt collection efforts.

Every domain name was subscribed to newsletters or communities or some service in which one could use to learn personal information or business information about the previous owner.

hackersUnknown but likely is that some of these domains may have been the “lost password” email address of record for other accounts online, a particularly troubling thought.

As the litany of stroke-inducing vulnerabilities piled up, then came live correspondence. Lenders wanted to know where to send a still-owed commission, a borrower was reaching out for customer service, old business partners were trying to rekindle past relationships.

Presumably such domains could give someone access to portals or databases where previous customer data was held. This implies that not only is the old domain owner at risk but that business vendors that had not disabled access to their systems for the defunct users could also be at risk from nefarious actors now in control of email addresses belonging to former customers.

A nefarious actor could surely dream up still more ways to carry out compromising acts. I disabled incoming email altogether for the domains pretty soon into my aforementioned discoveries so that emails to those domains would simply bounce back and indicate to the sender that there’s nobody there anymore.

SOME DOMAIN NAMES STILL HAD CONTROL OF SOCIAL MEDIA ACCOUNTS AND BANK ACCOUNTS

And my original hypothesis had been blown to smithereens. These domains generated no material web traffic of note, except for probing “bots” instead of human users. What I thought might be a hidden source of web traffic, a clever insight on internet marketing 101, instead turned out to be a glimpse into a business’s worst nightmare.

No matter how much one’s business has failed, control over the domain name should be preserved at all cost, that is unless, all of the above vulnerabilities are addressed first and completely.

Originally, the costs of this journalistic experiment were to be recouped by simply reselling the domains onto the public market for fair market value. Instead, they were simply cancelled, cast back in the sea anonymously, where anyone else could buy them and do whatever they want with them. I, however, made no effort to alert anyone’s attention to them.

The publication of this story was delayed as I, the journalist, had to weigh the merits of disclosing my findings. But as the data says, 41% of expired domains are going to get snapped up anyway. And true to form, I was actually outbid by other unknown buyers by some of the original domain names I had hoped to acquire for my experiment. A financial service company’s domain and all the vulnerabilities with it, were sold to bidders willing to pay $30, $40, or $50+ versus my $10-$20 or so budget. That seems a terrifyingly small cost. And I highly doubt they were journalists.

Perhaps those domains are generating web traffic, but if they’re not, one has to ponder why someone would want to acquire the lapsed domains of so many dead financial service companies. And post-pandemic, there are too many to count.

If the death of a thousand companies has taught me anything, it’s that even business failure needs a well thought-out security plan. Otherwise one risks death by a thousand cuts.

View the magazine issue this story appeared in here