SEAN MURRAY

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Sean Murray is the founder of AltFinanceDaily (2010), AltFinanceDaily CONNECT & Broker Fair (2018), DailyFunder (2012), and Broker Battle (2024). Organizer of B2B Finance Expo (2024).

Murray was born and raised on Long Island, NY. He has a Bachelors of Science in Accounting & Finance from the University of Delaware.

Murray started his career in fintech in 2006 at a startup called Merchant Cash & Capital in New York City. He is widely known for his extensive reporting on the small business finance industry and fintech.

Notables
11/27/24Author of The Case for Éamon de Valera's Birth and Baptismal Records Being Forgeries in Iarmhí, Vol. 1, No. 4. | PDF
2/24/24Originator and top researcher of the theory that Jack Dorsey is Satoshi Nakamoto
1/27/24First to ever execute a domain name loan by smart contract on Ethereum
1/11/24Creator and producer of the first ever LIVE Broker Battle competition in Miami
10/7/23First to ever execute a transfer of ownership of a DNS domain on-chain
8/1/23Drew attention to a naming bug/exploit on Farcaster
3/28/23First to ever wrap a DNS domain using the ENS NameWrapper on Ethereum
2/15/22Executive Producer of Equipping The Dream
9/12/21Deployed a AltFinanceDaily NFT Smart Contract on Ethereum
5/12/20Co-author of Did the IRS Forget Non-PPP Debt? Tax Implications of Debt Forgiveness with Grassi Advisors & Accountants
3/6/17Finalist for Best Fintech Journalist
11/3/16Co-author of Merchant Cash Advance Basics with CounselorLibrary
10/25/15Co-author of The Small Business Financing Report with Bryant Park Capital
Previous Speaker or Moderator For:
  • International Factoring Association Conference
  • New York Institute of Credit Conference
  • Alternative Finance Bar Association Conference
  • Lend360



Sean Murray



Recently Authored by Sean Murray

How Kaaj is Accelerating Small Business Lending
By: Sean Murray

Utsav Shah first met Kristen Castell at AltFinanceDaily CONNECT MIAMI this past February. At the time, Shah and his partner Shivi Sharma were freshly promoting a new AI technology to simplify small business lending. It's called Kaaj, described as a core intelligence layer that bolts into a lender or broker's CRM and handles all of the early-stage application intake and underwriting work. Shah had been familiar with the fintech accelerator Castell directs, the Center for Advancing Financial Equity (CAFE), which she was speaking about at the conference, but he had never actually met her in person until then. "That's really when we learned deeply about what CAFE's mission is and how it works with a lot of startups, a very unique mission and very unique approach to work with startups and bring the ecosystem together," said Sharma. "So we loved it and decided to apply this Fall." They applied into the exclusive accelerator program and were one of six companies to be selected, an honor considering hundreds of companies apply for entry on a bi-annual basis. As previously noted on AltFinanceDaily, it’s an eight-week program, some of which takes place on location at the Fintech Innovation Hub on the University of Delaware campus. The rest is virtual but there are in-person field trips like a recent one to Washington DC, for example. AltFinanceDaily has sponsored the last three accelerator cohorts which in the most recent cohort includes headline names like JPMorgan, PNC, Discover, Barclays, Capital One, M&T Bank, WSFS BANK, BNY Mellon, Prudential, Fulton Bank, County Bank, Best Egg, United Way, NeighborGood Partners, and the Delaware Bankers Association. KaajKaaj, based in San Francisco, was already getting noticed beforehand. The company won the Fintech Meetup Startup Pitch Competition in March and secured a $50,000 prize, for example. Their technology is especially suited for equipment financing companies, MCA providers, small business lenders, SBA lenders, factors, and more. "So imagine that you're a lender, and you get hundreds of applications in a day, and you don't really know where you want to focus your time on," Shah said to AltFinanceDaily. "'What do these 100 deals mean for me, for my business? Are they even qualifying against my criteria, etc.' So what Kaaj does, it provides very quick intelligence, within the first three minutes." Shah explained that as soon as someone submits a package with documents, they get analyzed from top to bottom, like KYC/KYB, the bank statements, and more. This helps lenders (and brokers) decide how to prioritize their time. Utsav's background in technology has played a major role in building this out as he comes with a decade of AI experience and was building autonomous cars before building Kaaj. "Time wins deals or time kills deals," said Shah. "Either way that you want to look at it, if we can give that time back to them, if we can reduce that turnaround time on each individual deal and focus on those higher profitability deals for these companies or these lenders, then they can start really feeding the top line and the bottom line, because they're not having to hire a bunch of folks." Sharma said that equipment finance is slightly more complex than MCA, for example, but that as a $1.4 trillion industry, it's a market that's ripe for innovation. Sharma used to work in commercial lending herself and has seen firsthand how manual processes and outdated technology slow things down and hurt not only the lenders but the borrowers in the process. "I have worked on small business lending, commercial lending, payments fraud, onboarding fraud, a lot of that," Sharma said. "I spotted a lot of challenges in that space and a clear lack of good technological solutions that really help these lenders scale efficiently." Shah, meanwhile, said that ultimately it's about helping the end-user, the business borrower. "We are very focused on solving for small businesses, because the final mission of the company is to get better access to capital for small businesses," he said.
The Great Concession, How the MCA Product Effectively Proved It Was Right All Along
By: Sean Murray

moneyacrossthecountryThere was no greater irony than the State of Texas banning ACH debits from sales-based financing providers at the same time that the State of Washington was celebrating the coming age of sales-based financing. In Texas, for example, the motivation for curbing sales-based financing was built on the premise that "this type of financing has raised significant concerns about predatory lending and that state attorneys general as well as the Federal Trade Commission have obtained high-profile judgments against such financing for predatory practices." Meanwhile, in Washington, the motivation for the state holding the opposite opinion was that sales-based financing "increases access to capital for small businesses in Washington state, particularly those that have been historically underserved or underbanked." How did these states reach the opposite conclusion? There's no caveat to how the Washington State program works. The State's Department of Commerce partnered with Grow America and the operation is backed by a federal grant (SSBCI-21031-0048) to roll out and administer a revenue-based financing program as part of Washington's State Small Business Credit Initiative. It's sales-based financing or in this case revenue-based financing (which is the more common phrase these days). Grow America's revenue-based financing program utters a very familiar phrase in its marketing. "The months you generate more revenue, you pay a higher amount, when business is slower you pay less," the company advertises. This was at one time the signature calling card of a merchant cash advance, but now such features have been repackaged and rebranded into something similar but different, and everybody is doing them. The Grow America program applies a 20% holdback on adjusted monthly revenue and requires a minimum monthly payment of $1,000 if the 20% holdback does not generate at least $1,000 for the month. Merchants can get approved for anywhere from $50,000 to $1 million. The product is marketed as having a 1.24 factor rate and an estimated 14.27% APR with a 3-year term. As industry participants are aware, increasing sales would translate into increasing payments, which means a rapidly paid off loan could potentially result in a final outcome APR in the triple digits, far and away from the "estimate." The irony is that the notable benefits of a similar product, merchant cash advances, which have no minimum monthly payments, no fixed term, and are not absolutely repayable, are eliminated when restructured in this way and presented as "revenue-based financing loans." Revenue-based financing loans take the underlying structure of MCAs (payments tied to sales) and then strip away the benefits. However, when structured as loans, the argument often goes that they are likely to be cheaper, which may be true on average, but is not always true. Indeed, Grow America leads specifically with price as for why its product, similar to its privately owned competitors, are the better option: "There are a lot of online lenders offering revenue-based loans that promise instant approvals, but their terms are intentionally confusing, and the fees are high," Grow America advertises. "Our lenders aren't like that. They're mission driven." In Texas, the author of the bill that banned debits from such financing providers "informed the [legislative] committee that commercial sales-based financing has become a popular financing option for small businesses desperate for credit and that, unlike traditional loans, this type of financing is repaid as a percentage of future sales or revenue." Indeed, it is very popular. The largest providers or brokers of such financing today whether structured as a purchase or loan, are household names like Amazon, Walmart, Shopify, Intuit, Stripe, DoorDash, PayPal, Square, GoDaddy, Wix, Squarespace and more. Some structure them as a purchase and call it a merchant cash advance and some structure it as a loan and call it revenue-based financing. In either case, payments are tied to the percentage of future sales or revenue. In egregious cases of wrongdoing one way or another, such incidents have historically been a result of deceptive marketing or payments from a merchant exceeding the contracted amount. In New York, when transactions are structured as a purchase, courts generally look to make sure that the agreements have a reconciliation provision in the agreement, whether the agreement has a finite term, and whether there is any recourse should the merchant declare bankruptcy. Legally speaking, the products have become pretty well defined and understood in the court system. Like Washington State, GoDaddy, which recently announced its new merchant cash advance program, markets its product in an almost identical fashion. "If your sales go up, the MCA will be paid sooner; if the sales are slow, it'll take longer," GoDaddy says. Same message. Washington State requires merchants to make a minimum payment every month and a balloon payment if not fully repaid within 3 years. GoDaddy, by contrast, advertises no minimum payment amount, no set payment schedule, no penalties, and no late fees. One's a loan, one's a purchase. While the best course of action is best left to the merchants, there appears to be a near-universal concession that the underlying nature of how merchant cash advance agreements were contemplated, payments tied to sales, made strong logical business sense all along. Washington State emphasizes this fact. "We know that your business has its own needs and loans with fixed payment amounts may not be the best option for you," they advertise. "The revenue-based financing fund offers loans with flexible payback terms so you can grow your business immediately and pay back your loan based on your varying revenue." Recent studies also now highlight the benefits of cash-flow-based underwriting. In Sharpening the Focus: Using Cash-Flow Data to Underwrite Financially Constrained Businesses, "The paper finds that adding cash-flow information substantially increases the predictive signal of models that rely primarily on the business owners’ personal credit scores and firm characteristics." There's also Square, the largest revenue-based financing provider in the US, that has explained why this system just works better. Square says that they can fund more businesses and have higher payment success rates than if they were to follow more conventional methods of underwriting and repayment. "Square Loans addresses [the credit] gap by using near real-time business data to assess creditworthiness, evaluating metrics such as transaction volume and revenue patterns to offer short-term loans — with repayment on average in 8 months," Square wrote in a White Paper. "This allows for a more accurate and timely understanding of a business’s capacity to borrow and repay. And loan repayments are higher during periods when business is stronger and reduced when sales are lower." Washington Fund
doordash capital What's the sentiment these days on payments tied to sales revenue? The market has spoken.
wix capital



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Stories

Sean Murray Published in Iarmhí: The Case for Éamon de Valera’s Birth and Baptismal Records Being Forgeries

December 19, 2024
Article by:
iarmhi journal sean murray 2024
Left: Iarmhí Editor Seamus O’Brien | Right: Sean Murray

AltFinanceDaily Chief Editor Sean Murray recently had a research paper published in Iarmhí, Vol. 1, No. 4, a journal based in Co. Westmeath, Ireland that’s edited by renowned historian Seamus O’Brien. The title is: The Case for Éamon de Valera’s Birth and Baptismal Records Being Forgeries.

The journal’s launch party commenced on November 27 at The Greville Arms Hotel in Mullingar. It’s available for sale online at Just Books. For international shipping, please contact the shop owner in advance at justbooksmullingar12@gmail.com.

This is Murray’s first paper on the subject. Research on the matter began in 2021 while he was writing a book on a related story that overlapped with the birth record circumstances of de Valera.

Murray’s great great grandfather Christopher Murray, who hailed from Raharney, Co. Westmeath, was a longtime leader of the Westmeath Men’s Social & Benevolent Association of New York and contributor to The Westmeath Examiner up until he died in 1936.

eamon de valera forged birth records

Sean Murray to Moderate Best Practices Panel at New York Institute of Credit Event

October 15, 2018
Article by:

AltFinanceDaily President and Chief Editor Sean Murray will be moderating a best practices panel at the New York Institute of Credit Event on October 16th. The event is also supported by the IFA Northeast, the Alternative Finance Bar Association, and AltFinanceDaily.

The subject of the panel is to discuss best practices when dealing with different financial firms, namely ABL, factoring, and merchant cash advance. The panelists are:

  • Bill Gallagher, President, CFG Merchant Solutions
  • Bill Elliott, President, First Business Growth Funding
  • Raffi Azadian, CEO, Change Capital
  • Dean Landis, President, Entrepreneur Growth Capital

Merchant Cash Advance APR Debate (Sean Murray v Ami Kassar)

November 24, 2015
Article by:

The other day, Inc. writer and loan broker Ami Kassar took some time out of his day from taking photos of his shadow in the park to engage me in a debate about the use of APRs in future receivable purchase transactions. He was apparently very bothered by my analysis of Square’s merchant cash advance program which has transacted more than $300 million to date.

To clarify my position here, I am indeed in favor of transparency, so long as it’s intelligent transparency. Coming up with phony percentages based on estimates and applying them to transactions where they don’t make sense is not transparency. Similarly, advocating that merchant cash advance companies and lenders alike move away from a dollar-for-dollar pricing model to one that requires the seller or borrower to do math or hire an accountant is also not transparency.

Even a Federal Reserve study that attempted to prove merchant cash advances were confusing inadvertently proved that APRs in general were confusing. If someone doesn’t know how to calculate an APR, then it’s unreasonable to assume that they could work backwards from an APR to determine the dollar-for-dollar cost of capital. In effect, APR is a surefire way to mask the trust cost despite arguments to the contrary.

My unplanned debate with Ami Kassar on twitter is below:

Sorry Ami. The only thing unclear is your argument.

Murray Loses Election for ENS Foundation Directorship

May 21, 2023
Article by:

BlockchaindeBanked president Sean Murray was one of two nominees earlier this month for an open director position of the ENS Foundation. ENS stands for the Ethereum Name Service, a protocol that allows users to substitute human readable usernames for long hexadecimal strings commonly associated with crypto addresses.

Instead of one’s address looking like this: 0x64233eAa064ef0d54ff1A963933D0D2d46ab5829, it could be altfinancedaily.eth or debanked.com or sean.debanked.com or some other domain name owned by the user.

Murray has been an advocate for ENS names as a form of web-based identity. He was one of the first 500 people in the world to use a .com address as an ENS name and the first in the world to turn a .com address into an NFT on mainnet using the official ENS Namewrapper contract. debanked.com, for example, is not only a website address, but also a crypto address and an NFT. Murray has been studying crypto since 2014 and deployed his first AltFinanceDaily smart contract to ethereum in 2021.

Murray lost the election in a blowout but has expressed that his candidacy led to some positive changes in the ENS ecosystem. The ENS Foundation represents the technology’s official DAO. Murray’s competition was more qualified than he was for the role. The victor, Alex Van de Sande, helped launch ethereum, launched the first Ethereum wallet and Web3 Browser, and was a co-founder of ENS.

“I anticipate there eventually being some crossover between the traditional financial system and blockchain technology,” Murray said. “A username system would be an integral part of that. I’m not into speculating on coins or anything of that nature.”

RadioShack Owners Accused of Running a Ponzi Scheme

September 25, 2025
Article by:

When the RadioShack brand was acquired in 2020 by Retail Ecommerce Ventures, LLC, the company shifted gears into a new direction, cryptocurrency. Using Twitter, now X, as its main base of messaging, the RadioShack account rapidly became outwardly controversial and hostile in order to generate eyeballs and attention. It was quite successful and piqued my curiosity to the point that it ended up on AltFinanceDaily in 2021.

At the time the company said “RadioShack DeFi is focused on the early majority. It will become the first to market with a 100 year old brand name that’s recognized in virtually all 190+ countries in the world.”

When I actually inquired about information on its new DeFi platform, all I received was a digital coupon for a boombox…

But the party seemed to come to an end and the account stopped tweeting on November 17, 2022.

Now, according to the SEC, it has been revealed that the owners of RadioShack and other defunct brand names had been conducting a ponzi scheme precisely through November 2022.

Taino Adrian Lopez, Alexander Farhang Mehr, and Maya Rose Burkenroad, were charged this week for running a $112M ponzi scheme. Apparently, none of the household brand names they acquired were generating any profits, but they claimed to investors that they were in order to raise capital. “Consequently, in order to pay interest, dividends and maturing note payments, Defendants resorted to using a combination of loans from outside lenders, merchant cash advances, money raised from new and existing investors, and transfers from other portfolio companies to cover obligations,” the SEC claims.

In addition to RadioShack, the accused operated Brahms, Linens ‘N Things, Modell’s, Stein Mart, and Pier 1 Imports.

Full complaint can be read here.

Is Jack Dorsey Satoshi Nakamoto? I Say Yes

September 20, 2025
Article by:

I’m the originator of the theory that Jack Dorsey is Satoshi Nakamoto, the creator of Bitcoin, which I first considered in February 2024. After extensive research, the theory has now been firmed up with incredible circumstantial evidence. I was the first person to discover that Dorsey was registered on the cypherpunk mailing list under two different email addresses, the first to recover Dorsey’s personal webpage dedicated to cryptography in 1997 (and his home page here), and basically connect all the dots that I compiled in my tweet below:

MoneyThumb and AltFinanceDaily Release Survey Findings on Fraud Trends Among Small Business Funders

September 16, 2025
Article by:

Smaller Funders Are Facing Higher Fraud Rates;
Document Falsification Emerges as Top Concern

San Diego, Calif. (September 16, 2025) – A new study conducted by MoneyThumb, a leader in automated document evaluation and fraud detection solutions, in partnership with AltFinanceDaily, a leading publication for MCAs, reveals an alarming trend in the small business lending sector: fraud is not only on the rise but is significantly impacting the cost of doing business, especially for smaller funders operating in an increasingly uncertain economic environment.

As small businesses continue to grapple with supply chain pressures, shifting tariffs, and a volatile economic outlook, lenders are seeing a direct correlation between economic strain and elevated fraud risk. When margins are tight and working capital is harder to secure, the incentive for applicants to falsify documents, or even attempt synthetic identity fraud—increases. Most of this fraud cannot be detected visually, making traditional underwriting processes insufficient on their own. This hidden risk doesn’t just weigh on the funder, it ultimately raises the cost of loans for all borrowers, including honest small business owners.

The survey polled a broad range of Merchant Cash Advance (MCA) providers, funders, and alternative lenders to assess how often they encounter tampered documents or fraudulent information during the application process. Respondents ranged from small firms processing fewer than 10 applications per month to large institutions handling over 500.

Key findings include:

  • Nearly 54% of respondents report that 2–10% of the applications they receive contain fraud.
  • Nearly 60% are “very concerned” about fraud.
  • A staggering 90% cite document falsification or forgery as the most pressing issue.
  • More than half of respondents say fraud has increased year over year.
  • Smaller funders are disproportionately affected: funders processing fewer than 100 financial applications per month report fraud in 11.8% of applications—more than double the rate reported by larger funders (5.6%).
  • 88% of funders are still reviewing documents manually, which wastes countless hours per month, is prone to human error and increases labor costs.

“Fraud is evolving just as quickly as the economy is shifting,” said Ryan Campbell, CEO of MoneyThumb. “In a time when rising tariffs and inflationary pressure are already squeezing small businesses, fraudulent applications add another layer of risk that funders can’t afford to ignore.”

Sean Murray, Founder of AltFinanceDaily, added: “Relying solely on manual review simply isn’t sustainable. The funders who embrace intelligent automation will not only reduce losses but also serve more businesses—faster and more fairly.”

Up to seven percent of revenue, billions of dollars and thousands of hours are lost every year due to fraudulent applications in the lending industry. MoneyThumb’s Thumbprint® patented technology leverages AI and advanced algorithms to identify subtle discrepancies and inconsistencies that can’t be seen manually. Over the last year, Thumbprint® has reviewed more than 10M statements and identified over 500,000 fraudulent or altered documents.

As macroeconomic uncertainty continues into Q4 2025, the report underscores the need for technology-driven solutions that can scale fraud detection without sacrificing underwriting speed or accuracy.

About MoneyThumb

MoneyThumb is an advanced automation software solution that streamlines the lending underwriting process by converting bank statements instantly into actionable data. By exponentially increasing efficiency, accuracy and the detection of fraud – MoneyThumb empowers lenders and accountants to make faster, more informed and accurate decisions. MoneyThumb is headquartered in Encinitas, California, and serves customers globally. For more information visit www.moneythumb.com.

About AltFinanceDaily

AltFinanceDaily is a leading publication covering non-bank finance, alternative lending, and fintech since 2010. It is a trusted source for insights, news, and trends in the MCA and small business lending space.

Media Contact:
Tracy Rubin
JCUTLER media group
tracy@jcmg.com

How Erica Bell of Tax Guard Won Second in The Poker Tournament

October 13, 2024
Article by:
Sean Murray, Erica Bell (Tax Guard)
Left: Sean Murray. Right: Erica Bell, Tax Guard

When the final hand of the B2B Finance Expo’s official poker tournament had concluded, Erica Bell, a Business Development Account Executive for Tax Guard, walked away with 2nd place. Bell has enjoyed poker for a long time and knows the game well. She’s even played in tournaments at the Ameristar Casino in Blackhawk, Colorado and won 1st place in one of them.

“The game’s strategy is what I truly enjoy,” Bell told AltFinanceDaily. “A couple of individuals came up to me and congratulated me [on coming in 2nd].”

Bell, who at least took home a small prize, has worked for Tax Guard for 5 and a half years. For those not familiar, “Tax Guard is a 3rd party due diligence company who provides real-time insights into hidden tax debt of individuals and businesses by retrieving and analyzing IRS data directly from the source, the IRS,” she says.

The company’s services are primarily used by commercial lenders and financial institutions to assess tax-related risks associated with borrowers. Tax Guard is widely known throughout the industry and has been frequently referenced on AltFinanceDaily. The company’s co-founder and CEO, Hansen Rada, even did a Zoom interview with AltFinanceDaily during the early lockdown era of Covid.

The company’s value is pretty straightforward, a lot of tax debt is not easily discoverable, and they’ll get the info you don’t even know you’re missing straight from the source.

“By offering earlier visibility into potential tax issues, liabilities, liens, & levies, we help our customers make more informed lending decisions and mitigate financial risks,” Bell explains.

And if there is a hidden tax issue, Tax Guard can proactively work to resolve it and even negotiate a payment plan. One downside of ignoring tax debt as a lender is having to compete with the IRS when they ultimately move to enforce collection.

Clients can use the Tax Guard portal to run reports or integrate their API right into a CRM. Other critical information can be obtained as well including a wage and income transcript from the IRS. “This includes data from W-2s, 1099s, and other income forms, as well as withholding details,” Bell says. “This data provides a comprehensive view of a taxpayer’s reported income and can be critical when assessing financial risks, resolving discrepancies and verifying financial details.”

Obviously, Bell says that anyone interested in learning more can reach out to her directly.

“My role is highly dynamic, being sales, strategic partnership and relationship focused,” Bell says. “I really enjoy working with extremely talented people at Tax Guard, meeting new folks in the finance industry and learning from their perspectives.”

She’s also apparently planning to host her own upcoming friendly poker tournament so it’s safe to say she has no intention of letting her skills get rusty.



Found on DailyFunder:

07-03-2019

Inform More, Earn More...
sean murray, president and chief editor at*altfinancedaily, makes great points about education for sales agents being paramount to their success.*if knowledgeable about the diversity of financial products, and their distinctions from one another, agents can*help customers make informed decisions, which allows them to close more deals., , *, , customers trust in the person, brand or company they are working with is...
06-07-2019

How in the WORLD!!!??...
sean murray over at altfinancedaily to do a nice piece for his magazine altfinancedaily., , this is just getting crazy!!! still waiting for approval/denial and merchant has been called 4 times already.... wwooowwwwww!!!!...
01-28-2019

Quicksilver...
sean murray would have stepped in to stop this but i guess doesnt want to hurt his bottom line...