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MFS Global Co-founder Launches Own Brokerage

March 9, 2016
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Money on the beachCo-founder and COO of MFS Global, Robert Abramov launched his own ISO brokerage called Flow Rich Capital and departed from his role at MFS.

The new company based in Las Vegas has already signed on partners like CAN Capital. Abramov wants to keep the business small and minimal, with not more than five lenders. While he will exit from MFS Global’s day-to-day business, he will continue to hold equity and be part-owner in the company.

“He is pretty much transitioned out but he is still an active member of the executive staff,” said Tom Abramov, founder and CEO of MFS Global. “I am sure he is going to knock it out of the park and I hope he sends us deals.”

Tom added that as an older brother, he is happy that his brother is pursuing his dreams. “I know that Robert wanted to do this for long. He wanted to pursue his passion and we are wholeheartedly behind him,” he added.

For Abramov, experience working with merchants coupled with marketing experience gave him the confidence to start his own shop.  “I have fun working with merchants and clients and have been running an ISO shop for five years now,” he added.

Flow Rich is in the process of setting up a team and and building a lender database.

As the industry expands and catches the eye of the big banks, competition will continue to breed. “While competition is on the rise, it will finally weed out the smaller guys tarnishing the image of the industry with little experience,” Abramov said.

Is now a good time as any to enter the business?

Merchant Cash Advance Predictions for 2016

January 10, 2016
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merchant cash advance 2016I hate new year’s resolutions, as most of the time the people making them on January 1st have already broken them by the time January 10th comes around. The reason they’re broken quick and easy is because they aren’t goals, but rather wishful thinking. A goal is something that should fit within the S.M.A.R.T criteria, which is a goal that fits five general metrics:

  • It must be specific
  • It must be measurable
  • It must be attainable
  • It must be realistic
  • It must be time-bound, or have some sort of deadline established

In other words, you don’t just randomly set goals, a goal has to first be done based upon critical thought, research, opportunity analysis and an examination of realistic outcomes, from there you set your objectives along with the step-by-step procedures to achieve them. Once this is done, you slap a deadline on each step-by-step procedure and continue to track your progression along the way.

I don’t set new year’s resolutions, I set new year goals and objectives. My goals and objectives for 2016 (in relation to our industry), will be based upon my predictions for the following 12 months. What do I see in my crystal ball for the year of 2016? This article will pinpoint my forecasts for our landscape this year. Some of you might agree and some of you might disagree, but nevertheless, these predictions ought to create a lot of quality discussion and debate.

“THE BIGGEST” WILL CONTINUE TO BE “THE BADDEST”

I’ve talked about the future of our industry before, with the belief that Strategic Networks will be the key going forward in terms of market dominance. These networks include the Center of Influence Network, the Mom and Pop Network and the Online Network. The Center of Influence Network includes other professionals such as banks, credit unions, merchant processors, etc., who have direct access to the prospective clients. The Mom and Pop Network is just a collection of random brokers from across the country that resell on a 100% commission basis. The Online Network is that of technology automation, especially the internet and how it will shape the market going forward in terms of communications, new lead generation, and more.

Well, the biggest funders on AltFinanceDaily’s Official Business Financing Leaderboard will continue to dominate the industry in 2016, taking more market share and growing the market in general, based on their efficient utilization of Strategic Networks.

PRICING PRESSURE WILL INCREASE AND COMMISSIONS WILL DECREASE, ACROSS THE BOARD

For higher paper grade deals, I believe that the pressure on pricing for A+ Paper, A Paper and B Paper clients will continue to increase, which will cause many funders and lenders to just stop competing for them (due to no longer being able to compete), while others will find innovative ways to reduce their operational costs so they can reduce down their buy rates, passing the lower costs onto these clients to compete against alternatives from the traditional lending system or P2P lenders. This entire process might also cause the commissions for these higher paper grade deals to decrease as well.

C Paper, D Paper and E Paper commissions will go down as well, as most of the new funders and lenders will target these paper grades due to not being able to compete in the high paper grade markets. Due to the increased amount of players, this will put pressure on pricing which will have brokers slicing their commissions even for the lower credit graded merchants.

TO HELP COMBAT PRICING PRESSURES, MORE PRIVATE FUNDERS WILL WELCOME SYNDICATES

More private funders and lenders will offer syndication programs for their brokers, and do so in a much more efficient, streamlined and transparent way than most of the other syndication partners are doing currently. This will help reduce the risk for a lot of these private funders and lenders, which would assist in bringing down their pricing across the board, helping them stay competitive in a marketplace where new competitors will cause merchants to put more pressure on pricing.

MORE FUNDERS WILL RESTRICT BROKER ACCESS

You will see more funders and lenders start to restrict their working relationship with new brokers. Basically, instead of just signing up anybody with a pulse, I believe more funders and lenders will actually vet new brokers they are considering partnering with. This will come as a result of the funders getting fed up of dealing with unscrupulous acts, fraud and other actions from these new and/or rogue brokers, which does nothing but hurt their brand and online reputation.

FUNDERS AND LENDERS WILL FIGHT BACK AGAINST STACKING

More funders and lenders will fight back against stacking by doing as I suggested before, which is to add a page to their Funding Agreement that says if the merchant stacks, then the merchant is liable for additional fee such as $5,000 or $10,000 per stack. This is similar to how on the merchant services side, early termination fees (ETFs) are used so merchants stop switching their merchant accounts over every month to try and save “$5.” In addition, I believe more funders and lenders will just stop filing UCCs altogether unless they are filed only on merchants that breach their contracts. This means that those new funders who specialize in “stacking”, might have to come up with a new model, as these updated practices will make it so that they will have a difficult time finding new “clients” to market to.

THE MAJORITY OF NEW ENTRANTS WILL BE SLAUGHTERED

You will continue to see new brokers, funders and lenders enter the market, with many of the funders/lenders being nothing but brokers in secret who seek to backdoor deals. Nevertheless, most of these new entrants will be slaughtered in terms of burning through their savings and capital on outdated marketing strategies or trying to compete within Strategic Networks that are already dominated by the biggest funders/lenders/brokers in the marketplace. Most of these companies will be fly-by-night companies, exiting the market as fast as they came running in.

UCC RECORDS WILL STILL BE POUNDED

I believe the UCC as a marketing tool will continue to be utilized by most of the newer entrants, despite the fact that the UCC Boom is Over.

BACK-DOORING WILL SIGNIFICANTLY DECREASE

Back-dooring will decrease significantly as brokers smarten up by researching the partners they decide to work with beforehand, and not just sending over ISO Agreements to “anybody” that calls them up and says they might be able to do something for their deals that other funders can’t do. Also, brokers will stop functioning as a sub-broker as well, which makes no sense, and this will also assist with bringing down the back-dooring issue. The heart of the back-dooring issue is the broker’s laziness, it is their laziness in properly vetting the partners they choose to work with, as well as deciding to sub-broker on a deal instead of researching the players in the marketplace on their own so they have adequate platforms available for any type of merchant they receive.

INDUSTRY WIDE REGULATION WILL GET CLOSER

While we can pinpoint that this is already going on in California, I believe you will continue to see some type of industry wide regulation that will restrict access to new brokers and seek certain levels of ethics from current brokers. This might be from within the industry itself, or it might be forced upon us from some type of regulatory agency. I’m hoping we can do this ourselves and not bring in the Government.

MARKETPLACE LENDING AS A WHOLE WILL CONTINUE TO GROW

It’s been estimated that we will see over $100 billion globally in marketplace lending (consumer and commercial side) in 2016, and I agree with this metric. I believe our products will gain more mainstream attention and be accepted more as the “standard” rather than an “alternative”, based on the efficiency of how we deliver capital, versus the extensive and inefficient process of the traditional lending system.

Fundera Raises $11.5 Million

September 17, 2015
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newsNEW YORK–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Fundera, the online credit marketplace for small businesses, today announced an $11.5 million Series B funding round led by Susquehanna Growth Equity with participation from previous investors including QED Investors, Khosla Ventures and First Round Capital, bringing the company’s total funding to date to $15 million.

Since the most recent financial crisis, small business owners have been underserved by traditional banks with small business loans down from their pre-recession high. As a result, they have been forced to turn to online lenders to find the capital they need to grow. The majority of small business loans originated by online lenders are sourced through predatory offline loan brokers who engage in deceptive practices and take exorbitant fees to market certain lenders over others, driving up the cost of loans to borrowers. This unethical behavior takes advantage of small business owners, often putting them into loans that they do not fully understand or cannot reasonably repay.

America’s small business owners deserve better. Fundera was created to disrupt the loan broker ecosystem and make the process of getting a small business loan as transparent, fair and accountable as possible. Fundera utilizes software to create a seamless common application which enables borrowers to apply to multiple pre-screened lenders in a matter of minutes, clearly presenting funding options while encouraging competition among lenders. Fundera’s customer success team acts as an impartial advocate on behalf of borrowers and the company produces content to educate and allow borrowers to make informed financing decisions. Additionally, this past August, Fundera helped lead the creation of a Small Business Borrowers’ Bill of Rights that brought together a coalition of major industry players with the goal of eliminating predatory lending, and which is quickly becoming the gold standard for fairness in online lending.

Fundera will use this latest round of funding to accelerate its mission of making small business lending more transparent and helping small business owners grow through the responsible use of credit. The company plans to expand its team of dedicated loan specialists and engineers, develop and refine its borrower experience, and continue to build new products that help empower borrowers to choose the best loan for their business.

“Everyday throughout America small businesses which represent the lifeblood of our economy are being taken advantage of by online lenders and brokers,” said Fundera founder and CEO, Jared Hecht. “By creating a transparent marketplace that lays out a small business owners’ loan options and empowers them with tools to choose the best option for their business, Fundera is revolutionizing how small business owners access credit while creating a software solution that is disrupting the loan broker industry.”

Susquehanna Growth Equity shares the company’s passion for empowering consumers and affecting structural changes in the financial space. Scott Feldman, Managing Director at Susquehanna Growth Equity and newly appointed member of Fundera’s Board of Directors, echoes this sentiment: “At Susquehanna, we look for holistic teams that demonstrate true passion for their mission. As early investors in Credit Karma, we understand the Fundera model and have experience in helping companies transform areas of credit and financial services that empower consumers to win.”

Small business credit is one of the few industries where the Internet has had minimal impact when it comes to empowering borrowers and providing them the buying power they need to come out on top, and Fundera is bringing that change to small businesses nation-wide.

Fundera launched in February 2014 and has established itself as the most-trusted online marketplace for small business owners. To date, Fundera has helped secure over $60 million in credit to more than 1,200 small business owners across the country in industries including retail, restaurants, and creative contractors. The company is based in New York City.

About Fundera

Fundera is the most-trusted online marketplace that connects small business owners with the best funding providers for their businesses by working with prescreened lenders to assemble the highest quality funding sources. Fundera was co-founded in 2013 by GroupMe co-founder Jared Hecht and successful software entrepreneur Rohan Deshpande to bring transparency, accountability, and fairness to the online lending industry at large. The company has raised $15 million from Susquehanna Growth Equity, QED Investors, Khosla Ventures, First Round Capital, Lerer Ventures, SV Angel, and angel investors Aaron Levie, Scott Belsky, Strauss Zelnick, Rob Wiesenthal, David Rosenblatt and David Tisch, and is based in New York City. To learn more or get started on a loan application, please visit www.fundera.com.

About Susquehanna Growth Equity

Susquehanna Growth Equity, LLC (SGE) invests in growth stage technology companies in the software, information services, internet and financial technology sectors. The firm is backed by a unique and patient capital base that allows management teams the freedom and flexibility to maximize growth. Notable prior investments in marketplace companies include CreditKarma (financial management platform with 40 million members), BStock Solutions (overstock inventory liquidation marketplace) and Globaltranz (marketplace for transportation services). To learn more, please visit us at www.sgep.com.

Contacts
Brew Media Relations
Ashley Hopkins, 646-517-7544
fundera@brewpr.com

On Deck Capital IPO, An Insider’s Perspective

August 16, 2014
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It was August 23, 2011, the day the Virginia Earthquake could be felt all the way up in New York City. The four of us were enjoying outdoor seating at a restaurant on the Upper East Side. The ground shook, my drink spilled and Ace looked at each one of us and said, “Okay so I’m putting you down for five deals this month.” OnDeck Capital’s relationship managers were aggressive. If you were a small Independent Sales Organization (ISO), they didn’t expect to get all of your dealflow so they roped you in little by little. It was hard to say no. If five deals was too much, Ace would say three and if three was too much, then he’d put you down for three anyway. Zero was not in the cards. OnDeck owned a specific niche and if you didn’t send your premium credit clients to them, then any ISOs you were competing against would. That was a death knell in those days. Just a few years earlier I would’ve shrugged them off, but public sentiment was changing. Merchants were embracing the fixed daily payment methodology and the merchant cash advance industry would never be the same.

OnDeck Capital is now going public. Will you buy stock?

ondeck capital ipoI’m in a unique position to discuss OnDeck. I started my career in this industry before they even existed. I’ve competed against them as an underwriter at a rival firm, worked with them as a referral partner when I was in sales, and covered them in my capacity as Chief Editor of an industry trade publication.

I left my post as Merchant Cash & Capital’s Director of Underwriting in late 2008. I was 25, about a year or two older than the average employee in the industry. Several of MCC’s rivals got demolished in the financial crisis but OnDeck wasn’t one of them. They also weren’t much of a competitor either. Struggling to define themselves as the anti-merchant cash advance, their product ran counter to the spirit of the industry’s rise. The single biggest allure of a merchant cash advance wasn’t that it was easy to obtain but that there was no fixed repayment term. The funds came with a pre-determined net cost but no specific date on when the delivery of future sales would be due.

Outsiders like the news media aren’t exactly sure what separates merchant cash advance from OnDeck except for maybe the cost of funds. Cash advance just sounds expensive, doesn’t it?

Outsiders identify the company by three characteristics.

1. They’re a non-bank business lender
2. They’re more expensive than a bank
3. They’re a tech company

These bullet points gloss over the fact that OnDeck’s loans require payments to be made every day. Can you imagine a credit card company forcing you to send a payment every day of the month? Or your landlord asking for rent on the 1st of the month, the 2nd, the 3rd, 4th, 5th, and so on every day until your lease is up?

This is not to say that this system is necessarily bad for borrowers, but that it is quite possibly the most unique and important part of what makes OnDeck different. It’s their secret sauce. It is why OnDeck gets lumped in with merchant cash advance companies in many conversations. OnDeck and the legion of copycats they have spawned are part of a broader industry that includes merchant cash advance companies. I call them daily funders. Daily funders provide financing on the condition that payments are made daily. I don’t call them daily lenders because traditional merchant cash advance products are not made by lenders, but by a unique group of investors that purchase future revenue streams.

Transition

Under company founder Mitch Jacobs, OnDeck had established themselves as the de facto loan option.

The merchant’s not biting on merchant cash advance? Send it to OnDeck. The merchant doesn’t accept credit cards? Send it to OnDeck.

They were every merchant cash advance ISO’s frenemy. They’d solicit you for your deals and then throw you under the bus to journalists as evil purveyors of expensive financing. They needed us to source dealflow and we needed them to maximize closing ratios but neither was quite satisfied with the arrangement.

When the company’s first employee took over as CEO in June 2012, the rhetoric changed. While still happy to be portrayed as the anti-merchant cash advance, OnDeck transformed their image from a niche Wall Street lender to a Silicon Valley-esque tech company. Noah Breslow was a curious choice. He has a BS from MIT and an MBA from Harvard Business School. He’s tall, charismatic, and he introduced vocabulary words such as algorithm to an industry that relied entirely on manual human underwriting.

At a recent lending conference, the younger crowd characterized Breslow as the Steve Jobs of business loans. He commands a cult-like following inside and outside the company, and in 2013 was embraced by New York City’s Mayor Bloomberg.

Breslow fast tracked OnDeck. With only $43 million raised in the first 5 years, the company went on to raise more than $300 million in the first 24 months under Breslow’s leadership.

This was their plan all along

In November 2012, OnDeck entertained a buyout offer from UK-based payday lender Wonga in which they reportedly received a $250 million valuation. The deal fell apart in the late stages but at the time I believed the negotiations were all a ploy for OnDeck to get a true market valuation. With a solid offer on the table, they knew both where they stood and where they needed to go. Last week the WSJ reported that preliminary IPO discussions valued them at $1.5 billion, six times higher than where they were two years ago.

With stock options being offered to new employees at least as far back as 2012, the plan to go public should come as no surprise. Later this year, those employees may actually get to do something very few startup workers ever get to do, convert those options into real shares.

So will OnDeck ride off into the sunset of billion dollar bliss? Not so fast say several industry insiders, some of whom are itching to short the stock on the first day they can.

smoke and mirrorsSmoke and mirrors?

As OnDeck took advantage of the swing in public consensus (that fixed terms were better and lower costs increased the attactiveness ), insiders began to ask an important question. Why weren’t merchant cash advance companies collectively countering with lower prices to remain competitive? Greed was fingered by journalists especially in the wake of the financial crisis. But greed is a weak prerogative if you consider that merchant cash advance companies were filing for bankruptcy left and right in 2009.

And oddly or perhaps even ominously, an entire segment of merchant cash advance companies began to raise their prices just as OnDeck was lowering theirs. When I wrote The Fork in the Merchant Cash Advance Road in April 2011, I said:

While the margins earned on high credit accounts shrank, funding providers were dealing with another challenge simultaneously, defaults. Whether the business owner intentionally interfered with their credit card processing or the store went out of business altogether, bad debt in the MCA world was mounting…FAST!

Risk was and still is the number one reason that merchant cash advances cost so much. While it’s true that OnDeck serviced higher credit businesses, insiders speculated that the spreads were too thin. For years, OnDeck’s merchant cash advance competitors have doubted the soundness of their model.

long vs. shortIt’s a debate that continues even to this day and yet OnDeck has secured hundreds of millions in investments from companies like Google Ventures, Goldman Sachs, Peter Thiel, and Fortress Investment Group. Their notes got an investment grade rating from DBRS. And as far as volume is concerned, they have likely eclipsed the industry’s all time reigning giant CAN Capital. If they had reached none of these milestones, OnDeck would have little credibility to convince critics of their sanity.

With a mountain of circumstantial evidence through big name backing in OnDeck’s favor, it seems to be indicative that the skeptics are wrong. But maybe they’re not. Could their model be both seriously flawed and superior at the same time?

It’s all about eyeballs

Going back to the 1990s, Internet companies have been judged, valued, and made famous by the price of eyeballs and the number of site visits. It’s a measure that’s never disappeared and according to USA Today is making a comeback. And while OnDeck Capital has always been based in New York City, true to their Silicon Valley form, their model has been to conquer market share first eyeballsand take on profitability second. In their case, it’s not eyeballs or site visits, it’s loan origination volume.

Five months ago Breslow was quoted in the WSJ as saying OnDeck is “imminently profitable“. With seven years in business, it’s proof that their critics have been right all along, that their model doesn’t make money.

What scares their competitors though, is that this strategy has been intentional. Very few if any players in the industry have had the luxury, guts, or the purse to lose money for seven years as part of a coup to conquer the market. Disbelievers in this long term wildly risky strategy are salivating at the opportunity to inspect the company’s financial statements in the IPO.

In When Will the Bubble Burst?, RapidAdvance CEO Jeremy Brown, whose company became part of the Quicken Loans family last winter, fired shots at OnDeck, “To accomplish high growth rates, which may be driven by a desire or need for an IPO or to raise investment or to sell to private equity, assets are being overpaid for through higher than economically justified commissions (I’ve heard 12-15 points upfront from the more aggressive companies) and stretch the repayment term of the MCA or loan even further (On Deck24, I am talking about you).”

Insiders testify that OnDeck’s strategy has not so much been about lower costs but about growth at all costs. Among the evidence is the sudden removal of an industry-wide practice of verifying the business owner is current on their rent. Repayment terms are getting stretched out, commissions have shot up, and for a while they ran a program that allowed applicants to get funding with the submission of just a single bank statement.

Merchant cash advance companies look at their own default figures and scoff at the notion that OnDeck’s aggressive practices could produce low single digit defaults as they’ve publicly claimed.

Imminent

imminentThrough it all, there remains the fact that OnDeck has never claimed their methodologies to be profitable, at least not yet. Red ink at IPO time might reward their detractors with a certain delicious satisfaction, but what will they say if and when they become profitable?

I’m reminded of The 20 Smartest Things Amazon Founder Jeff Bezos ever said. Below is a few of them.

  • “There are two kinds of companies: Those that work to try to charge more and those that work to charge less. We will be the second.”
  • “Your margin is my opportunity.”
  • “We’ve done price elasticity studies, and the answer is always that we should raise prices. We don’t do that, because we believe — and we have to take this as an article of faith — that by keeping our prices very, very low, we earn trust with customers over time, and that that actually does maximize free cash flow over the long term.”
  • “If you never want to be criticized, for goodness’ sake don’t do anything new.”
  • “Invention requires a long-term willingness to be misunderstood. You do something that you genuinely believe in, that you have conviction about, but for a long period of time, well-meaning people may criticize that effort. When you receive criticism from well-meaning people, it pays to ask, ‘Are they right?’ And if they are, you need to adapt what they’re doing. If they’re not right, if you really have conviction that they’re not right, you need to have that long-term willingness to be misunderstood. It’s a key part of invention.”

I wonder if the executive team at OnDeck would share these philosophies.

They’ve always claimed themselves to be a tech company, much to the bewilderment of their competitors. Will technology come through for them?

The data available on businesses has changed. Bank statements and a credit report might’ve been all there was to go on when the company first started, but in Automated Intelligence Breslow said, “the fact is most businesses operating today, in 2014, are already technology focused to one degree or another. They have computers, they have online banking, they use credit card processors, their customers are reviewing them online, there are public records, etc. All this electronic data helps paint a deeper and more accurate picture of the health of a business.”

OnDeck Capital featured on a PBS Special

With such easy access to important data, it might be possible that through the use of 2,000 data points, OnDeck doesn’t need to do all the manual investigations that their competitors still place high values on. The available data might be able to predict loan repayment success just as well as a human analyst.

And if that’s true, then they can reduce the cost of overhead as they scale. As their predictive algorithms get fed more data, they might be able to eliminate humans altogether. At the May 2014 LendIt conference, Breslow admitted that 30% of their loans were still manually underwritten but said that “if customers want full automation, we are prepared to deliver it.”

By that charge, a sustainable model should not be that far out of reach. Through advanced data analysis and decreasing fixed costs, profitability may indeed be imminent.

Winner

If the story of the merchant cash advance industry has been a race to the top, then OnDeck might be declared the winner in a successful IPO. It would be an ironic achievement for the company that positioned itself as the anti-merchant cash advance. In their wake today are hundreds of daily funders offering fixed payment products.

everybody wins?OnDeck’s critics are in a paradoxical position because a successful IPO is good for them too. They want to believe OnDeck’s model never worked, can’t work, and have it be proven a failure. But if it goes the other way, the legitimacy of the daily funder universe will be solidified in the mainstream. What’s good for the goose is good for the gander.

As AmeriMerchant CEO David Goldin said to Inc, “the OnDeck IPO shows that Wall Street is now taking this industry seriously.”

So does that mean he’d buy stock? Somewhere out there at a restaurant in New York City, an OnDeck relationship manager is probably putting Goldin down for five shares.

Cue the earthquake, the industry will never be the same.


Curious how it will change it exactly? Read my magazine published prediction, The Retail Investor.

Access to Capital – A Dose of Reality

June 15, 2014
Article by:

So much for a lack of transparency… While sitting directly next to Maria Contreras-Sweet, the head of the Small Business Administration, OnDeck Capital’s CEO corrected U.S. Senator Cory Booker’s comments about the APR of their loans. High teens? Not so, said Noah Breslow who explained their average 6 month loan has an APR of 60% even while costing only 15 cents on the dollar.

Why is access to capital so expensive? Rob Frohwein, the CEO of Kabbage said that up until recently his company was borrowing funds at a net rate of more than 20% APR. In order to turn a profit, they had to lend at a rate much higher than that.


The Access to Capital small business panel included:
Maria Contreras-Sweet – Head of the U.S. Small Business Administration
Noah Breslow – CEO, OnDeck Capital
Rohit Arora – CEO, Biz2Credit
David Nayor – CEO, BoeFly
Rob Frohwein – CEO, Kabbage
Paul Quintero – CEO, Accion East
Rohan Matthew – CEO, Intersect Fund
Jonny Price – Senior Director, Kiva Zip
Jeff Bogan – SVP, LendingClub
Steve Allocca – Global Head of Credit, PayPal
Jay Savulich – Managing Director of Programs, Rising Tide Capital

Why I’m An Evangelist…. For Outside Accounting Firms in MCA

November 9, 2023
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David Roitblat is the founder and CEO of Better Accounting Solutions, an accounting firm based in New York City, and a leading authority in specialized accounting for merchant cash advance companies. To connect with David or schedule a call about working with Better Accounting Solutions, email david@betteraccountingsolutions.com.

inspecting booksFor over a decade, since the explosion of the merchant cash advance industry in the United States, my team and I at Better Accounting Solutions have been working with a growing number of people and businesses involved in the industry, including brokers, funders, syndicators and investors. We’ve spent time meeting and mingling with you at industry events like Broker Fair and spent more hours talking on the phone advising you than we can bill for.

All this experience has led me to one conclusion, one reinforced the longer we work together with many of you: to thrive and be successful in the merchant cash advance industry, you need a third-party independent financial expert embedded in your business and books.

To declare the obvious context and biases up front: yes, this benefits businesses like mine and yes, I know this from working with many of you. But people become knowledgeable and experts in their own field that they’ve spent years studying and developing, which is why I feel qualified to discuss this.

In the ever-evolving world of merchant cash advance and its challenging relationship with transparency and ethics, trust with your business partners is a must.

Having independent third-party financial experts that report to both parties-for example between a funder and their syndicators- is the only way to ensure complete transparency without bias or conflict. It eliminates the possibility of the funder misappropriating the syndicator’s investment and skimming off what the investors are owed. Firms like ours excel in tracking the numbers to see the deals that are working and the ones that aren’t, and can demonstrate what is trending down to stop a bad deal from spiraling into a company-killing problem.

People often choose to rely on a single in-house accountant to manage their books because they want exclusive focus, but there are plenty of downsides to that as well. Not only are accountants hired from another corporate job rarely equipped to accurately track deals in the complicated world of cash advance, but they are also incentivized to make their reports as favorable as they can to their own company, which may scare syndicators and investors whom they have no obligations to. By outsourcing these critical functions to a specialized firm, MCA funders send a clear message to investors and syndicators: they take financial accountability seriously and they are a trustworthy and transparent business to work with, with open books for their partners to peer in.

Industry scandals that bring our profession into disrepute- such as the collapses of MJ Capital Funding, LLC and 1 Global Capital– were able to happen because the investors pouring money into what they thought were legitimate MCA businesses weren’t given access to the companies books until it was too late and hundreds of millions of dollars were forever lost.

Obviously, you should be wise about people’s motives, even mine as the author of this article, but you should also take every piece of advice into consideration, particularly one that objectively suggests measures that fosters and promote trust and better business growth practices.

Remember, in the world of finance, trust is the most valuable asset of all.

Protecting Your Syndicated MCA Investments

August 24, 2023
Article by:

David Roitblat is the founder and CEO of Better Accounting Solutions, an accounting firm based in New York City, and a leading authority in specialized accounting for merchant cash advance companies.

To connect with David or schedule a call about working with Better Accounting Solutions, email david@betteraccountingsolutions.com.

An increasingly popular way for merchant cash advances businesses to raise capital is by offering syndicated deals. In theory, this structure is simple to understand and fulfill the terms of: in these scenarios, investors put a percentage of the funded deal and get a percentage of the returns. But, as we all know, our industry is dynamic and has inherent risks, and safeguarding one’s hard-earned investments takes on paramount importance.

We saw the pitfalls in the cases of MJ Capital Funding, LLC and 1 Global Capital, along with more recent cases earlier this year, where investors were fleeced of hundreds of millions of dollars that they invested into what they thought were legitimate MCA funding companies.

What happened there is unfortunately investors did not see or understand the importance of having a third party reporting back to the investors and syndicators about how their investment was going, and were misled until it was too late.

So how can investors protect their investments in syndicated MCA deals?

magnifying glass businessKnow Where Your Money Is Going

Let’s start with the first thing you can do.

The landscape of MCAs is marred by tales of deceitful entities posing as legitimate funding companies, leaving investors and syndicators in dire financial straits when they are left to hold the bag.

From the outset, it is essential to ensure that the funds committed find their way into the intended bank account- one that is owned by the same entity as the MCA actually funding the merchants. The need for this is underscored by the unfortunate prevalence of fraudulent actors diverting funds to different accounts under deceptive entities. This manipulation obscures the money trail, making it harder to track and detect financial malfeasance, and leave investor funds vulnerable to exploitation.

Vigilance through Allocation Monitoring

To protect your investment against malicious machinations, it is crucial to exercise stringent vigilance and monitor your funds.

If one’s investment is tied to a specific percentage of MCA deals, a diligent verification process is necessary to confirm that the funds contributed align precisely with these deals. Ensuring the MCA business has a quality and comprehensive reporting and CRM system will provide a transparent window into the balance and distribution of funds across each deal. This transparency not only empowers investors but also safeguards their interests against any misallocation.

Additionally, investors should ask about and pay attention to when their portion of the syndication was added to a deal, to make sure you haven’t been added to a bad deal only once they have already started bouncing payments.

Finally, suppose the CRM system shows an available balance on your syndication for a certain amount. In that case, you can talk to the MCA funder about ensuring they always have that amount or more available in their bank account. If the available balance in the MCA’s bank account is less than your available liquid balance then essentially the funder is borrowing (and risking) your funds to fund deals without you benefitting.

Navigating Default Deception

Another way scammers try to fleece syndicators is by telling them deals that they have invested in have defaulted. Through shrewd tactics such as rerouting default payments to alternative accounts or manipulating reporting mechanisms, deceptive entities can evade investor scrutiny and keep their money.

To counteract these tactics, a collaborative partnership with a transparent and independent accounting firm is indispensable. This partnership acts as a source of clarity for both parties: unraveling intricate payment webs and ensuring that defaults are tracked while investors receive accurate insights into their investments’ actual performance that cannot be manipulated by the unscrupulous funder.

A Solution…

The scale of risks are glaringly evident. So what can you do about it?

The message is clear: vigilance is paramount. Minor inconsistencies can snowball into severe financial pitfalls, making it imperative to maintain an unwavering, watchful eye.

But it’s difficult for syndicators to do that, both because they have limited insights as syndicators and because they have their own jobs to worry about without the added stress.

That’s why Better Accounting Solutions encourages all our clients in the merchant cash advance industry to employ this protective framework:

When we come onboard to do accounting for business or investors, we encourage both parties to obtain explicit consent from MCA entities to share all information with the syndicator. Without formal authorization, firms like Better Accounting Solutions are legally bound from sharing crucial information. Trust and transparency rests upon this explicit approval, serving as the conduit for open dialogues and proactive measures. With this permission granted, the accountants can regularly produce independent and up-to-date reports ensuring both parties are on the same page and share a mutual trust. That’s the benefit of third party oversight: nothing is happening in the dark, without anyone’s knowledge.

Encouraging and working towards an honest merchant cash advance industry is a virtue that safeguards investments, draws more investors, and bolsters the credibility of our entire industry.

Par Funding, Receiver Continue to Spar Over Its MCA Business

December 18, 2020
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“From inception through 2019, [Par Funding] incurred a cash loss from operations of $136.2 million.”

That’s the conclusion reached by Bradley D. Sharp, CEO of Development Specialists Inc (DSI), the financial advisor to the Receiver appointed in the Par SEC case.

Par has scoffed at the Receiver’s analysis of its business. “We do not necessarily begrudge attorneys, whose skill sets are often in other areas, a potential inability to understand the math that often makes for a strong and profitable financial model,” Par’s lawyers wrote in an October court filing. “There is a reason that smart, mathematically inclined people are typically hired by banks, hedge funds and financial services firms. But the Receiver and his counsel’s inability to understand Par’s business has led to all manner of baseless accusations that are easily answered in the very documents they possess but do not understand…”

Par says it was profitable and walks the Court throught its mathematical process. Sharp says Par’s assessment “is misleading and does not reflect actual operations at the company.”

Sharp alludes to Ponzi-like characteristics but refrains from using that term. “From inception through 2019, [Par] paid $231 million to investors, consisting of principal repayments totaling $135.6 million and interest payments totaling $95.4 million. [Par] could not have made these principal and interest payments to the investors without additional funds from the investors.”

Par explained that the key to its business is in the compounding:

“The merchant funding model is profitable because merchant funding returns are reinvested, either in a new or different merchant, or in an existing merchant with adequate receivables as a consolidation, or as a refinance of a merchant which may already have MCA funding from another provider. And the reinvestment begins on the merchant funding returns which commence immediately and occur daily. In very simple form, the math works as follows. Assuming $10,000 is funded to a merchant pursuant to a funding agreement providing for a funding return of $13,000 over the course of 100 daily ACH withdrawals, the agreement would provide for repayment to begin immediately with daily payments of $130. As those monies are returned, portions are used to pay operating expenses, but most of the monies are re-invested to fund other merchants. Mathematically, this means that the original $10,000 is being used to fund more than one merchant. Over the life of a single $10,000 funding, that same $10,000 can be used to fund multiple merchants, all of whom are paying funding fees in excess of the principal amount received. Thus, the original $10,000, at a 1.30 factor rate, generates $13,000 on the first merchant cash advance (MCA). Those funds are reinvested and generate $16,900 on the second MCA, and $21,970 by the third MCA – an increase of $11,970 over and above the initial $10,000. And that can happen within a year. This is the powerful compounding effect of the financial model.

That is the simplest version of the model. In practice, the model is far more sophisticated than that because the leveraging to new merchants of the MCA returns begins as soon as the MCA payments come in.”

Par additionally said:

“At the conference on October 8, 2020, the Receiver’s counsel told this Court, and many investors, that out of $1.5 million received per day from merchants prior to July 28, 2020, $1.2 million was used for new MCA funding. Thus, according to the Receiver’s counsel, only $300,000 constituted net collections, about 20%. The Receiver’s counsel appears to be suggesting that the company is not holding on to receivables but, instead, is refunding the same merchants 80% of receipts. This proposition is wrong and its assertion shows that the Receiver and his counsel do not understand the MCA business.”

One could assess that a large element of this case consists of the Receiver being like, ha! well look at this! and Par responding, well, yes, that is actually how our business works.

In fact, that is precisely the angle Par took in defending its use of funding new deals with money collected from deals previously funded.

“First, the numbers show that collections are used to fund new MCA deals,” Par’s attorneys wrote. “This may come as a total surprise to the Receiver and his counsel, but funding merchants is the business of Par. That is like criticizing Ford Motor Corp. for using its car sales income to build and sell more cars.”

Both sides agree that Par advanced over $1 billion to small businesses but Sharp says that “reloads” distorted the numbers.

“Use of reloads escalates the obligations of the merchant as each reload adds an additional ‘factor’ along with any new funds advanced,” Sharp wrote. “In [one example the reloaded funds are] subject to the factor twice; once when the funds were originally sent and again when they are included in the reload advance. The use of reloads also significantly distorts the calculation of loss rates as the advances are simply refinanced without becoming a loss.”

Sharp concludes that the true end result for Par is a much higher default rate than it lets on to.



And then there’s this

Sharp has repeatedly brought attention to a list of merchants with unusual payment and funding activity. Par countered by saying there are good explanations for each.

Amongst all of this is that company insiders are alleged to have received tens of millions in payments from Par and the Receiver is confident, in part due to DSI’s report, that Par was majorly unprofitable.

“Based on our review to date, it is apparent that [Par] would not have been able to continue to provide payments to investors, or to continue to operate, without additional funds from investors,” Sharp wrote in a December 13th report.

This case is not the first rodeo for Sharp and DSI in the merchant cash advance business. They were also assigned to manage the 1 Global Capital case.

The case is ongoing. The Court recently approved a motion to expand the Receivership estate.