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subject: Restaurant Capital: Getting Working Capital With A Merchant Cash Advance [print this page]


Restaurant Capital: Getting Working Capital With A Merchant Cash Advance

Restaurants are thought to be among the highest risk ventures. This makes it extremely hard for a new culinary entrepreneur to acquire necessary restaurant capital, both when opening the business and when innovation or upgrades are warranted. A merchant could wait weeks or even months to hear a peep from the traditional bank, and in the meantime, the business could possibly flounder.

An additional choice for attaining restaurant capital is a merchant loan or merchant cash advance. These financial agreements fall into the category of credit card receivables factoring. Credit card factoring is a product whereby a lender provides the merchant cash in exchange for a cheaper rate on future credit card receivables. That translates as follows: the credit card factoring lender will offer you funding in exchange for a portion of your anticipated credit card revenues in the future.

Approval is readily available within a day or two and the funds is in your possession within about 10 working days - often less. No collateral is necessary since the product is based upon future sales.

Because the pay back term is tied to actual transactions, a bad month's business doesn't require "creative bookkeeping" to keep up with a set payment amount. The one stipulation is that the small business owner must stick to the predetermined agreement or the entrepreneur can be held accountable for repayment.

The truth is that many small business owners, particularly new ones, simply cannot meet the approval conditions set forth by the traditional banking industry. This does not necessarily mean that the merchant is doing poorly or that the entrepreneur isn't reliable.

Most of the time the only issue is the fact that the business is too new and hasn't had the time to establish a lengthy history and credit rating. Acquiring restaurant capital through a merchant account factoring agreement makes good business sense in these types of situations.

by: Daniel Samoohi.




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