What Is The Principle Behind Business Merchant Cash Advances? – Click Here For Info!
Merchant Cash Advances works in the same manner as that of invoice factoring. The process of invoice factoring involves selling of sales ledger or a specific part of the sales ledger to a group of lenders or individual lender. It provides immediate cash to the company and the sales lender gets paid when the pending ledger invoices of the company are settled.
With business funding, the business sells its revenue stream that will be received by future credit card receipts against the business. The process starts by evaluation of sales from credit cards for a given period of time and a certain portion of this amount is paid to the owner as cash advance. The lender receives the money from those sales after they are made.
In both of these cases, there is a fee involved depending on the amount of cash advance which is charged by the lender. Depending upon the terms of the agreement, fee amount and other costs vary accordingly. The rate of interests depends on the level of risk and flexibility offered from the funding group.
Read The Interesting Snippets Below For Exciting Merchant Cash Advance News!
Asia Day Ahead: China diplomacy, factories in focus
– http://www.reuters.com/USVideoBusiness
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Political risk can't dim Southeast Asia's allure: Jim Walker
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Breakingviews: Brace for trouble in China's property market
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DealBook: After Fed, Bernanke Offers His Wisdom, for a Big Fee
– http://nytimes.com/ny
Ben S. Bernanke, the former chairman of the Federal Reserve, is poised to make millions of dollars from speaking engagements this year.DealBook: Pfizer’s Latest Offer Divides Some of Largest Shareholders in AstraZeneca
– http://nytimes.com/ny
The British asset manager Schroders said it was disappointed with AstraZeneca’s “quick rejection” of Pfizer’s latest takeover bid and urged the company to resume merger discussions.DealBook: Credit Suisse Investors Shrug Off Tax Plea
– http://nytimes.com/ny
Brady Dougan, the bank’s chief executive, said Credit Suisse took full responsibility for its actions, but said the bank had “found no instances where clients cannot do business with us.”Microsoft doubles down on devices
– http://www.reuters.com/USVideoBusiness
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10 million Americans still under water on mortgages-Zillow
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Mayor Bill de Blasio’s solution in his contract with New York teachers was to promise retroactive pay now and pay it later. States and cities routinely fudge the numbers like this.
The government’s concern with minimizing the collateral consequences for Credit Suisse almost gives the impression that this was a guilty plea without all the guilt.
An emergency room doctor lists common, yet avoidable injuries from outdoor activities like gardening, hiking, swimming and lighting up the grill.
The construction cranes that have surrounded the World Trade Center will soon be gone, and retail centers will take their place.
While patients may prefer doctors like them — in terms of race, gender or weight — it is unclear whether such pairings improve health outcomes.
The case against Credit Suisse signaled a shift in federal prosecutors’ approach to Wall Street, potentially laying the groundwork for other banks to plead guilty.
AstraZeneca on Monday rejected Pfizer’s latest — and, according to the American pharmaceutical giant, its final — takeover bid. The offer, made Sunday evening, was worth about $119 billion.
Brady W. Dougan is a low-key Midwesterner who drives a Prius. He is also the chief executive of the first very large bank to be criminally convicted in decades.
An emergency room doctor lists common, yet avoidable injuries from outdoor activities like gardening, hiking, swimming and lighting up the grill.
In heart surgery, a patient’s own red blood cells may be a better choice than blood transfusion.
Britain does not have as many takeover defenses as the United States, so it is puzzling why Pfizer did not make a full-fledged hostile bid for AstraZeneca, Steven M. Davidoff writes in the Deal Professor column.
Lounges not directly affiliated with an airline are common outside the United States, but the independent concept has started to catch on.
The noted investor and entrepreneur discusses the valley’s investment climate, his faith in virtual reality and digital currency — and his long tweets.
The American drug giant Pfizer has made an offer worth $119 billion in what it said was a final effort to bring the British drug maker AstraZeneca to the table for deal talks.
The lack of decorum in Jill Abramson’s dismissal from The Times was stunning, David Carr writes.
Under the terms of the deal, AT&T will pay about $95 a share in stock and cash to acquire the country’s biggest satellite television operator.
AT&T is poised to announce a takeover, people briefed on the matter said on Saturday, ushering in another transformation of the telecommunications industry.
Nurse practitioners have long fought against Texas regulations that link them financially and professionally to supervising physicians, a construct they say limits their ability to treat patients in a state with a looming shortage of primary care doctors.
A review of internal communication shows that high-ranking officials, particularly in G.M.’s legal department, acted with increasing urgency in the last 12 months to grapple with the spreading impact of defective ignition switches.
Russia acquired not just a peninsula, but a maritime zone and the rights to tap its seabed for oil and gas reserves potentially worth trillions of dollars.
Fierce rivals in mobile software, Apple and Google agreed to dismiss patent lawsuits related to smartphone technology between the two companies.
Food waste has become a hot-button issue, with cities and companies adopting strategies for reducing it.
Russia acquired not just a peninsula, but a maritime zone and the rights to tap its seabed for oil and gas reserves potentially worth trillions of dollars.
A review of internal communication shows that high-ranking officials, particularly in G.M.’s legal department, acted with increasing urgency in the last 12 months to grapple with the spreading impact of defective ignition switches.
A new study has found that, compared with patients who have private insurance, those on the government health plan arrive in worse shape, suffer more complications and stay longer in the hospital.