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There are a lot of advantages of businesses using advances as compared to regular bank loans. These are easily available to new businesses and a business need not to have a strong credit history to get approval for business advances.
Another important factor is the amount of flexibility offered in business advances. The repayments are generally decided according to the current business and initial payments can be made quickly. The business owner has the advantage of making quick repayments in case of fast business.
But the overall cost of the business advance is much higher than regular bank loans. It is important that small business should consider business advances as initial funding only and these should not be preferred for long term financial requirements. Business funding offers the advantage of quick funding but like any other financial agreement, business owners should not enter into it lightly.
Business merchant cash advances for quick and easy funding for small-business owners in a tight credit market can be an easy thing to get accomplished these days!
Read The Interesting Snippets Below For Exciting Merchant Cash Advance News!
Breakingviews: Investors tire of Thai tycoon purchases
– http://www.reuters.com/USVideoBusiness
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Tiffany's results sparkle
– http://www.reuters.com/USVideoBusiness
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Bad debts rise at China's big banks
– http://www.reuters.com/USVideoBusiness
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Breakingviews: Tesco should cut dividend
– http://www.reuters.com/USVideoBusiness
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Bits Blog: After Social Media Uproar, Zara Ditches T-Shirt That Looks Like Nazi Camp Uniform
– http://nytimes.com/ny
What can corporates learn from CERN?
– http://www.reuters.com/USVideoBusiness
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Markets Edge Lower in Early Trading
– http://nytimes.com/ny
Bearing Gifts, Local Officials Push for Chinese Factories to Move Inland
– http://nytimes.com/ny
With foreign investment falling, inland provinces are in a cutthroat competition to attract local industries.[Buzz_Burner_Fresh_Updates]

People have always tended to surround themselves with like-minded people, but the Internet makes doing so easier than ever before, a study finds.
Governments should ban the use of e-cigarettes in public places, the organization said in a report, and prohibit their use indoors until their effects on bystanders are better known.
Burger King Worldwide agreed on Tuesday to buy the Canadian restaurant chain Tim Hortons for about $11.4 billion, creating one of the biggest fast-food chains worldwide.
To combat inversions, it’s tempting to collect revenue without a corporate tax, but other tax avoidance measures would then spring up.
In a letter to the board, the activist investor Engine Capital and the hedge fund Red Alder said Ann Inc., the parent company of Ann Taylor stores, could be worth a significant premium in a sale.
A Mass was planned Sunday afternoon in Rochester, N.H., for James Foley, the journalist who was beheaded last week by the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria.
Mr. Akers became chief executive in 1985, as smaller, less expensive computers started to undercut the company’s lucrative mainframe computer business.
Experts say the struggle of two entrepreneurs highlights how the myriad rules governing driving schools — and 36 other highly regulated professions — stifle competition and inflate prices in France.
The Department of Homeland Security said that more than 1,000 businesses had been infected with the cash register malware used in the Target data breach and others, leading to the theft of data from millions of customers’ payment cards.
Patrick Gottsch, the chairman of the Rural Media Group, has become one of the most vocal critics of Comcast’s proposed $45 billion purchase of Time Warner Cable.
Though the Sultan of Brunei denied putting down $2 billion to buy the Manhattan landmark and two other high-end hotels, the Plaza’s tangled ownership history appears set to take a new turn.
Bruce Koloshi of Summit, N.J., pleaded guilty to cheating at gambling in Connecticut, where he had marked cards at the Mohegan Sun casino.
The Department of Homeland Security said on Friday that more than 1,000 businesses had been infected with the cash register malware used in the Target data breach and others, leading to the theft of data from millions of customers’ payment cards.
Goldman Sachs had been accused of unloading low-quality mortgage bonds onto Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in the run-up to the financial crisis.
Arvind Subramanian, a United States-based economist, has criticized the government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi for policies that seem unfriendly to investors and markets.
Documents in a settlement between the Bank of America and the Justice Department read like a highlight reel of mortgage sins.
Banks fear competition for top talent from companies like Google and Facebook that can offer similarly high pay combined with luxurious benefits.
Applying the ratio of bad loans to equity and set-aside cash — the so-called Texas ratio — suggests a number of eurozone lenders are at risk of collapse.
First Investors Financial Services Group is accused of giving credit reporting agencies flawed data about thousands of car buyers.
Instead, Family Dollar Stores is holding firm to its earlier $8.5 billion merger deal with Dollar Tree, arguing that it poses far less antitrust risk.
A look at what has happened in Massachusetts and more recently at Walmart is instructive.
Understanding the stakes, the entire project team is down at the end of the processing line waiting for the parts to come out. I’m down there, too. And here they come …
Dollar General offered to buy Family Dollar Stores for $8.9 billion, hoping to break up its fellow deep-discount retailer Family Tree’s agreed-upon $8.5 billion merger with Family Dollar.
The fine is tied to a review PricewaterhouseCoopers did in 2007 for the Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ of its transactions with Iran and other countries under sanctions.
Machines still can’t see and identify objects as well as humans, but researchers participating in a contest say error rates have been cut in half over the last year.
Companies like Google are employing unorthodox criteria — say, whether a product is used daily, like a toothbrush — to size up their deal targets, and without the advice of Wall Street bankers.
PricewaterhouseCoopers is said to have agreed to pay a $25 million fine in New York for obscuring misconduct it was supposed to unearth.
The WikiLeaks founder has taken refuge in the Ecuadorean Embassy in London for the past two years while facing extradition to Sweden.
The simple and sturdy Mason jar, a 19th-century staple, has been embraced by companies trying to reach a new generation of consumers.
Workers are their own bosses in the sharing economy, but that flexibility also brings much uncertainty — and few of the protections of full-time work.
Alissa J. Rubin, a veteran Times foreign correspondent, was injured Tuesday in a helicopter crash in Kurdistan and dictated this article from her hospital bed in Istanbul.
Mr. Fein wrote voluminously about contemporary Jews, Judaism and “the often stormy relationship between Jews and Judaism,” and founded groups to combat hunger and illiteracy.
Lassie’s new owners at DreamWorks Animation are using a series of publicity stunts to remake the classic American dog as a merchandising superstar.
The accounting issues at the film company, which was recently acquired by Alibaba, are raising questions about whether the Chinese e-commerce giant was overzealous with recent takeovers.
After an underwhelming initial foray into making its own video programming, Amazon has poured even more money into the effort.
Emotionally abusive comments are becoming more common online, and the consequences could include scaring away from the web those subject to attacks.
Measured by the cost per calorie, it’s hard to find anything that is less of a bargain, but maybe that’s the idea.
A major rationale for the deal was Coca-Cola’s desire to find a replacement for carbonated soft drink sales.
The disclosure may raise concerns that the e-commerce giant is biting off more than it can chew in a recent spree of acquisitions.
A whistle-blower complaint, coming as Congress considers amending an act on how the N.S.A. operates domestically, focuses attention on how the agency operates abroad under different rules.
The hedge fund billionaire has filed a lawsuit against the clothing magnate, claiming a history of character assassination.
The online retailer is competing with companies like VeriFone, PayPal and Square, but will offer a lower transaction rate to the small- and medium-size businesses it is targeting.
European companies rated below investment grade have turned to issuing junk bonds, following the lead of American businesses.
Syncora Guarantee said that the city’s exit strategy had been tainted by the biases of its chief mediator, whose job it was to impartially negotiate out-of-court settlements for as many of the city’s outstanding debts as possible.
Following Google, Twitter, and Facebook, Apple has published a report summarizing the makeup of its work force in terms of race and gender.
Federal regulators said that Kansas defrauded investors by bringing $273 million of bonds to market in 2009 and 2010 without disclosing that its pension system was deeply under water.
With Kinder Morgan restructuring, some are asking whether master limited partnerships still make sense for other companies.
The Aloft hotel in Cupertino, Calif., will begin testing a robot designed to shuttle items from the hotel lobby desk to guest rooms.
The viral media site will use a $50 million investment to diversify its content, expand its video arm and create an in-house incubator for new technology.
The pipeline group Kinder Morgan, the largest of the master limited partnerships, will acquire its three associated companies and re-form as a traditional corporation worth $140 billion.
The website Sports on Earth lost most of its staff last week after Gannett announced a spinoff of its print companies.
To bolster its case in a dispute with authors over e-book pricing, the bookseller Amazon made an online post that quoted one of their own: George Orwell.
The tech company’s highly secretive internal training program is like its products: meticulously planned, with polished presentations and a gleaming veneer that masks a great deal of effort.
In an open letter to readers, the retailer cited George Orwell in its fight with the publisher Hachette over e-book pricing, but it may have undermined its own argument.
The market for vintage toilet parts is stronger than you might think — and many online companies are reaping the benefits.
Why is the giant A380 jet wowing passengers, but not many airlines? Its maker may have made the wrong bet on air travel’s future.
Retaliatory sanctions against Western products have led to a “buy Russian” campaign and some signs that there were ways around the problem.
The government announced a stock buyback and a restructuring plan for Malaysia Airlines, which has lost two planes this year and is mired in debt.
A judge rejected a settlement in a case that accuses tech companies of agreeing not to solicit one another’s employees.
Cheap credit, lower tax bills and a desire for revenue, more than economic optimism, may be behind this year’s surge in corporate acquisitions.
Douglas Preston, a Hachette author, wrote a letter to his readers asking them to contact Jeff Bezos. Nearly 1,000 other writers have joined his cause.
The company also reported results for the quarter ended June 30 that barely made the low end of its earlier forecasts.
K.K.R., Blackstone and TPG agreed to pay $325 million to settle claims that they drove down the prices of corporate takeover targets. The lone holdout is the Carlyle Group.
Fan Bao, the head of the China Renaissance investment firm, has built a network of contacts with a focus on tech start-ups that will thrive in China’s “new economy.”