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Investing in Merchant Cash Advance full interview Chaim Ekstein with Charlie Lederman
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In this interview, I discuss with Charlie Lederman from Vista Point Services all the ins and outs of investing in Merchant Cash Advance. Feel free to post any comments or questions below. Also if you want to discuss personaly investing with Vista point you can send me a message at https://www.chaimekstein.com/contact to discuss your situation.
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Transcript
Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
charlie good morning i'm so happy that
you're with us let me just make a quick
introduction charlie
um my relationship with charlie goes
back probably
uh over a year ago probably a year
or 12 to 15 months something like that
charlie is in florida together with his
partner moisha finkelstein and i flew
down to florida to meet them and we
probably speak two or three times a week
and
i invested with vistapoint
about a year ago and uh i probably spent
tens of hours with charlie on the phone
to make sure i understand every detail
of it and make sure that i'm comfortable
with what i'm doing and since i've
introduced many investors to them as
well and
all i can say so far we're all happy and
everything is working out exactly as we
anticipated or better
but i highly encourage anybody who sees
this who watches this
should understand that this is just to
understand a concept it's not that i'm
suggesting any investments with this
it's just a concept
you know if you choose to you want to
participate with such a thing you're
welcome to reach out to me i'll make
sure i get you introduced to charlie
but what's very very important is that
anything that you get involved you're
gonna set yourself involved then you
should understand what you're doing and
you should make sure that you understand
what needs to happen for you to succeed
as well as what needs to happen for you
to god forbid fail not to succeed good
morning charlie thank you for being with
us i'm happy that you you made us you
made it to this meeting today
good morning it's a pleasure um so i
think charlie before we start if you can
just tell us briefly what we are doing i
know it's called merchant cash advance i
didn't even say that worth on the call
yet but just explain let's say in two
three minutes what is it that you get
involved with how do you make money how
do you make money for investors
very very high view and then we'll go
into some details sure uh merchant cash
advance or mca as people generally uh
shorten that that name
uh is a
area in the u.s economy
uh that has sort of been uh forced uh
because of some
called bad regulation bad government
however you want to phrase it
started with the banking crisis of 2007
and created a situation where merchants
uh that have certain characteristics
cannot get funding from traditional
sources they haven't been able to get
funding from traditional sources for
about 15 years now
uh as with any industry there was
opportunity seen by a couple of early
pioneers
uh it's now after 15 years i would say
pretty well established both in terms of
the
regulations that have been promulgated
and the
issues that have gone through the courts
and what we do is
as a group uh
a segment which is about equal somewhere
between five and eight billion dollars
nobody has exact numbers
but we provide funding to merchants uh
small to medium-sized merchants
merchants that basically have less than
anywhere from a half a million to a
million dollars of revenues per month
most of the merchants we deal with have
less than a hundred thousand dollars in
revenues per month and we provide them
with short-term funding contracts that's
not we'll talk about why but it's not
called financing it's called funding
contracts for purchasing accounts
receivable
and generally like i said i'll keep it
short
we're doing a contract uh
where we're providing funding like i
said it was short term so let's say a
ten thousand dollar contract and funding
might be repayable over
75 business days uh that ten thousand
dollars over that 75 days the merchant's
paying back fifteen thousand dollars for
all intents and purposes
so that the uh profit before the gross
operating profit before expenses is is a
fifty percent return uh on that
individual contract but that's just the
start of how you make money in mca
that's only looking at one contract and
not a portfolio but i'm sure we'll go
into the details right okay thank you
for that information it's very very
general and first i want to talk about
the opportunity and then we'll talk
about the risk which is equally or even
more important than the opportunity so
if i understand correctly you say that
your funding and will stick to the
example of ten thousand dollars and the
merchant repaying fifteen 000 and as we
understand as
as i understand it's usually not the
first place where the merchant would
want to access some capital and we'll
talk in a minute about why the merchant
is choosing to access capital with such
a hefty uh premium to pay for it but if
you say that they're paying 75 payments
so if i do that correctly i put in
you'll lend them ten thousand dollars
and they're repaying fifteen thousand
dollars if i do fifteen thousand dollars
divided in 75 that means they're paying
200 a day
is that 75 calendar days or is that
business this
it's 75 business days so it doesn't
include uh weekends or any federal
holidays
okay so 75 days we always always assume
on average there's 21.5 days a month so
you can do the math on that basis that
that's an average it runs anywhere from
20 to 23. so let's call it four months
okay
correct so if we have four months the
the company or the merchant
battled ten thousand dollars and they
repay fifteen thousand dollars over four
months okay
yes um
the audience that watches
the
this conversation are pretty much
educated especially they usually watch
this not as the first video but after
many many videos
and i'm assuming uh that you understand
that when you pay
for a four month loan
it's usually equals to paying 150
percent a year because if you pay 50
for four months you have three times
four months in a year so if you keep
doing this over the year every four
months again that that that's the same
as paying 150 percent a year is that
correct javi
that's the uh on a very general basis
absolutely correct
so on a very very general basis that
would be correct but i would want to
have a conversation about
if is that really correct because that's
you know if if somebody would pay you
fifteen thousand dollars after four
months that might be correct so let's
say january 1 they battle 10 000
uh
april 31 they repay 15 000 may 1 they
battle again and so on and so forth that
would be correct but if i understand
correctly in this case in this specific
situation the merchant is not repaying
it after four months but they repaying
it every day a portion of it so i don't
know whether you know what is the rate
of return of such money do you know
um
uh you know i i've tried to calculate
that and it is calculable but the
numbers after a while
at that kind of level from an investment
perspective stop making sense in terms
of
uh people look at that and they say it
can't be possible
okay so so now
we have to understand if it doesn't make
sense meaning in other words if it's uh
so good for the investor it has to be so
bad for the merchants meaning you know
money is finite there's nothing there's
a usually somebody makes money but
either by the loss of somebody or by the
opportunity for somebody to involve you
in the deal so on and so forth so why in
the world if it comes out to hundreds of
percentages a year why in the world
would the merchant battle such money
that's question number one and question
number two is why would you
want to be involved in such a
transaction where the merchant can end
up losing so much money for our benefit
in other words i'm trying to understand
the win-win situation here uh and
understand if this is a win-loss
situation or is it a win-win and how is
it the win-win and when is it a win-win
when is it not a win when uh you know
how do you look at it and when do you
stay away from it and when when do you
get
do you get involved et cetera et cetera
um no it's a great question um the
answer is
uh
and this is for your audience because i
know this is going to a general audience
besides just you know this conversation
is that if if there is a concern uh that
it's a win-lose situation
then then your audience should be very
careful who they deal with uh in in this
in the merchant cash advance space
uh they it's not a question that's
generally asked i understand why the
question is it's a question of ethics
it's a question of compassion it's a
question of uh just right and wrong in a
lot of respects and there is a lot of of
let me call it not caring uh within the
industry that all that's really looked
at
is a is a chalkboard which says here's
my wins without looking at like well how
many people that i hurt you know along
the way how many people did i have to
step on along the way
uh you and i have had so many
conversations about this and i know your
audience isn't privy to this but uh one
of the things that you know i make sure
in my own life because as we always talk
about life is short
is when i look in the mirror every
morning when i'm ready to shave or clean
up whatever it is i have to clean up i
want to like the person i'm seeing in
the mirror i want to think that that
person did something good the prior day
so right off the bat and i know there's
a longer answer than you probably imply
but people in addition to having to
understand the product have to
understand the person and you know in
terms of what we're talking about
uh so
we we won't do that we won't if it's
hurting the merchant we won't provide
them the money it's part of our whole
process of of discussing what it is
we're doing with the merchant prior to
them actually signing a contract and us
providing them the money so let's just
take that as a given we can delve into
that a little bit deeper if you want to
find but i just i just it was important
for people to hear that
the question is why and what is it that
we're discussing with the merchant uh
and why would they do this so the
merchants we're talking to like i said
are small to medium-sized merchants
they're generally uh
owners of a business where
the business is basically their biggest
financial resource i'm not talking i
mean i'm talking about more than their
houses more than um any portfolio they
might have because the people we're
dealing with their entire livelihood is
based on their business so along the way
uh in terms of putting their business
together they've used all their family
resources generally in terms of in terms
of what little savings they may have uh
as you know in the u.s i forget what the
number is but you know less than 10 or
15 percent have an extra 400 in cash
available for an emergency i mean that
went through in terms of what the
pandemic was all about
these merchants are no different they
they've used all their credit cards
they've tapped out all their credit
cards in terms of being able to put
money into it they've not only their uh
their their immediate family their
extended family they've looked at so
uh and
and what they've done by doing all this
is
they've they've hurt their credit rating
so that most of their credit ratings are
6.50 and below probably below 600. uh
banks right now will not look at any
even today this is 15 years later that
you know if if your credits below let's
say 680 or 700
where you know something in the 800s is
like stellar uh so
most people are in the uh
let's say 700 and above range the
merchants we're dealing with are
basically below 680 in terms of what
we're dealing with so the banks there's
there's no recourse to the banks so from
the merchant's perspective he still
needs every business needs capital to
grow at some point sometimes there's an
emergency sometimes there's a new
location sometimes there's opportunities
that the merchant wants to take take
advantage of and you need money to do
that in terms of just it's just one of
the givens in life and i know all the
people you're going to be showing this
to completely understand that
we
we then talk to them about the fact that
they really only have two options at
that point
they can deal with the money that we
provide them or they can bring on a
partner
if they're bringing on a partner
the the easy thing to look at is what's
the expense of bringing on a partner
well for the immediate expense is you're
giving up two things you're giving up
share you know ownership in your company
and you're giving up some control in
terms of what you're talking about the
thing longer term that you're giving up
is an inability uh that if something
happens where you and the partner don't
agree on things you don't see eye to eye
how do you get rid of the partner it's
like a divorce nobody wants to go
through uh the legal hassle of doing
anything like that so we're back down to
is who are we and what are we doing well
for all intents and purposes we are a
partner in the business
for a very short period of time so when
you say 75 days if that's the only
contract we do with the merchant then
we're a partner for that period for 75
days is it expensive well expense to me
is all relative
if you have to have the money to take
care to take advantage of an opportunity
and you're paying us 50
what's the return you're getting on the
opportunity and then at the end of 75
days you we basically shake they don't
want any more funding from us we shake
hands we say we say thank you they did
us a favor we did them a favor and we
walk away
we're a partner you know in the sense of
being short-term and and and being able
to not have any
uh giving up of any control we're not
you know we don't get involved in the
business and there is there is no
excess strategy other than saying
goodbye you know in terms of and you
know thanks for thanks for doing what
you did and what we say is if you have
any opportunities you know in the future
just give us a call you have a great
track record you know
our due diligence is is a lot less
so if you look at it in the sense of
being a short-term partner our expense
compared to their other options are
really very low
not you know and so you can't look at
the absolute dollars you have to look as
in everything you're doing the way you
did those graphs in the beginning with
the different boxes you have to look at
all of the boxes all at one time and so
when you look at all of that and you say
it's 50
and and we talk to them about how they
should bake that into their operating
expenses in other words we don't become
and we become an expensive doing
business the same way they have an
insurance expense
but ours is a definite finite time
period in terms of what they're dealing
with
and then if they start with us and we
start with this let's say let's say we
represent 15 percent of their average
daily deposits
one of the things we talk about is if
you if you're doing it right and using
our money correctly by the end of the
term of your contract the 15 should go
down to 12 should go down to 10
if they're not building their business
they shouldn't be taking our money and
that's really you know that's part of
the education that we provide in
addition to providing the money
okay uh i i think you explained it very
well but i do want to elaborate a little
bit on the part of the due diligence on
the underwriting process
if i'm going to take a partner i'm going
to make sure first that the business is
profitable and the business can provide
profit for
two partners instead of just one partner
so and i understand in this specific
situation it's not the same because it's
a very short-term thing or potentially
it's a very short-term thing
so how much do you go into details with
the merchants to understand how the fund
that you're going to provide to them are
going to help them solve their problems
that because of that they
they sort of sort of speak reach out to
you for short-term partnership
uh
the the the underwriting uh and the due
diligence that goes on it's two parts
there's a quantitative aspect to that
obviously and there's a qualitative
aspect uh let me take the qualitative
aspect first that's usually after the
fact and that is uh
we we we understand the industries that
we're dealing with uh to the to the
extent of uh you know we're looking at
the
um the 50 uh states within the united
states uh we understand geographic areas
we also understand specific industries
so as an example
trucking uh is is always an industry
that's interested in this type of
funding uh right now the truckers are
having a heck of a time because diesel
prices have gone from three dollars and
fifty cents to over six dollars maybe
seven dollars in some states uh and
they're not able to get the their fuel
adjustments put together in such a way
uh that they can make that up so we're
very careful right now with trucks like
i said depending on time frame and
whatnot you understand the qualitative
aspects secondly
before we fund the money there is an
extensive interview that goes on it's
called the funding call
we want to know what their what their
plans are for the money how they're
using it
we look at uh what their customer base
is uh you know
when i say extensive i mean it's it's
about a 30-minute conversation so but
but after a while you get uh
educated as to how you can get to the
points you need and pinpoint to the
points you need very quickly
uh from a quantitative standpoint
uh we we basically look at their bank
statements we are a pure cash flow
underwriter
uh we we do not discriminate it's funny
we don't discriminate on geography or
industry we only discriminated on the
fact that they have money coming through
the system uh that's our discrimination
process
uh certain industries uh you got to be
careful with because you got to look at
the number of deposits when they occur
uh whether or not there is cash in the
business uh whether the merchant keeps
cash in the business or whether they're
extracting it um
many funders and it's once again i'll
point out some differentiations between
what we do and what some other funders
do and i'm not saying it's right or
wrong it's just what we do and what they
do
uh they're uh
they look at uh businesses let's say a
monthly business and say
as a for instance it's okay for them to
have uh you know up to five negative
cash days in other words they didn't
they didn't have enough money to cover
their
expenses for those days uh a month
if we see five negative cash days we'll
never go near them we'll never go near
the merchant um we're
100 cash based whatever whatever offer
we provide them and whatever their
payback is we have to be 100 sure at
least in the past
uh and if it's the past three to five
months depending on what what we want to
look at that they were able to cover our
payment in each day for each day of
those three you know three four or five
months that we're looking at so like i
said it's it's not a question of
industry it's understanding industries
uh and different geographic areas uh but
once again it's it's pure cash flow
underwriting
right let me let me uh elaborate let me
try to elaborate on some of the things
you pointed out i know you pointed out
that you reviewed the bank statements
etc some documents
but you also mentioned the interview
that you have
uh i'm gonna have i'm gonna ask you two
questions one question is how do you
know
that whatever information you get
is
the truth that's number one and then
number two
how many times did you find out after
the fact that the company the merchant
was just lying to you and they tried to
to
scam you
uh
there is no good answer and when i say
like
because if it was we'd be making we all
be making a lot of money it's in terms
of understanding when someone's lying to
you and when someone's not lying to it's
it's generally a feel
uh part
part of the nice thing about doing as
much as of what we do and and how we do
it uh is that indus industries um
are not that different uh between
themselves because of the economy and
also within an industry you have an idea
of where it is that what questions you
need to ask like i used trucking before
uh so you know one question you want to
ask is like who are your customers
uh how much is short haul versus long
haul do you have fuel adjustments you
know on your contracts
if you if you're not doing what we do
every day and what we've been doing
every day for the well
not 100 the way we're doing it now but
we've been in this business now for
about seven years so
you know what questions they ask in
particular industries
can we divine whether someone's lying to
us uh it all depends on
how far outside the grid that i just
mentioned that they're giving you
answers to
uh
but even if they're all totally within
the grid uh as there are situations
where
you find out that the merchant uh has uh
has is just outright lying is basically
scamming you the answer is
we're we're good we're not that good um
and you know the the the nice thing
about it
in terms of the way our contracts
written is that the merchant
uh whether they
uh there are certain exceptions and we
can talk about that but for all for all
intents and purposes the merchant as
part as part of sending our contract has
a personal guarantee
uh so that uh
to the extent that we may have to take
them to court to enforce our contract
because they did try to scam us
uh you know uh we'll go after their
their homes i mean you know it's it's
it's you know you put us in this
situation it's not something i did or
something you know vista did you know
you did this and and we make that clear
to them uh so
uh you know
if we have to uh
we'll do whatever we can to get our
money back and we're very very very good
at getting our money back
but can you tell can you tell me a
number how many times in the past have
you showed up that we're trying like
doesn't have to be an exact number just
a practice uh
quite well
let me just broaden it a little bit
because the answer is you know uh
it first off
i i i think in all the years we've been
talking about it if if it's less than a
handful of people that actually we knew
out of the gate we're just trying to
scam us i mean i you know i i mean it
happens don't don't think that that
doesn't happen but you know but we've
issued at this point i forget about how
many contracts we've worked on
without funding but but we've issued at
this point i think
uh we're just about just under 500
contracts in about two years uh that
we've issued and like i said it's less
than a handful um the key question that
that
sort of like enlarges that picture is
what kind of there is a default rate i
mean there's something where you you
know you basically that there's there's
a time that you're just not going to be
able to get all your money back it's the
nature of our business you can see who
who we're dealing with uh
our models that we've provided that i
know kim that you provide uh
specifically to anybody that that asks
about uh our experience provide for a 10
default rate uh in terms of what we're
talking about
experience tells us uh that at that rate
uh we'll be able to generate
to a syndicate after all expenses
uh somewhere between a 50 and 60 annual
return that's that's sort of the numbers
that you were talking about before
we've been fortunate uh in some respects
uh you know maybe lucky uh but our
default rate is is well under 10 percent
our default rates closer to three or
four percent and maybe even a little bit
lower than that
um that's not to say
that we don't have to what we call
nursing contracts in other words work
with merchants and at times have to
lower their payments maybe hold off
payments for a week or two depending on
what's going on like for instance um
like the omicron situation that it's
pretty much over uh
we had situations where you know people
contracted you know covet uh the the
omicron variety and and they couldn't
work for two weeks so if there's no
money coming in because it's not working
you got to work with those people and if
you work with those people and you know
you're always going to be able to work
with those people
then uh
the the answer is
those are contracts we call nurse in
other words the money doesn't come in
the way the contract says it should come
in and that's about eight percent of our
contracts but you know the only
difference there is you know the example
we used before instead of collecting the
money over 75 days maybe we're
collecting it over 90 days you know a 50
return over 90 days versus 75 days is
still an excellent return so that's
that's sort of the way to look at that
okay um yeah you answered the question
very well but i just want to elaborate
on one thing i think it's very
understandable that even if somebody
defaults usually it doesn't happen on
day one so meaning uh yeah it bothers
and it hurts that they defaulted but you
still were able to get some money back
and you probably didn't give up you you
hired attorneys to keep going after them
and uh
and trying to do the best to get the
rest of the balance back as well am i
correct yeah that's a
excellent question we're just just our
experience uh
through the entire process uh and this
is this is this experience now goes it's
pretty consistent over the past uh
i don't know
24 months or so
uh is that between what we collect
on the contract before we have to give
it to the collection firm the attorneys
that you just mentioned where they go
where we do go after them through the
court system uh we're getting back
somewhere around 80 cents on the dollar
at this point now that's that's the
basket as a whole in terms of what we're
you know what we're talking about and
it's also a basket
based on the experience of collections
through today because collections will
continue
every day going forward so the 80 is
really a floor it's not a ceiling
uh so
you know to answer that question is
we get a big piece of of what we're uh
what we've funded back because of what
we do and just in terms of the debits we
do and also when we nurse or not and
when we finally make that decision that
you know where the merchant just is just
we just feel he's not listening to us
anymore or he's not going to pay us and
without without a bigger hammer
uh and then we have to give it over to
the collection firm plus what the
collection firm then does in terms of
negotiations and or going through the
court system where they have the
judgment uh we're getting back about 80
cents on a dollar okay amazing um i want
to shift gears now and talk about you
mentioned about syndications and i think
it's important to touch a little bit on
it not for too long because i don't know
i still want to cover and detail the
risk part
but
um i just want you to elaborate a little
bit on what you mentioned on syndication
like let's say somebody invests with you
a hundred thousand dollars how does that
work you take the hundred thousand
dollars and you put it into contracts
and he
is now the lender for these merchants or
do you do it like a group as you
mentioned some kind of syndication i
want you to elaborate a little bit how
that works and assume
that many of the listeners are hearing
the word syndication for the first time
okay not a problem um once again this is
an area uh that we're very different
than other funders uh we've created a uh
with our bank
the ability uh to have uh the
syndication done at a point where
each syndicate is an entity unto
themselves in other words uh somebody
comes with a hundred thousand dollars
that money is not commingled in anything
in in our account that's not where a lot
of funders the money just gets
commingled in one funding account we've
created a situation where every
syndicate has their own bank account
they can view that bank account they can
track money going into that account and
out of that account every day
and and the the participation that goes
on with us is completely transparent
both in terms of the data that we
provide the information that we provide
but also uh if let's take that ten
thousand dollar contract uh
we will if we let's say we have 10 10
different accounts 10 different
syndicates that are going into that
contract they each have a 10 share of
that each put up
for all intents and purposes a thousand
dollars for that 10 000 contract time
you know it's a little bit more detailed
than that but they each put up a
thousand dollars that thousand dollars
is their participation share they own it
uh so once again regardless of what
happens with vista uh the contracts that
we have and this and the platform that
we have basically says that each piece
is owned by the individual syndicates so
it's 100 transparent it's not a vista
it's it's it's a vista facilitation
that's what we do that's how we manage
it
but the shares of all the different
contracts that we have are in the are in
the individual syndicate so the money
goes into a segregated account the money
goes out of the segregated account but
everything that happens through that
account is also segregated strictly for
that for that investor so there is no
co-mingling of funds so i think that's
the answer that
yeah so let me elaborate a little bit on
that and correct me if i'm right or you
have anything to comment on that the way
i understand it is let's say that i
invest a hundred thousand dollars and
let's say that i direct you i don't want
more than five percent or five thousand
dollars going into any specific account
so let's say you lent to a certain
merchant uh
let's say i don't know fifty thousand
dollars but you cannot put more than
five thousand dollars of that of that of
that funding from my money okay
and then
let's say after a month or two months
whatever the length of time i see myself
being part of 20 different accounts
of 20 different uh 20 different loans
now money starts coming in every month
every day and as money comes in
i'm getting to invest in even more
accounts so i think the ideal scenario
would be that after five six seven
months i should be spread over in much
more than 20 accounts and
and i i think that's a pretty good
diversification again going back to my
introduction that i started with how you
can diversify more and even if you take
a bigger risk you can start having your
risk decline more and more is by adding
more and more and more diversification
over time am i correct with that
it's our goal uh one of the things that
we do uh really really well i think once
again we're a little bit different uh is
is is risk mitigation that's really what
you're talking about is taking something
that is is is high risk which i think
i think if you look at one contract an
individual contract you'd say that's
pretty high risk you're dealing with a
small merchant the credit rating is
pretty low in terms of what we're
talking about so you're saying you know
you know that that's that's
it
individual contracts are each
individually high risk no question about
it that's the way you should look at it
that's why we have to i'm going back to
what you said if you want a 50 return
you need 50 risk i mean it's a lot
higher risk than what you have in the
bank the stuff you said in the beginning
was absolutely on point it was totally
correct now the the the difference
though
is is the word that you use and that's
diversification
if you have one contract it's got a
certain level of risk if you have two
contracts uh it's not double the risk
it's less than double the risk it's just
a fact of life
if you have 20 contracts and each of
those have you know five percent risk
obviously you now have even less risk
going into the portfolio our goal
is twofold uh we're going to lower each
each syndicates risk because in the
beginning especially we don't in a lot
of respects we don't care what the
syndicate owner says uh the five percent
is usually it's usually five to seven
eight percent we won't allow any
individual syndicate to go into a
contract more than five six seven
percent why because if that contract
were to go bad and you don't know which
contracts go bad and which contracts
will pay uh you don't want too higher
level of risk in an individual contract
that can hurt the portfolio so in the
beginning until we get to that magic
number and i'm going to give you the
magic number that we deal with all the
time day in day out uh is that we're
going to keep every syndicate in the
beginning and it frustrates some
syndicate owners because they're saying
well it's taking you three four five
weeks to deploy my money and we're
saying yes but we're still going to make
it the kind of money we're talking about
trust us in this and then once we get up
to a certain level that magic number
then you won't be talking to us on the
same basis you'll see what the returns
look like
and our number
comparable to
if we're doing a stock portfolio and
you're doing a stock portfolio you would
you would educate the people to
basically say 20 to 25 stocks
for us the number's 50. so once we get
up to 50 contracts
we be we feel like that portfolio is
pretty well diversified we might be able
to take on a little more risk but for us
a little more risk is moving from five
to eight percent to maybe ten percent on
an individual contract it's not it's not
a huge jump
so the answer is uh
the the the number of contracts and and
time as you know it's it is a point when
we provide information out it's clearly
highlighted that that single number is
clearly highlighted every month in terms
of what you're dealing with actually
every day but for the most part when we
talk to the center against it's every
month
and 50 is that magic number once you get
up to 50 we feel that portfolio is
pretty well diversified and we haven't
really focused and i'm going to say this
really quickly is
we
if for all intents and purposes if we
put money out to contracts today
there's a little bit of a lag but let's
just let's assume away the lag and
that's that's due to the federal reserve
but the money starts coming back
immediately as soon as we get money
coming back on those contracts it gets
invested in new contracts so we can get
up to 45 or 50 contracts easily within
30 days you've known that you've seen
that you've seen all the syndicates that
that you know you work with personally
and your own syndicate
so that that magic number of 50 happens
uh relatively quickly in in the in the
relationship between between vista and
and and
i have seen what i can say that what
i've seen after about a year i've seen
to be in about 100 contracts which makes
me feel very comfortable i mean too many
things have to go really really bad for
me to lose money on this i mean not no
guarantee but things could could always
happen but yeah i feel that my risk is
very diversified and very declined and i
can say
by knowing
knowing investors and knowing other
merchant cash advance companies the
transparency that we see with vista is
unbelievable it's like i have
i i've speak i've spoken to people who
are invested with other cash advanced
companies and
um
they look at what you know what what
information i have on what we're doing
they're jealous and you know usually
they want to come over but they're
jealous and they don't have that you
know i i you know as we discussed many
times before but i think it's now a good
a good
segue to go into the
risk part of it um
i have seen people making a lot of money
with cash advance and i've also seen
people lose money
and
for me the biggest reason that i even
started working with you guys was
because of trans the transparencies but
i i want to elaborate a little bit on
what is the risk
and what is the risk in the beginning
and how do we mitigate the risk and how
do we reduce it even more over time we
touched on many of these things already
but i think it's good to
to to uh have the framework around the
risk once more
sure not a problem um
the the the risk that's involved as i
said uh individual contracts each have a
fairly equal and even level of risk i
mean
there's nothing you can do about the
fact that the of of the of the uh in the
the characteristics of the uh market
that we're in for individual merchants
uh the idea though is that you never
look at uh individual individual
contracts if you looked at individual
contracts you would never do you would
never get into the mca business
it's not the way mca works mca works
because of the fact that you're getting
money back every day on every contract
uh that you're dealing with and because
of that you can add uh additional
contracts as you get money so it's not
like in the example we gave the ten
thousand and fifteen thousand you don't
have to wait for the end of the 75 days
before you're going into a second or
third or fourth contract every day
you're going into another contract in
terms of what it is i mean
not that no you're not doing that at 10
000 when you're getting back 200 a day
but the fact is you've got other assets
to deploy it's the concept of what we're
talking about in terms of how we're
doing that
uh
that's the first thing in terms of
looking at diversification is is that
you got to you have to make sure you're
getting in as many contracts as possible
and on a consistent basis in other words
you know if depending on what's going on
with the economy depending on um
uh what might be going on in a
particular industry you don't want to
chase dollars so to the extent that
you're not chasing dollars just just to
make the investments is is is is a key
underwriting criteria that you're always
looking at so i i use the example of
trucking right now trucking is a little
bit difficult to do and until fuel
prices go down or the trucker has the
ability to adjust his contracts you want
to basically just shy away from that a
little bit in terms of what we're
talking about
so that's that's part of the
underwriting that's part of the risk
mitigation in terms of they look at it
but the reality
is we're always uh
looking at diversifying the portfolio
increasing the portfolio making sure
that not a when i say portfolio
portfolio and syndicate are synonymous
in terms of what we're looking at
because every cindy we look at the
portfolios for every one of our sin that
gets in terms of what they're looking at
is that we won't put it we won't put a
syndicate owner especially in the
beginning into any more than five
percent on the contract so on a ten
thousand dollar contract
most of that syndicate would invest in
that contract in the beginning is five
hundred dollars
longer term probably the answer is going
to be a thousand but once again
everything's relative to the contract
size in terms of what we're dealing with
um
there's other factors in terms of that
that we look at in terms of of going
getting over the you know the risk
mitigation but from a general level in
terms of what we're talking about
increasing those contract
the number of contracts in the portfolio
to 50
is critical for us uh people as part of
this
recording may get a little confused
because i just said 50 after 30 days and
you said 100 after
after a year
those things are are both true and the
reason for it is you're not going to get
much more than 100 to 120 at the rate
that we're doing things
and controlling because they're all
short-term contracts so contracts are
dropping off all the time because they
either
refi or they renew or they don't renew
when they end in terms of you know what
we're looking at so
both our numbers are correct and i want
to make sure people understand that
that there was complete consistency with
that so over time when a mature
portfolio will have somewhere between
100 120 contracts will be running at all
different terms uh and no single
contract because of the way we put the
contracts into the portfolio will have a
we'll have a
any kind of major dramatic effect if it
does happen to go bad and that then once
again that's for two reasons one it's
such a small percentage of each each
contract's a small percentage of the
total and two we've done a really good
job of collecting money before we say
that contract where to go back so a big
piece of the money's already back into
the portfolio so all of those things
tend to lower the risk and give us the
consistency of the returns that we're
talking about
right so it's very important when
somebody uh is looking into the idea of
investing in such a concept as merchant
cash advance they should understand that
in the beginning they have a little bit
more risk than overtime so you know as
i'm sure everybody understands don't put
all your eggs in one basket especially
when it comes to merchant cash advance
you should not put in too much of your
assets at the beginning let it start
with something and let it go and start
let it start picking up steam and then
from there uh your risk over time
uh declines a lot um and i think it's
also important that uh
um i i think i should also ask you how
knowing the risks involved how did you
perform during coverts
that's really an interesting question
i'm sorry about the sun i can't do
anything about the sunshine i'm trying
to find a position where the sun's not
on my face so um
it's just this time it's more important
for us to get the the
information we can now then take away
no i get it with the best you can on
there
yeah
that's why i keep on moving but i can't
find a place that doesn't look you know
anyway i apologize um anyway i want to
pull down the shades but wait a minute i
know i can't there's one like i said
i've got one part of the window that
there's no shade on it's like the very
top
i know it it's all but sorry about that
you know because if i move it might
think people think i'm doing something
very strange
um
how oh that's better um how we did
during covet we were unbelievably
fortunate during coven um
we there's there's reasons why uh and
it's when we first we we decided to uh
to to move away from doing brokering
which is what our entry was into
merchant cash advance into doing funding
which is what we're doing 100 now
uh we needed some structures built
january of 2020 is when we went 100
to
[Music]
funding and moved away from brokering
and as we all know the world sort of
shut down in february starting february
of 2020
uh when information about what was
coming out of china and kova
sort of hit the news and and hit all of
us
the
the reason for it basically i think was
our is the way we underwrote and and the
way we
uh
made decisions about what accounts we
wanted so
uh the example we gave was the ten
thousand and fifteen thousand that down
the line is pretty much what it is we're
doing now
uh if we see something less than a one
it's it's it's one four nine nine versus
one five but for all intents and
purposes it's one five
uh is is when there's a certain
situation uh where even though the
factors lower you're actually doing
better than the one one five so it may
look like a 1.2 or 1.45 or something
like that but if you analyze the
contract you'll see that we're actually
making way well more than the 1.5
but so we we said that's the only
contracts we want we don't want to see
any contracts that are less than one
five and at the time
the merchant cash advance was very
competitive and and the type of
businesses that everybody wanted
uh were
ash rich businesses in other words with
a lot of credit card sales and a lot of
cash so that would be like restaurants
bars nail salons you know things of that
any kind of retail establishment doing a
lot of walk-in trade uh
the the
industry was driving for a lot of
reasons the rating factors down from one
five to one three one three two and we
said no we there's still industries out
there that are they'll give us the one
five so we stayed away from those
industries by choice uh and then we
decided we were going to do uh basically
two broad industries one's construction
one's trucking uh
and and it's industries that people just
try to
shy away from
uh and we put our money into those now
when we say we put our money we still
diversified our portfolios the way we
discussed already uh but from an
industry standpoint maybe we had less
diversification going spread across
different types of industries than we
normally would
uh so what happens covet hits uh and
everybody is shutting and they got to
stay at home
uh and so what do they do all of a
sudden everybody's ordering off of
amazon
everybody's looking at their house and
deciding they don't like what they see
so it was amazing what happened and also
at the same time governments lowered the
interest rates uh borrowing rates down
to like zero or negative so that banks
could offer home equity loans at three
percent and less all of those things
combine to what i'm going to talk about
so covet hits and who gets hurt they
shut down restaurants bars nail salons
all those businesses shuttered their
doors for a long time period anybody
that was involved in merchant cash
advance for those types of businesses
had a lot of trouble should they have
lost all their money no but they had a
lot of trouble
what our businesses did
you know they knew amazon needed the
truckers to deliver the product
everybody's looking around their house
and basically saying i don't like the
way that bathroom looks or i don't like
the way the construction looks you
couldn't you you couldn't get enough
truckers on the road during that time
period and it still continues today and
you couldn't get a contractor booked in
the united states through all 50 states
for at least three to four months so
everybody that was competing
for the for that choice business prior
to covet was was working very hard to
make sure they didn't lose a lot of
money during covet and we were just
sitting there basically saying our
merchants are doing better than they
have ever done in their life so we went
through a period of covid uh once again
just from decisions we made like i said
sometimes it's luck sometimes a little
bit of work in terms of what you're
thinking about
but we didn't have a single default and
all our portfolios that we were managing
basically did somewhere between 110 and
120 returns for that period
uh there's always opportunities let me
ask you for a second what would you
did you ever think what would have
happened to the portfolio without that
decision because you know this could be
as you said pure luck what would have
happened if
you would have stayed with restaurants
etc well it would have done 60
uh the portfolios were diversified in in
the same way we're diversifying all the
portfolios uh what i said was the
differences uh between the model and
what we do with an experienced base is
all based on how you do with the default
rate that's that's the key in what we do
so
so if you go from a
percent which is what we model
down to
in this case zero
uh portfolio should do the the range
between sixteen and like i said a
hundred and ten or hundred and twenty
percent right maybe you would have had
to wait a little bit longer you know you
would have had to work with the
merchants but it wouldn't be the end of
the
you know
it be what we're doing today right so
what brings me to my next question and
uh it's getting late so i want to wrap
it up but i have two more questions to
discuss one is what is in it for you
what is it for you know you partner with
the merchants and we partner with you so
how do we partner with you like
all these returns we're talking about
hundreds of percentages and then with
both down to 60 to 80 to 100 percent so
how does it work as far as the
the
we've
built our investors and then i want to
talk also about the the charging
interest
challenge that jewish people can have so
let's first
talk about
the hardest question for last but um
so anyway so the the answer to what
what's in it for us is two two things
that's in it for us the fact is we have
our own personal money invested in every
contract like i said we started in
january of 2020 we really didn't go out
and get outside let's call it family
money outside the family of the partners
uh until february of 2021.
so to the extent that we can get other
syndicators involved helps us in terms
of being able to diversify and lower the
risk of our own portfolios in terms of
what we're talking about because we
we're sitting there shoulder to shoulder
with every syndicator that that's the
first point the second point is is we
charge management fees it's it's it's
you know we're not we're not embarrassed
about the fees that we charge
we charge fees based on every dollar
that we collect if we don't collect
anything we don't we don't get any any
fees the returns that we're talking
about are all after the fees are paid so
this is so basically what we're talking
about is money that's going right back
into this indicator's pocket it's not
you don't have to make any calculations
we provide you all that information so
that every month you can see exactly
what you expect back from the merchants
what our fees are and what you're going
to get back in your pocket so it's once
again 100 transparency right in terms of
what we've done is and i keep on saying
this um and and i haven't had a chance
to review when we first did it i knew we
were the only one and i believe we're
still the only one
uh we have a header risk it built right
into our contract uh in terms of uh and
it's been reviewed by
probably every syndicate uh that's come
on board with us and at this point we're
probably just under 50 syndicates that
we're dealing with so it's been reviewed
at least 50 times and i'm assuming it's
it's at most 50 rabbis unless
everybody's going to the same rabbi
somewhere between 1 and 50 in terms of
people that have looked at it
we built it in because we knew the the
syndicates and the people that we were
dealing with and they were concerned
about that we we
you know if if someone is obviously
jewish we won't loan them we won't like
i use loan it's the wrong word i
apologize we won't fund the money uh you
know it'd be you know because of the uh
considerations of of the people that
we're working with including us in terms
of you know what we're dealing with a
lot of times you can't ask a lot of
times people won't say uh in terms of
what it is you don't know what their
situation happens to be but in this
situation where we did fund somebody
that was jewish and
you know the
for the the section of the contract i
had to risk it takes over and for all in
terms of and and for all uh what it does
it basically just takes the the personal
guarantee away and it the the
arbitration becomes a based in as
opposed to a secular uh you know a
secular prison
to the extent that we can stay away from
jewish merchants
we do our best but we're not 100 on that
right that makes a lot of sense and i'm
just mentioned before we wrap it up if
anybody has any questions you can post
it in the chat
um so i just want to mention
i what i've seen with other merchants is
they go into a
50 50 relationship meaning
they split the profits with the
investors
and the problem i always had with that
is number one the transparency i didn't
even know
you know everything i had to i had to
believe them everything they were saying
how much the profit was and how much
fees was and how much management fees
and how much underwriting fees and this
fee and that fee and all kind of hidden
uh numbers that there was no way to keep
track on it um
i liked very much the idea that i saw by
you that it goes based on a management
fee and it's not there's no in the
profits beyond the management fee
whatever the management fee is it is and
it's very transparent i can just attest
to that i keep getting my
uh different type of statements every
morning
which always makes me question when
charlie is sleeping and he always calms
me down that
it's not as hard as it seems
on my side but i think you're working on
a system that everything everybody
should have their own login to be able
to log in and see everything by
themselves right can you talk about that
uh hopefully my plan is to go live the
first week in april so we're getting
closer and closer
uh basically right now we're pushing all
the information out to all the
syndicates as you said
uh there will be no pushing once the
system goes live there'll be a little
bit of a test period but all the sydney
gets said but when it's working uh
anytime you want to go in and the
syndicates will be able to pull all
their information so
the idea of logging in online
you'll log in you'll have that complete
access to every report actually there's
gonna be more reports than you're
getting now uh but the reports you're
getting now will be at a minimum and
then as we add reports they'll just be
made available so if one syndicate owner
says i'd like to see it this way as you
well know how we're
totally we work with all of us into it
we've changed reports
you know
anytime we think it's an improvement we
change the
change
and then it's available to everybody so
the like i said uh hopefully the first
week in april i'm
really pushing okay looking forward i'm
excited for that listen charlie it was
really really a pleasure to speak to you
about this opportunity today my main
goal is
uh i was speaking about leverage part
and what we're teaching to our students
we were speaking about leverage and
people when they think about leverage
they understand the concept in real
estate how you can leverage and real
estate you can invest money take out
money invest it again take it out again
invest it again this way you reduce the
risk more and more and more and people
were constantly asking me are there any
other strategies to leverage meaning
velocitize it use the money again and
again besides real estate and my point
was there is but it's not always the
same system as you invest money you take
it out in form of a loan it's you invest
money and you have a big enough return
yes also bigger risk but if you do it in
a risk controlled manner you you you
mitigate the risk you do it in a way
that the risk keeps reducing itself
while the opportunity is not reducing
but keeps going up you can theoretically
do the same thing keep your money in
motion keep the money
use the using the money again and again
and again and again
without involving financial institutions
but in order to do that you need a
little bit out-of-the-box thinking you
cannot do the traditional way as
everybody else is doing
so again charlie thank you so much for
being with me today and uh
i hope you can hear from some of our
students very soon
it was my pleasure thank you so much
have a great wonderful day
you too
you