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Need a Bank to Fund MCAs? You Can’t Operate Without One
“I learned back in the early 2000s when merchant processors started to offer merchant cash advances, that was the first time I ever heard of MCA,” said Christian Sanchez, Relationship Manager for the National Deposits Group of Dime Private & Commercial Bank. Sanchez, who’s been in banking for 25 years, understands MCAs in their current iteration from a unique vantage point in the ecosystem. Dime, for example, is a full‑service commercial bank based in New York that today provides a variety of customers, including MCA funding companies, with services like checking accounts, wire access, and ACHs.
Sanchez worked with his first MCA client in 2021 and immersed himself in their business and the industry. When he got them onboarded and saw how well it worked out, he knew there was something there. By early 2024, he set out to find a place where he could meet many MCA funders at once and attended the deBanked CONNECT MIAMI conference that January. It was almost right afterward that he started a new role at Dime, and he has been actively looking to serve MCA companies ever since.
“Through the connections I made—I attended Broker Fair in New York last May and from there my access to the industry has been great and I continue to meet contacts, and one contact leads me to another,” Sanchez said.
It’s more than just a basic account that Dime is offering to MCA funders.

“Our platform is designed to give you the tools that you need to run your MCA funding company,” he said, “coming in from the standard online banking access, being able to view your accounts, run reports, extract information to your accounting system… We give you access to our ACH platform, which allows you to set up your payment collections, and based on how your deal is structured with the merchant, you can set those up with the different recurring schedules.”
Dime customers can also continue to use their own third‑party ACH processor if they choose.
Banking, believe it or not, can be one of the most overlooked considerations in running a funding company. A bank’s underwriting team has to understand the business, be comfortable with it, approve it, and be prepared to handle the flurry of activity—yet, even when they do, things may not always run smoothly. To that end, Sanchez said that even if someone already has an MCA banking relationship elsewhere and doesn’t want to switch to Dime, being fully onboarded with another bank as a backup is a smart plan. The time‑sensitivity surrounding things like wire deadlines and daily ACHs is critically important in the industry. It’s crucial not to wait until it’s too late for that Plan B, since onboarding and risk underwriting are neither instantaneous nor guaranteed.
“Obviously I would love to be the primary and having the biggest share,” Sanchez said. “But at the end of the day, it’s business. If I can be part of your business and work together, then I fulfill my need.”
Credit facilities, investors, and syndicates may also require an MCA funder to have a backup bank ready to go as a condition of working together. They might even require a Deposit Account Control Agreement (DACA), which Dime is equipped to put in place.
“[A DACA] is a tri‑party agreement between the MCA funder, the lender, and the bank,” Sanchez explained. “And what happens is this is a way for a lender to ensure that the MCA is doing what they say they were going to do…”
Dime customers need not be located in New York, but those who want to drop in on their banker can do so at the Midtown Manhattan branch or set up a meeting with Sanchez himself.
“A lot of times what I can assure you is, if you look for me, you can find me, whether it’s by phone or we might be meeting somewhere but I’m constantly available.”
True to that promise, Sanchez said he will once again attend Broker Fair in person on May 19 in New York City.
It’s important to note that, as a bank, there is still a rigorous underwriting process and not every company may be approved.
“It’s absolutely amazing to see how Dime is willing to work with MCAs,” he said. “We have a clear understanding of the industry, the risk that’s involved with it, but the bank has embraced it instead of running away.”
View PostShopify Continues to Grow its Merchant Funding Business
“We continue to grow our capital business and have recently introduced several product innovations that give merchants more choice for how they manage their loans, and how they choose among various loan options,” said Jeff Hoffmeister, CFO of Shopify during the Q1 earnings call.
The company had ~$1.4B in business loan & merchant cash advance receivables on its balance sheet as of March 31, 2025. It purchased & originated $805M worth of business loans in Q1, putting it on pace to surpass the $3B total for all of 2024.
“Shopify Capital is a financing program that offers merchant cash advances and loans to eligible businesses based on the store’s location, history, use and interaction with the Shopify platform,” the company states. It is offered in the US, Australia, Canada, and the UK.
View PostOppFi: Bitty performed well in Q1 2025
“Our investment in Bitty continued to perform well in the first quarter of 2025,” said OppFi CEO Todd Schwartz during the earnings call. “The business continued to drive accretive profitability and cash flow to OppFi. We continue to see significant imbalance between supply and demand for working capital among small businesses. We are excited to be part of Bitty’s growth ahead.”
OppFi owns a 35% stake in Bitty.
During the Q&A, Schwartz reiterated that Bitty was well-positioned despite the uncertainty surrounding tariffs in the current environment.
View PostNerdWallet Q1: Small Business Loan Originations Down, AI Agents Are Referring Them Business
Small business loan originations were down for NerdWallet in Q1 “as underwriting remained tight and trade policy uncertainty dampened demand.” This is not a new development at the company as it has been publicizing a similar sentiment for some time.
The biggest takeaways from NerdWallet’s regular reports, however, are how the company, long reliant on organic Google search listings for much of its online traffic, is weathering the transition from the online search-ranking era to the AI answer-agent era. Analysts have been asking NerdWallet CEO Tim Chen to weigh in on what they’re seeing and how it’s going. Now, in this latest quarter, Chen says that AI actually appears to be referring them business so far.
“I think as we think ahead to channels beyond Google search, for example, I’d say top of mind for us is the factors that have historically driven success in areas like Google Search seem to be carrying over to other AI driven search engines. So it’s early days here, but compared to our competitive set, NerdWallet receives a really high share of referral traffic from AI sources. So I think big picture, the way I think about it is AI, at its best, helps you find a great answer quickly without a bunch of effort or spam. And areas with simple answers, AI is gonna meet that user need really well.”
– Tim Chen, CEO, NerdWallet
deBanked independently prompted both Grok-3 and ChatGPT-4o to make recommendations to shop for a small business loan and both recommended Fundera among its top answers. Fundera was acquired by NerdWallet in 2020. ChatGPT-4o put Fundera in its top 2 and Grok-3 put them in its top 3. AI-agents are becoming more memory-based and personalized so this experiment may produce different results for others.
On search rankings specifically, NerdWallet’s Chen said that it had taken a bit of a haircut for them over the past year, in part because even search engines are also now delivering AI-based answers at the top of the results.
AI is permeating so much that the transcript of the earnings call that deBanked relied upon for this writeup was also prepared and published by AI.
View PostMerchant Confidential
Carl Brabander, EVP of Strategy for IOU Financial, will be speaking at Broker Fair on May 19 in New York City. Brabander will be sharing data and tips on how to build trust and win deals in the small business finance industry.
This is a can’t-miss session for brokers. Registration for the full-day conference ends soon. You can sign up here.

Square Originated $1.59B in Business Loans in Q1
Square Loans, a subsidiary of Block, originated $1.59B in business loans in Q1, according to the company’s latest earnings report. Despite being the largest online small business lender that deBanked tracks, the company spent most of the quarterly call talking about its new consumer lending product, Cash App Borrow.
Square’s Q1 business loan figures puts them on pace to exceed their total volume in 2024, when they hit $5.7B. The subject of tariffs did not arise on the earnings call at all and Block had an overall positive quarter with $190M in net income.
View PostGetting Backdoored? Put Your Mark on the Docs
Christina Duncan was once working on a renewal as an MCA broker when things turned south. Her client suddenly received so many calls with offers for funding that they had to turn their phone off.
“[The client] eventually reached out to us via email and basically said, ‘Hey I don’t know what’s going on but these people are saying they’re with you and they have my bank statements. I’m really concerned,'” Duncan said.

Duncan’s renewal had been backdoored. It was hardly the first time, and she was hardly the only victim. As many in the industry often complain, it has become a growing trend in which a broker submits a client’s deal and it somehow slips out the back door into the hands of a third party. The broker then ends up competing on their own deal, or they lose out on it completely. And that’s how many brokers see it—as something that happened to them. But there’s also the business owner who is now left wondering how their data ended up in the wrong hands and what to do about it.
In the above example, Duncan tried to help the client learn how an unauthorized party came into possession of those bank statements, but she was simply hung up on and blocked. It was a dead end.
“So those are the situations that we encounter every day and it’s tough to navigate,” she said.
Born in San Jose, CA and based in San Francisco, Duncan has seen it all. She started in equipment financing more than 15 years ago and gradually shifted into brokering MCAs. When complaints about backdooring began to crop up, everyone had their own opinion on the cause.
“I’ve seen people get caught up on just trying to point the finger or use backdooring as an excuse for their lack of success,” Duncan said, “But the reality is that it is very real. I’m a part of the DailyFunder forum. I see people talking about it all the time but there just hasn’t really been an efficient way to deal with it.”
But then she came up with a solution: Aquamark, a defensive watermarking tool that differs from other tactics employed across the industry to reduce the risk of backdooring. It allows brokers to permanently stamp the documents as having originated from them.
With the assistance of AI and a small team, Duncan left the broker world behind to go full-time into developing the technology, which she said can be used on all the documents in the process.
“It’s not just the bank statements, it’s tax returns, your application,” Duncan said. “What’s happening is it’s someone who has access to these submissions, these packages, and it very well could be internal, someone on your team, it could be a lender and the lender doesn’t know that…”
So it’s not only a problem, but one that can happen at multiple levels in the process. The Aquamark tool, still in its early days but already being used by funders and brokers, can apply custom-branded watermarks onto PDF files with ease. On the one hand, she said, the tool had to be designed to prevent AI from removing the watermarks, and on the other hand it had to work with encrypted statements. When she solved both challenges, she knew she had something. Now, brokers simply upload their documents through the portal, and the platform returns them in seconds.
“By design, I built this in a way that it’s very lightweight and it’s self-service,” Duncan said. “You don’t really need me to do anything and more importantly we’re not storing anything. So essentially you’re uploading your documents and I’m giving it back to you. There’s no logs, there’s no history, none of that is happening behind the scenes.”
The company’s mission statement is a simple one: “Prevent Backdooring. Fund More Deals.”
As Duncan explains, lenders might not even know that a deal they’ve received has been backdoored because the submitting party doesn’t always make it obvious where they got it.
“It’s tough, especially in this environment with all the competition, cost to acquire customers are through the roof, and you lose that,” she said. “It sucks. And honestly it’s so frustrating because aside from it being [how brokers make their money], for the merchants it puts that bad taste in their mouth in the industry. And it’s very real. And so I just wanted to come out with something that—again, the MCA industry gave me a lot and this just feels like a way to give back, as cheesy as that sounds.”
View PostEnova: SMB Loan Demand and Performance Remains Normal
Enova originated $1.2B in small business loans in Q1, a 27% increase year-over-year.
Despite noise in the media about economic disruptions, Enova CEO David Fisher said during the earnings call that “We are monitoring both demand and portfolio performance even more closely than normal and continue to see the level of demand we would expect while payment performance remains in line or better than our expectations.”
When asked if the company saw a spike in applications in relation to businesses possibly stocking up on inventory ahead of the new tariff policy, Fisher said they hadn’t seen any spike and that demand has mainly tracked typical seasonal patterns.
The company emphasized more than once that if anything were to change, the quick duration of its small business loans would allow it to react and make adjustments very quickly. As always, Enova reiterated that it does not have much competition in the market, hadn’t seen any new competitive threats in the first quarter, and doesn’t expect to see any changes on the competitive side for the rest of the year.
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