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12-19-2014, 11:07 AM #1
why to avoid mca IPOs
http://www.forbes.com/sites/petercoh...ingclub-stock/
Just as we saw during the 1995 to 2000 Internet bubble, venture capital investors are assigning very high value to companies with very rapid growth in huge markets. In so doing, they disregard traditional financial measure like revenues and profits.
Such bubbles have predictable shapes — following five phases:
I. Pioneer. This is the stage when the biggest risk-taking entrepreneurs and the occasional angel investors are willing to invest in a startup — usually right after the last bubble burst and everyone else thinks they’re crazy.
II. Glimmer of hope. Here a leading player in the new market segment is bought or goes public – and that makes peer companies believe that they and their investors may also be able to exit at a profit;
III. Harvest. This is where the followers in that market feel intense pressure to grow fast or sell out to capture what they fear is the final opportunity to cash out;
IV. Enter the tourists. Here is when people from traditional lines of work like investment banking and consulting decide to leave their comfortable perches to get their share of the boom; and
V. Collapse. Finally, something happens to spook everyone — all of whom scramble to get their money out. If the boom is financed through equity, the ripple effects are more limited than if it has been backed by borrowing.
At the moment, we are at different phases for different industries. But we may be at a blend of Phase II and Phase IV for the peer-to-peer lending market in which LendingClub started competing in 2007. It operates a “platform” — meaning a website that people can access via a variety of devices — to connect people who want to borrow money with others who want to lend it to them.Anthony Diamond
Underwriter
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12-19-2014, 11:24 AM #2
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Irrelevant. 74% of the companies that went public over the past 6 months weren't profitable.
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05-12-2016, 02:11 PM #3
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05-12-2016, 03:17 PM #4
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- Sep 2014
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Amazon opened at $1.50 almost 20 years ago, has never turned a profit, and shares are trading at $720 today.
Also, since I enjoy correcting you when you are wrong, the question to ask is what are their share prices/market caps now. An INITIAL Public Offering is, by definition, a one time event."Nobody can make you feel inferior without your consent." -Eleanor Roosevelt
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05-12-2016, 03:51 PM #5
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Kevin Henry
VP-Business Development
Seacoast Business Funding, a division of Seacoast Bank
561-850-9346
Kevin.Henry@SeacoastBF.com
1880 N Congress Ave., Suite 404
Boynton Beach, FL 33426
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05-12-2016, 03:58 PM #6
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- Sep 2014
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- 430
Yahoo lied to me.
Capture.jpg"Nobody can make you feel inferior without your consent." -Eleanor Roosevelt
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12-19-2014, 12:28 PM #7
Didn't you watch Breaking Bad?
First, corner the market.... Then raise your prices!
Soon, On Deck be doing 1.4 factors for 3 month turns, up to 4th position.Zachary Ramirez – CEO
Phone: 562-391-7099
Email: zach@zacharyjosephramirez.com
1661 N. Raymond Ave #265
Anaheim CA 92801
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12-19-2014, 12:38 PM #8
Couldn't agree with this more. Either that or they will have a tougher road to profitability than they already have. Longer terms at lower factors, unsecured, to me is not the answer. Whatever each lender's definition of defaults is, it is still high and I don't care what anyone tells me on top of overhead as well. Just my opinion.
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12-19-2014, 01:11 PM #9
As soon as the shareholders start seeing the actual 10Q's and audited (not some back room shenanigans) financials, they'll start making demands that ODC will have no choice but to cover.
As and far as the companies that went public without profits....how many of them are still around a year, two years later?
We in cash advance might only think 3-6 months ahead, but big money investors are looking years into the future.
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12-19-2014, 01:38 PM #10
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- Aug 2014
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12-19-2014, 12:39 PM #11
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- Apr 2013
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- NY
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haha nice one. but not toooo far of a stretch, they are now doing 9 month 1.38s on some files, not such a great rate anymore. But they are capping rates at 99%apr, want to stay under 100% for PR purposes. And anyone that has been with them long time im sure has noticed their rates have trended upwards the past few years. I can remember funding 12 month 1.20 with them and making 8 points, ahh those were the days...
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12-19-2014, 01:21 PM #12
All jokes aside, On Deck is probably in the best position of any lender right now. Think about it... If you take renewals out of the equation, they are originating the most deals in the market right now. It doesn't matter if they are doing it at 0% APR, as long as they have sufficient backing. If this continues, their portfolio will overtake CAN Capital's within the next 2 years (as far as gross funded volume).
If they do any of these four things, they will be set:
1. Sell their platform to a large bank for a several billion
2. Raise their rates (or at least have high-risk categories that have substantially higher rates)
3. Lower defaults
4. Lower overhead
I would personally go for #1.Zachary Ramirez – CEO
Phone: 562-391-7099
Email: zach@zacharyjosephramirez.com
1661 N. Raymond Ave #265
Anaheim CA 92801
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12-19-2014, 01:24 PM #13
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12-19-2014, 01:53 PM #14
Chambo, couple of things:
1. On Deck does not do cash advances. They do business loans.
2. If On Deck sold their platform to a bank, they could limit the APR to a specified percentage that would be legal (although many states do not have usury laws for business loans), or they could even just utilize the technology and data to automate their underwriting.
3. Why wouldn't a bank purchase On Deck? It would automate the processes of a huge, untapped market for bank space. The reason they don't do small business loans anymore is because the cost of underwriting does not make sense for the minimal profits. An automated system using the On Deck scoring mechanism would alleviate their manpower costs, and the higher rates would increase yield.
No reason for a personal attack here buddy, just expressing what I think their strategy is. Do you think they are doing poorly? If so, why?Zachary Ramirez – CEO
Phone: 562-391-7099
Email: zach@zacharyjosephramirez.com
1661 N. Raymond Ave #265
Anaheim CA 92801
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12-19-2014, 02:09 PM #15
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- Sep 2014
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- 430
OnDeck isn't selling a cash advance. Its a loan. That's a distinction they have always made in the market.
Also, what legal mechanism is preventing banks from entering? Banks factor receivables all the time. Using the definition bandied about here that it is "a sale of future receivables", that is in essence a factoring relationship. The difference is that the bank underwrites existing A/R for quality and aging, sometimes employing a lockbox to ensure collection, but sometimes not; whereas an MCA is more about assessing the borrowers to consistently generate receivables and lending into that risk.
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12-19-2014, 01:34 PM #16
Where is Can Capital? Weren't they working to go public too. . . Or did they just do that so Ondeck can get to the punch an learn from Ondeck an to stay private still or did they do that to get Ondeck out of the picture completely. . . Hmm.
Last edited by CO1; 12-19-2014 at 01:38 PM.
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12-19-2014, 02:17 PM #17
http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/da...tm#rom772825_2
there is there investment prospectus available to only ipo owners up to a couple days ago which i doubt anyone looked at
balance sheet shows a net loss of 14MM-24MM for the past four years
any solid equity investor wouldn't touch this garbage.Anthony Diamond
Underwriter
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12-19-2014, 02:27 PM #18
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- Aug 2014
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12-19-2014, 03:02 PM #19
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12-19-2014, 02:43 PM #20
- Join Date
- Oct 2014
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- 260
I would have to agree with Chambo. I don't think that the banks could get around the Usury laws that most states have in effect against high interest business "loans". Hence why the "advance" was created, legal jargon to slip one past the goalie.
Second place? Set of steak knives.
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12-19-2014, 02:55 PM #21
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- Jul 2013
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- 352
Banks have been looking to lighten their balance sheets to get around capital reserve requirement from Basel and Dodd Frank. That's why these non-banking entities have been able to gain traction.
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12-19-2014, 03:01 PM #22
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12-19-2014, 03:05 PM #23
After 2008 and all the political fallout, there is NO WAY IN HELL they would even entertain entering into this realm.
Not to mention, it would ignite zealous lawyers (not just in Cali) to start suing for usury. The judge stated in the ruling in Cali "You can put a dress on a pig and it is still a pig" to combat the "it's not a loan" verbiage. You think if a National Bank got actively involved there wouldn't be lawsuits popping up all over the country? They would be massively salivating at the deep pockets.
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12-19-2014, 03:09 PM #24
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12-19-2014, 03:21 PM #25
This would be a good time to read the American Banker article that came out yesterday. Only paid subscribers have access to it so I don't want to just copy and paste the whole thing.
American Banker: Why Lending Club Relies on a Bank You've Never Heard Of
"Lending Club's ability to make loans to consumers across the country hinges on a well-known 1978 Supreme Court case involving Marquette National Bank of Minneapolis. The Marquette decision allowed banks to export their home-state interest rates across the country, which enabled the creation of the nationwide credit-card industry.
The court ruling also gave rise to contracts between banks and non-bank firms that wanted to take advantage of banks' unique ability to apply their home state's rules elsewhere. One well-established example is the private-label credit card industry, where large retailers such as Walmart and Macy's partner with banks."
The article goes on to make the point that all of alternative lending can be disrupted by taking out WebBank and Cross River Bank.
In short, Lending Club, Prosper, Kabbage, PayPal etc, CAN Capital, Avant Credit, are all dependent on the success and non-interruption of WebBank. I wrote a little bit about WebBank here: http://debanked.com/2014/12/blue-hor...s-holdings-lp/
Surprisingly, it's completely illiquid. Some days it has no volume whatsoever.
Today's alternative lenders are using the same model as credit card issuers.
Merchant Cash Advance companies where future sales are purchased is a completely different model.
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