Commercial lending books


Getting a business loan with less than perfect personal credit may seem like an impossible feat. Even though a business loan is used to expand, maintain, or kick-off a business, lenders still use an applicant’s personal credit history as a determinant of whether or not a borrower will be able to repay a business loan. Therefore, straying away form traditional methods of business financing may be a necessary step for a small business owner to take.

Freight Bill Factoring is the Future of Trucking
Wouldn’t it be great to leave the administration and paperwork, and just get on with the business of trucking? And what about those unpaid broker invoices that always leave you strapped for cash? It would be different if the administrative headaches resulted in profits - but they don’t - they just get in the way!

Can I Qualify For a Business Loan?
Lenders are no longer extending loans with the leniency they once were and, in some instances, are pulling back already extended credit. In this new lending environment, only the strong will continue to acquire needed cash. This article revisits the question, how can you tell if your business is one of the strong ones?

How Does a Merchant Cash Advance Differ From a Business Loan?
Many critics say that the merchant cash advance was designed to answer to the continually rising and evolving needs of entrepreneurs that small business loans are not able to accommodate. Though both are forms of borrowed money which eventually will need to be repaid with an interest, they also have a lot of varying features and this article distinguishes each.

Alternative Financing - Freight Bill Factoring is the Best Kept Secret in Financial Services
Freight Bill Factoring has been referred to as the financial backbone of the trucking business. Why? Because Freight Bill Factoring is the one financing alternative that makes it possible for business to secure additional financing capital that might otherwise be unavailable.

Restaurant Loans
The restaurant industry is booming. With 945,000 U.S. locations and 13.1 million employees, 2008 restaurant sales totaled $558 billion dollars. That means, on a typical day, restaurant industry sales are about $1.5 billion.

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