How to Prepare for Outside Syndicators

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David Roitblat is the founder and CEO of Better Accounting Solutions, an accounting firm based in New York City, and a leading authority in specialized accounting for merchant cash advance companies.

To connect with David, email david@betteraccountingsolutions.com.


There’s a clear gap of knowledge in our industry, and how merchant cash advance businesses need to prepare themselves to receive outside money in investment or syndication.

Whether you’re seeking your first institutional investment or scaling to eight-figure funding rounds, the preparation required isn’t just about having good portfolio performance—it’s about having the financial infrastructure responsible investors need to see before forking over money to you. Not knowing how to prepare that for them can cost you months of delays or even kill promising funding opportunities entirely.

I’ve seen too many MCA shops operating under a misconception. They believe that the impressive Google Sheets presentation showing their advance volume, daily collection rates, and merchant performance will be sufficient when courting serious investors.

Sometimes that’s enough. When you’re looking to raise money from friends and family, you have flexibility. These investors typically accept basic performance reports showing advance volume and collection rates, might not request detailed merchant-level financials, and generally won’t demand formal audits. Basic spreadsheets might suffice at this stage when you’re raising up to about $1 million in capital to fund your advances.

The financial documentation requirements escalate dramatically when you need more than that.

Once you move beyond self-funding or friends and family money into the realm of raising $5-10 million or more, investors won’t accept your homegrown reporting systems or month-end bundle accounting—they want audited financials and proper transaction-level documentation.

Sophisticated syndicators expect a professional CRM system tracking all merchant relationships, detailed default modeling, GAAP-compliant accounting systems that properly account for income recognition on merchant advances, and as investment amounts increase, audited financials become non-negotiable.

Auditors don’t accept shortcuts in the MCA space. They require transaction-level detail with recognized income on each advance, estimated defaults by cohort, and precise documentation of collection performance. They’re specifically looking for attempts to bundle or obscure individual merchant performance – a common practice in some MCA shops that raises immediate concerns with institutional investors.

Here’s what most MCA operators don’t realize: Getting your books audit-ready isn’t a quick fix. It’s a process that can take several months to update historical advance and collection records, 3-4 months for a first-time audit (always longer than subsequent audits), and additional time for any remediation of collection documentation. In total, you’re looking at potentially 9-12 months from financial disarray to audited statements. That’s an eternity in the fast-moving MCA world when a funding opportunity appears.

If you even think you might seek significant outside capital within the next year, start preparing now. Implement proper merchant tracking systems immediately. Ensure all bookkeeping follows GAAP principles for advance recognition. Consider getting audited financials before you need them.

Yes, this requires upfront investment, but put it in perspective: If you’re raising $5 million to fund your advance portfolio (often just the starting point), the cost of proper financial infrastructure is minimal compared to the capital you’ll secure and the acceleration in your timeline.

The most successful capital raises in the MCA industry aren’t just about having a great portfolio performance – they’re about being ready when opportunity knocks. Don’t be the MCA provider explaining to eager investors why they need to wait a year while you get your advance and collection records in order. The most valuable asset in fundraising isn’t just your merchant performance – it’s being prepared to prove it immediately.

Last modified: April 29, 2025

David Roitblat is the founder and CEO of Better Accounting Solutions, an accounting firm based in New York City, and a leading authority in specialized accounting for merchant cash advance companies.

To connect with David, email david@betteraccountingsolutions.com.




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