I Co-Funded a $699M Real Estate Operator's MCA. Here's What That Taught Me About Speed.
- Ali Barkhordar

- 3 days ago
- 4 min read

When I tell people one of the largest merchants I've ever co-funded on the MCA side does north of $699 million in annual revenue, the reaction is almost always the same. They assume I'm exaggerating. Then they assume the business must be struggling. Neither is true.
This is what I've learned about MCA for real estate by actually putting capital to work alongside operators at this scale. It isn't the story the industry tells itself.
The merchant is an East Coast real estate operator. Multi-generational brand. Institutional banking activity. A credit profile that would clear underwriting at any commercial bank in the country. The kind of operator most people assume would never touch a merchant cash advance.
And yet I've co-funded MCA positions on this business with a consistent renewal history.
For years, I'd been operating inside the same lazy framing as everyone else in this industry.
MCA is for businesses that can't get bank money. MCA is the option of last resort. MCA is what you do when you've exhausted the cheaper alternatives. That framing isn't wrong for a portion of the market. But it's wildly incomplete, and watching this operator work changed how I think about the product.
What I used to believe. I used to believe the rate was the thing. I'd look at a factor and compare it to a bank line of credit and conclude that anyone choosing the more expensive option was either uninformed or out of options. That's a comforting belief because it lets you put every merchant into one of two buckets. Smart operators take cheap money. The rest take MCA.
The problem is that the operators I respect most don't fit that frame. They're not naive. They're not desperate. They run businesses I'd want to own, and they choose MCA on purpose, repeatedly, with full awareness of what cheaper capital costs.
So either they're all wrong, or my frame was wrong. I changed my frame.
What the $699M operator showed me. Here's the thing that finally clicked when I watched this merchant work.
In real estate, the spread between a deal being available and a deal being closed is where the money is made. A seller wants to move. A property hits the market. A competitor is circling. The clock is the constraint, not the rate.
A bank line of credit, even a pre-approved one, runs on the bank's timeline. Committees meet. Files get reviewed. Appraisals get scheduled. The capital is cheaper on paper, but it arrives after the window has closed.
MCA capital arrives in 24 to 72 hours. The cost is higher. The speed is the entire point.
For an operator at this scale, the math is straightforward. The carrying cost of an MCA position is a small fraction of the upside on a property captured ahead of competitors. The "expensive" capital becomes the cheapest capital the moment the deal closes.
I was looking at the rate. He was looking at the deal.
The renewal question. Every funder in this industry has been asked some version of "if MCA is so good, why do merchants need to renew?" It's a fair question, and for a long time I thought it cut against the product.
Watching this operator changed my answer.
Renewals aren't a sign that the product is broken. They're a sign that the product is working. A merchant who renews repeatedly is a merchant for whom the math has been proven, transaction by transaction, over a sustained period. Distressed businesses don't renew. They default, they stack to survive, or they quietly exit the space. The merchants who keep coming back are the ones for whom the unit economics have penciled out.
I started watching renewal patterns differently after this. Not as a problem to apologize for. As one of the most honest signals in the entire industry.
What this means for how I underwrite now. Once I started seeing operators at this scale use MCA deliberately, I stopped letting the industry stereotype drive my underwriting instincts. I look at consistency of revenue. I look at deposit behavior. I look at renewal history. I look at how the merchant talks about the use of capital. Are they buying inventory ahead of a season? Acquiring a property? Funding a contract they've already signed? Or are they covering a hole?
That distinction matters more than any credit score.
The merchants I want to co-fund are the ones using MCA as a tool, not as a lifeline. And the framework I'd apply to a corner pizza shop is the same framework I'd apply to a $699M real estate operator, just at different scale. Velocity over cost. Consistency over rating. Use of capital over cost of capital.
What I'd tell other funders and brokers. Stop apologizing for the product.
The operators winning market share right now are not the ones with the cheapest capital stack. They're the ones who have stopped treating capital cost as a moral question and started treating it as a mechanical one. They benchmark capital not against other capital. They benchmark it against the cost of standing still.
If you've been carrying around a quiet sense that you should be in a "more respectable" part of finance, drop it. Some of the most sophisticated operators in the country use MCA on purpose. Your job is to underwrite well, fund consistently, and respect the renewal patterns of the merchants who keep coming back.
The quiet lesson. The market doesn't reward the cheapest capital. It rewards the fastest hand.
I co-funded a real estate operator doing nearly three quarters of a billion dollars in revenue. He keeps coming back to MCA. He keeps closing properties his competitors are still underwriting. He keeps winning markets while the cautious crowd waits on a committee.
I learned more from watching him work than from any pitch deck or credit memo I've reviewed in twenty years.



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