Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

"extra 1%" on month > 12% APR.


Why 'on month'? You'd get a 1% discount at most; if you 'buy' that discount by freezing all funds for the whole chargeback period (90-120 days) then it's 3-4% APR.

[edit] the thinking is, if your revenue is $100/year, then in (A) scenario with higher rate you pay $1/year more in fees; in (B) scenario with delayed funds you need a permanent loan of ~$25 which will cost you more than that unless you can get an APR of lower than 4%.


std credit now:customer pays % after 1st month & merchant pays 36% APR during customer grace of 1 month.


Wishful thinking > actual APR of short-term, high-risk loans and difficulty of small businesses in securing them in the first place.




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: