How Business Debt Settlement Works: An Overview
The merchant retains an attorney-owned firm. The firm reviews the MCA contracts, identifies vulnerabilities, and assesses the total obligation. The firm contacts the funder and initiates negotiation. The funder evaluates the cost of continued collection versus the cost of settlement. A reduced amount is agreed upon, documented, and paid. The obligation is discharged. The UCC lien is released.
The Sequence
The sequence is simple. The execution requires knowledge of MCA contracts, federal case law, and the specific vulnerabilities that create leverage in negotiation.
What Happens During Negotiation
The attorney presents the funder’s counsel with the contract’s weaknesses. A COJ clause that is unenforceable under CPLR § 3218. A reconciliation provision that was never honored. A personal guarantee whose terms were misrepresented by the broker. A factor rate that, annualized, invites recharacterization as a usurious loan under federal precedent.
The funder’s counsel evaluates the risk. Litigation against a represented merchant with identifiable contract vulnerabilities costs more and produces less predictable outcomes than a negotiated settlement. The funder settles.
The funder does not settle because the funder is generous. The funder settles because the funder’s attorney has calculated the cost of not settling.
The Timeline
Straightforward cases resolve in four to eight weeks. Cases involving multiple stacked advances, active litigation, or frozen accounts require more time. The variable is the funder’s responsiveness, not the merchant’s readiness.
The process begins with the documents. We can review them and explain what happens next.
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Disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Results vary based on individual circumstances. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. If you are in legal distress, consult a licensed attorney.