Business-size (or advance-size) diversification is how MCA funders control loss-given-default per single concentration event. A clean A-paper $500K advance to a single merchant is a much larger single-name risk than 50 × $10K micro-advances, even if the aggregate underwriting is similar.
Typical 2026 advance-size mix for a mature ($100M+) funder book. - Micro ($5K–$25K): 28–35% of book, 55–65% of merchant count. Highest default rate (16–22%), lowest loss-given-default (often 60–70% recovery). Speed-funded in under 4 hours. - Small ($25K–$100K): 38–45% of book, 28–35% of merchant count. The "core" segment — 12–18% default rate, 50–60% recovery. - Mid ($100K–$300K): 20–28% of book, 6–10% of merchant count. Default rate 9–13%, recovery 40–50%. Slower funding (1–3 days), more underwriting touch. - Large ($300K–$1M): 3–8% of book, 1–2% of merchant count. Often syndicated. Default rate 7–11%, recovery 30–45%. - Jumbo ($1M+): 0–3% of book, < 0.5% of merchant count. Almost always syndicated, often participation-only. Default rate 8–14% (concentrated tail risk).
Why funders diversify by size. - Single-name risk: a $1M default on a $50M book is 2% loss in one event; same default on a $250M book is 0.4%. The same nominal dollar default is 5× more damaging on the smaller book. - Operational scaling: micro tickets fund automatically with low underwriter touch; mid and large tickets need senior underwriters, which constrains volume. - Investor preferences: securitization investors price small-balance pools tighter (more diversification); warehouse lenders impose single-obligor concentration caps (typically 1% of borrowing base).
Concentration limits in 2026. - Single advance > 0.5–1% of book: triggers credit-committee review. - Top-10 merchants > 8–12% of book: signals over-concentration; funders typically syndicate down. - Single-merchant aggregate exposure cap: $1–3M for most independent funders, $5–10M for bank-affiliated platforms, $25M+ for the largest (Enova/OnDeck, Bluevine).
The "$500K problem" that defines the mid-segment. Files in the $250K–$500K range are the hardest to underwrite: too large for the speed-fund automated track, too small for the manual-review specialist underwriter to justify the time. Most funders solve this with a "fast-track manual review" lane that completes in under 24 hours but requires three years of tax returns, business debt schedule, and aged AR. Mid-segment files account for the bulk of stress on a typical underwriting team.
2026 trend: barbell distribution. Funders are increasingly bifurcating into micro-fast (Square Capital, Toast Capital, Stripe Capital — sub-$50K average) and mid-large (Credibly, Channel Partners — $75K–$200K average). Pure-play "small ticket" $25K–$100K is being squeezed by the processor-embedded funders on one side and the bank-affiliated mid-market funders on the other.
Common confusions. - "Bigger advances = lower risk" — partially true; default rate drops with size, but loss-given-default rises sharply (less recovery on larger advances). - "Micro advances are pure consumer-like risk" — partially true; modern processors with embedded data (Square, Toast) underwrite micro with low losses.
Takeaway for 2026. Funders without a clear size-segment strategy lose on both ends: not fast enough for micro deal flow, not deep enough for mid-market underwriting. The funders winning in 2026 picked a lane (or built explicit micro + mid lanes with separate teams). PE-acquired platforms increasingly drive the larger-ticket segment as their capital structure favors size; independent funders specialize in micro or small.
Related terms
- MCA funder portfolio diversification by state (2026) — Mature MCA funders cap any single US state at 15–22% of outstanding receivables. FL/TX/NY/CA each typically run 8–18%; secondary states 2–6%; under-3% states are 'opportunistic only'. (Updated 2026-06-28.)
- MCA funder portfolio diversification by industry (2026) — Most 2026 MCA funders cap any single NAICS-2 industry at 18–25% of book. Restaurants/food service typically 15–22%, retail 10–18%, trucking 8–15%, construction 5–12%, services 20–30% (most fragmented). (Updated 2026-06-28.)
- MCA funder portfolio size — The total dollar value of active MCA advances on a funder's books; benchmarks: micro-funders <$10M, mid-market $10M–$250M, large $250M–$1B, mega-funders $1B+ (Credibly, Rapid Finance, Kapitus, Forward Financing each cross $1B as of 2026).
- MCA funder portfolio concentration risk — typical 2026 levels — Mature 2026 MCA funders run Herfindahl indices of 800–1,400 (state), 1,000–1,800 (industry), and 200–600 (single-merchant). HHI above 2,500 in any dimension triggers covenant breaches and rating downgrades. (Updated 2026-06-28.)
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