Unlock Your Cash Flow Potential with Residual buyouts from Dual Processing
Discover the Power of Residual Buyouts for Your Business and Turn Future Residuals into Immediate Cash
Residual Buyouts in Credit Card Processing
If you’re involved in the credit card processing industry, you’ve likely heard about Credit Card portfolio buyout. These arrangements allow you to turn your future residuals from merchant accounts into immediate cash. We work with every major processor, over 400 completed acquisitions across 100 different ISOs under every major processor including ISOs in US and Canada.
What Is a Residual Buyout?
A residual buyout occurs when you sell part or all of your credit card residual portfolio to another party. Here’s how it works:
Residuals
When you sign up merchants for credit card processing services, you earn residuals. These are ongoing commissions based on the processing volume of the accounts you’ve brought in.
Cash Flow Needs
Sometimes, you need cash quickly—for working capital, expansion, equipment purchases, or other reasons. Instead of waiting for monthly residuals, you can opt for a Merchant level sales residual buyout.
Agreement
In a MLS residual buyout, you transfer your future residuals to the buyer. The buyer pays you a lump sum upfront, effectively purchasing your future income stream.
Types of Buyouts in Credit Card Processing
When it comes to credit card processing, residual buyouts offer unique opportunities for financial flexibility.
- Static Buyout – A static residual buyout is solely the purchase of an agent’s or ISO’s residuals with no requirements for new business.
- Residual Buyout with new business – this requires the agent or ISO to board new business with the buyer. This can require exclusivity or may only require the agent/ISO to board a certain number of accounts or revenue amount or processing volume amount with the buyer each month or year.
- Partial Purchase – A partial purchase refers to when a buyer only buys a portion of the merchants or a percentage of the average monthly revenue. This is typically done to mitigate risk or to appease the ongoing income requirements of the seller.
- Full Purchase – This is a reassignment of the entire residual from the seller to the buyer.
How Does A Buyout Work?
Evaluate
Assess the value of your residuals.
Explore
Connect with potential buyers.
Negotiate
Agree on terms that suit both parties.
Why Should You Consider a Buyout?
Cash Flow Needs
Access immediate funds for growth, working capital, or equipment purchases.
Risk Mitigation
Protect yourself from volatility within the industry.
Portfolio Optimization
Sell just a portion or sell your entire residual portfolio
Key Considerations
- Portfolio Size: Whether you have a small residual portfolio earning a few thousand dollars a month or a substantial one generating up to $250,000 per month, there are buyers interested in both.
- Partial or Full Buyout: You can choose to sell all or only part of your residual portfolio. Evaluate how much cash you need and decide accordingly.
- Evaluation Factors: Buyers consider various factors when assessing your portfolio:
- Monthly Revenue: The average monthly revenue from your residuals.
- Processing Volume: The number of accounts and their processing volume.
- Attrition: Account retention rates.
- Growth: Same-store sales growth.
- Data Requirements: To sell your residuals, provide raw data files and contractual agreements with your existing relationships (usually processors or ISOs). The data should cover 12-24 months of history.
- Merchant Experience: Selling residuals doesn’t impact the merchants. Their processing relationship remains unchanged.
Ready to Unlock Your Financial Potential?
Contact us today to explore if a residual buyout is right for you.