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Business Profile: Local Broker Gets Creative
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Business Profile: Local Broker Gets Creative
North American Resource Capital
90 New Mill Rd, Smithtown
/listings/north-american-resource-capital
175553
/locations/1931240
North American Resource Capital scores funding when
others fail.
By
Laura Glasser
|
www.patch.com
| September 14, 2010
When local businesses are turned down by their bankers,
they call Richard Cassiano.
His firm,
North American Resource Capital
on New Mill Road, specializes in finding creative
funding for companies across Long Island. He's often a
last-ditch effort for businesses that have been bumped
by their banks and can't find funding on their own.
And that's OK, Cassiano said, because if he can't help
them, no one can.
"I work with banking sources, institutional sources and
private sources of funding, and I don't give up," he
said. "Nine times out of 10, if I don't have a product
for them, there's nothing available for them."
Cassiano said his success with creative financing comes
from years of experience in the industry and a general
knowledge of what banks and other funding sources are
looking for.
"Businesses don't always give the right information," he
said. "Or lots of times they just really went to the
wrong place, like a national bank when they should be
with a local bank."
Cassiano said he can immediately spot which companies
fit with which funding sources and he can often succeed
where businesses have failed simply by tweaking their
approach.
To close the deal and get cash for clients, he's
rewritten business plans and even helped business owners
clean up their credit. He helped one client get a loan
from an Arizona bank after the business was turned down,
simply by reworking the application.
"He's as conscientious as anyone can be," said Gloria
Glowacki, assistant director of Stony Brook University's
Small Business Development Center, which Cassiano works
with to help developing companies find funding. "He does
anything to get the deal done," she said.
Cassiano offers Small Business Administration loans,
lines of credit, private funding, equipment leases and
even personal mortgages to his clients, which are
generally small businesses with less than $3 million in
annual sales, though he will go larger.
He started North American Resource Capital in 1995 with
two colleagues, after about 15 years of working in the
financial industry.
"At that point we had a lot of relationships with
referrals," Cassiano said. "We basically left our old
company on Friday and opened the new one on Monday."
The three men taught themselves how to broker SBA loans,
lines of credit and other products in an effort to
become a one-stop-shop for businesses looking for
financing.
"We wanted to be full-service to the customer because
being diversified is really helpful," Cassiano said,
adding that the knowledge of various types of funding
helps him steer customers toward products that
complement them.
Since opening, North America Resource Capital has had a
satellite office in New Jersey and a staff of about 7
sales people.
The two colleagues are no longer with Cassiano who
operates the company himself.
The firm has found funding for Smithtown companies
including
Café Havanna Bar & Grill
and
Island Motorcycle Parts,
both of which got their startup cash through Cassiano.
He's also scored cash for Stafford Associates in
Setauket, a chiropractic practice in Stony Brook and a
dry cleaning business in Holtsville.
Cassiano said most of his business comes from referrals
from bankers and others in the industry. In addition to
Stony Brook's business center, he works with
Farmingdale's Small Business Development Center as well.
"Traditional bank funding is a no-brainer, but then you
have all the deals that don't quite make it," Glowacki
said. "Rich has access to a lot of other opportunities."
Business is currently booming, Cassiano said, because
big banks have recently been rejecting so many small
business clients. July was one of the company's best
months on record.
"Many of my clients from the larger banks have been
declined because those banks have raised the criteria
bar so high," Cassiano said. "But there are so many
smaller and regional banks I can place them with that
still have money to lend."
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