C2FO marks $300B in funding for businesses as entrepreneurs navigate ongoing credit crunch

August 24, 2023  |  Startland News Staff

Rapid marketplace expansion in the first half of 2023 helped push Leawood-based C2FO — the world’s on-demand working capital platform — past the $300-billion mark in total funding to its customers.

This record funding amount reflects invoices paid an average of 31 days early via C2FO’s platform. C2FO gets vital, low-cost capital into customers’ hands quickly so they can take advantage of growth opportunities and plan for today’s changing and often challenging times, the company said in a press release.

Alex Donnelly, C2FO

“Between January 2022 and August 2023, C2FO launched over 50 marketplaces for enterprises and their suppliers worldwide. This has added hundreds of thousands of invoices to our platform as they flow between buyers and suppliers,” Alex Donnelly, COO, Americas, C2FO, told Startland News. “Our continued ability to offer competitive rates despite interest rate hikes and the inflation-driven rise in invoice amounts is also a key factor in our customer retention and loyalty.”

The company’s mission of ensuring every company around the world has the capital needed to thrive is the cornerstone of its business, C2FO officials said.

C2FO reached $300 billion in accelerated funding July 21 — less than 1.5 years after surpassing $200 billion in funding in March 2022. This recent milestone demonstrates the continued strong demand for more efficient and affordable sources of working capital for businesses.

“When we celebrated our first accelerated invoice in 2010, we knew we had created something that might have a shot at redefining working capital finance for the better,” said Alexander “Sandy” Kemper, founder and CEO of C2FO. “This $300 billion is money businesses didn’t have to borrow, personally guarantee or pay interest on. Instead, they can focus on what matters most: adding jobs, creating new products and building for the future. It really is just two clicks to cash, so why borrow working capital when it can be accelerated instead?” 

C2FO funding for businesses over time; image courtesy of C2FO

Recent surveys from the Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank confirm that banks are tightening their lending standards, C2FO said in a press release. While predictions of a 2023 recession have lessened, businesses are still facing increased challenges when it comes to securing loans and lines of credit, the company continued, noting businesses face reduced access to funding and an increased cost for that funding with limited support from the traditional financial system.

“Despite initial fears of a U.S. recession due to rising rates and weakened consumer spending, the economy has been resilient in the past year,” Donnelly detailed. “This has prompted economists to predict a favorable “soft landing” in 2024. If this trend continues, businesses will likely navigate an environment of low growth, high interest, above-average inflation, and low unemployment in 2024.”

Such an environment could sustain strong consumer spending, benefiting goods-focused businesses and driving increased inventory demand, she continued.

“While this is good for the suppliers, it also presents a significant challenge,” Donnelly added. “This is because these suppliers are bound by agreements requiring them to wait for extended periods, typically between 30 to 120 days, for payment. Payment delays severely restrict a business’s liquidity and ability to invest in additional inventory. Amid tighter credit conditions, businesses turn to alternatives like C2FO for fast, flexible, and affordable capital, ensuring operations, capitalizing on the market’s ascent, and seizing growth opportunities amid the complex economic landscape.”

C2FO eliminates risk-based underwriting and allows businesses to access low-cost, convenient capital on their terms, the company said, noting that win-win model enables its buyers to improve their margins and provide fast, impactful help to their supply chains.

In the first half of 2023, the average C2FO enterprise buyer customer enjoyed more than $1 million in improved EBITDA, the company reported. During that same time, the platform delivered more than $35 billion in funding to supplier customers — capital that helped them grow and become stronger participants in the global supply chain.

Click here to learn more about C2FO.

Tagged , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder
      [adinserter block="4"]

      2023 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        LISTEN: Ground Truth Ag puts real-time objectivity into grain grading; here’s how it makes your food safer

        By Tommy Felts | October 31, 2025

        On this episode of our 12-part Plug and Play Topeka podcast series, we speak with Kyle Folk, CEO and founder of Ground Truth Ag — a next-gen ag-tech company using AI, machine vision and near-infrared spectroscopy to deliver real-time grain-quality data across the farm-to-market workflow. Folk shares how his upbringing on a Canadian farm inspired…

        MidxMidwest teases lineup for three-day investor-innovation event (and the startup party of the year)

        By Tommy Felts | October 31, 2025

        Building on Kansas City’s ambitious spirit, a new blend of music, startups and community is expected to meet at the crossroads of innovation, said Alexa Heying, pulling back the curtain on plans for the region’s flagship Midwest tech conference. “The goal of MidxMidwest is to create the connective tissue between founders, investors, and corporates so…

        Peek inside: Buffalo State Pizza takes another slice of ownership with fresh-baked downtown OP relocation

        By Tommy Felts | October 31, 2025

        Three decades of pizza at a popular downtown Overland Park corner might have come to a close this week, as the crew at Buffalo State Pizza Co. picked up the last of what they could carry and walked it a half block down the street to the shop’s new home near another local favorite, The…

        One cabin, one chair, one cut: Barber swaps rushed for rustic at his no-distractions shop in the woods

        By Tommy Felts | October 31, 2025

        LONE JACK, Mo. — A short drive to visit this barber — his cabin tucked away in the oaks and hickories about 35 minutes from the heart Kansas City — is about more than just the journey to a great hair cut, Micah Holdaway said; it’s about the experience. After running Barberhouse Men’s Hair Studio in…