- Arkansas has not enacted a commercial financing disclosure law or MCA-specific statute as of mid-2026, but its constitutional usury cap (Amendment 89, generally 17%) may apply if a court recharacterizes an advance as a disguised loan.
- The economy runs on agriculture (top rice and a leading poultry producer), food processing, and trucking and logistics anchored by Walmart, Tyson, and J.B. Hunt.
- The SBA Arkansas District Office in Little Rock serves all 75 counties with 7(a) and 504 loans.
Funding the Arkansas economy
Arkansas runs on the land and on logistics. It’s the nation’s top rice producer and one of its leading poultry states, and that farm output feeds a deep food-processing industry led by Springdale-based Tyson Foods. Layered on top is a retail-and-freight engine anchored by Walmart in Bentonville and trucking giant J.B. Hunt in Lowell — companies that pull a vast network of Arkansas suppliers, carriers, and service businesses into their orbit. Add a growing steel cluster in Mississippi County and a steady aerospace-and-defense export base, and you get an economy where capital needs are constant and often seasonal.
Industries we fund across Arkansas
- Poultry & agriculture — equipment financing and working capital for growers, feed operations, and farm-service businesses across the Delta and the river valley.
- Food & beverage processing — growth financing for the plants and suppliers feeding Tyson and other processors in Northwest Arkansas.
- Trucking & logistics — invoice factoring is especially common, turning slow-paying freight bills into same-week cash along the I-40 and I-30 corridors.
- Steel & metals — equipment loans for fabricators and the mills clustered around Osceola and Mississippi County.
- Retail & services — lines of credit for the small businesses that support Bentonville, Rogers, and the fast-growing Fayetteville–Springdale metro.
What the rules mean for you
Arkansas has not enacted a commercial financing disclosure law, so MCA and sales-based financing providers aren’t required by the state to give you a standardized APR or total-cost figure, and they generally don’t register with an Arkansas financial regulator. One Arkansas-specific wrinkle: the state constitution’s usury cap (Amendment 89) is among the strictest in the country and can come into play if a court treats an advance as a disguised loan. The practical takeaway: get the numbers yourself. Before signing, ask for the factor rate, the total repayment amount, the holdback percentage, every fee, and the reconciliation terms in writing. Hoss Capital only works with partners who operate transparently.