Most Deals Don’t Die in Credit... They Die in Preparation.

Here’s how to fix that before it costs you time, leverage, or the deal.

Josh Peters
Founder & Principal Capital Advisor

Meet Josh Peters


Josh is the founder of MCS Capital and a 20+ year operator across finance, technology, and capital strategy.


His background spans commercial lending, working capital, CRE acquisitions, startup funding, and system-driven deal execution across North America.


But what defines his work today is simple:

Building the infrastructure that gets deals approved.


A Different Approach to Capital

Through MCS Capital, Josh has focused on one core problem:

Most deals don’t fail because of the opportunity.
They fail because of how they’re presented.

To solve that, he built a system.


Rufus™ Capital Intelligence System


Rufus™ is MCS Capital’s internal underwriting framework—designed to evaluate, structure, and position deals the way lenders actually make decisions.

It transforms raw borrower input into clear, structured, lender-ready files that remove friction and improve execution.


What That Means in Practice

Josh’s work helps brokers and operators:

  • Package deals correctly the first time
  • Eliminate missing-document chaos
  • Improve lender response times
  • Increase approval probability
  • Present opportunities with clarity and control

Operating Philosophy

Execution creates opportunity.

Josh blends old-school relationship discipline with modern, system-driven execution—making the capital process faster, clearer, and more predictable.


Bottom Line

Josh Peters isn’t just experienced in capital markets.

He’s built a system to navigate them more effectively.

For brokers and operators who need deals to actually close, MCS Capital is where they turn when execution matters.

I Need a Capital Readiness Review

Get lender-level clarity before you ever ask for capital.


Before submitting, give us a quick snapshot of your deal:


• Property or business type

• Location

• Deal type (acquisition, refinance, bridge, expansion, etc.)

• Estimated deal size

• Current stage (under contract, exploring, stalled, etc.)

• Any challenges or lender feedback so far


Most issues show up in how a deal is structured and presented—this helps us quickly see where things stand.