So_Cynical
The Contrarian Averager
- Joined
- 31 August 2007
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Well I have to say, I was like, you have to be kidding, but it actually looks interesting. Still seems like you are completly at the mercy of the borrower to repay you back though, yea ok the risk is spread over 10's or100's of investors but if they all decide not to repay....
I guess being regulated though it would effect someone's credit rating? That alone is a pretty decent incentive to make the repayments
I just had a quick read of their website - is it the case that they currently only allow for "sophisticated investors"?
NEWS Corp has been joined by billionaires James Packer and Kerry Stokes in a powerful consortium that will disrupt the major banks in the unsecured lending market through an initial 25 per cent stake in the peer-to-peer lender SocietyOne.
The consortium, which has been pulled together by former Challenger boss Dominic Stevens, has the potential to increase its holding to 50 per cent, depending on performance.
Mr Packer and Mr Stokes will invest in SocietyOne through their private companies, Consolidated Press Holdings and Australian Capital Equity.
Our platform is currently open to Wholesale Clients. We are working to open the platform to all retail investors very soon.
December 11 2014 11:57 AM
Lending Club Corp. (NYSE:LC) shares skyrocketed more than 60 percent Thursday in their debut on the New York Stock Exchange. The San Francisco startup, an online peer-to-peer lending company connecting borrowers and investors, priced its initial public offering at $15 a share late Wednesday, topping Wall Street expectations for $12 to $14.
But shortly after the opening bell, Lending Club's shares surged to $24.75 and at one point climbed 67 percent to $25.44 -- valuing the company at more than $9 billion -- before easing slightly in early-afternoon trading. The company raised $870 million on 58 million shares sold.
United Prosperity presents you the opportunity to directly help poor entrepreneurs and transform the lives of their families and communities by making a loan or a loan guarantee.
Lend: You select the entrepreneur to support and lend any amount you want. United Prosperity would consolidate the loan amounts from all online lenders and through a locally present Microfinance Institution(MFI) ; your loan will directly reach the entrepreneurs.
Guarantee: You select the entrepreneur to support and each $1 you contribute acts as collateral or a loan guarantee to a bank. Based on the guarantee, the bank makes a loan of nearly $2 to the entrepreneur though a partner Microfinance Institution (MFI).
Once a loan or a loan guarantee has been made, the entrepreneur’s progress can be tracked online. On loan repayment, you get your money back, and you can choose to recycle it by lending/ guaranteeing the loan to another entrepreneur.
Since our launch in May 2009 and as of May 2013:
1300 families have received more than $280,000 in loans
Our partner MFIs have built their credit history with the local banking system encouraging more banks to lend to them.
This has impacted an even greater number of entrepreneurs, their families and whole communities. We work in regions with high levels of extreme poverty and ask you to join us in amplifying this positive change and lift many more communities out of poverty.
I wondering if it could be reasonably safe way for retirees to get more than 2% return on their term deposits.
I had a look at Rate Setter and was impressed with their provision fund idea.
But there are a number around.
Thoughts ? Experiences ? Other suggestions ?
Thanks Zaxon. Very Interesting. I can hear the concerns of scandals in China. Your observations about the lack of risk the companies has seems pertinent.P2P lending had massive scandals in China which has tarnished the industry. There's also been some examples in other countries where some very shady practises have been happening. The industry just isn't regulated, allowing the companies to basically do what they please.
The problem is that the market maker's incentive is to push through as many transactions as possible. They take no risk. You the lender do. They make their transaction fees regardless.
.
Just wondering if there are any other direct experiences of how local companies are working ?
I've start using Ratesetter in January last year, I've been very impressed by the results so far. I haven't used any of the others but from appearances it looks like Ratesetter appear to try to be transparent with their loans & how they're performing: every 3 months they give you a data dump of all their loans from the start and whether they're current/arrears/defaulted etc.Thought this deserved a reboot.
What have been peoples experiences with investing/borrowing through P2P ? I wondering if it could be reasonably safe way for retirees to get more than 2% return on their term deposits.
I had a look at Rate Setter and was impressed with their provision fund idea.
But there are a number around.
Thoughts ? Experiences ? Other suggestions ?
https://www.ratesetter.com.au/
That's excellent CBerg. I take Zaxons comments onboard but it would be useful to get a independent overall picture of how safe the loans made by Rate Setter (and other providers) are. They do have a provisional fund to pay out at least some defaulting loans.
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