Lending Club ROI Bonus: 5% extra return as a “Thank You!”

Lending Club is offering a 5% ROI bonus in the form of a “Thank you!” to investors who lend more than $5,000 before February 3rd 2008. If you lend $5,000 before the deadline, you will receive a bonus of $250! If you use my Lending Club Affiliate Link and open the account with $1,000 initially, you will receive an additional bonus of $50! That will add up to an extra 1% to your P2P lending ROI. The best news is that the more you loan, the more bonus you will receive, so if you loan a total of $10,000 before the deadline, you will receive a $500 bonus payout. Even better you can take the bonus out in cash or reinvest it at Lending Club.

How would the Bonus Impact your Lending ROI? [Read more...]

Zopa Open for P2P Lending in the USA

Zopa, the P2P Lending company from the UK has now opened its virtual doors in the United States. Zopa has been providing a P2P marketplace in Italy and the UK for some time now. The rates that they are offering to borrowers (currently starting at 8.75%) for unsecured loans are quite low and can go as low as nothing with help. The rates provided to lenders, although greater than a government CD, are not outstanding, but Zopa’s differentiating factor from other P2P lending sites is that Zopa loans are guaranteed.

To summarize and simplify Zopa’s somewhat complex model, let me walk you through the steps as a lender — How Zopa Works:

  1. Register and open an account with one of the member credit unions.
  2. Lend money to the credit union at a flat and guaranteed rate which is higher than a CD, but is also backed by the FDIC up to $100,000.
  3. You pick a small portion of your return (called help) and give to a particular borrower(s) to lower the borrower’s monthly payments.

So again it is a guaranteed flat rate of return which is greater than a 1 year CD, unless you choose to lower the return to give the difference away. The return is less than you might earn with Prosper or Lending Club, but you do not take on the credit risk, so your principle is not at risk. You are lending money to the bank and not directly to the individual in this case. So to inject the P2P aspect of the lending, Zopa allows you to give away a bit of the differential between the rate at which they loan out the money and interest that they are paying you. So if you loan Zopa, er, rather the credit union via Zopa, lots of money, you can discount the rate at which your uncle, bother, or sister (or the girl who has a cute picture — and I expect to see lots of attractive pictures posted at Zopa) borrows money by you giving the borrower a bit of the return to lower their payment. According to the marketing material, everyone wins. Well, as long as the lender is happy tying up their money for a full year at rates just slightly higher than a government bond – or less than government bond if the lender prefers to give more juice to borrowers. And of course Zopa wins who takes no risk on the transaction since Zopa is actually a middle man between the credit unions and the individuals.

The True Irony of Zopa

Did you catch that last bit? My review of Zopa is that it is ironic that a web 2.0 P2P lending site is actually serving as middle man between borrower and bank and lender and bank. Zopa has injected themselves into the middle of a transaction that you could have more directly entered. Very ironic, but at least they do seem to offer good rates and an interesting concept.

Update: Zopa Borrowers Receiving Negative Interest Rates on Loans

More than ironic… What is the point of using Zopa lending to a relative? If your purpose is to gift a relative some money by lowering their rate by lending your money at less than the going rate, might I suggest you simply gift the relative some money instead and cut out the middle man?

[Read more...]

Zopa Promises to be Different

I recieved my informational email from Zopa announcing that they are in the testing phase. Zopa is promising to be different than the existing Person to Person lending sites such as Prosper.com and Lending Club in some interesting ways:

  • No risk for investors.
    Your funds will be federally insured. No more worrying about whether your borrowers will pay your loan back.
  • Pick who you want to help.
    Investors will choose exactly who they want to help.
  • Set your rate.
    Investors will choose how much they want to earn, up to a ceiling.
  • No waiting.
    Borrowers will get their loans immediately upon approval.
    Lower your monthly payment.
  • Borrowers can actually reduce their loan payments after they’ve borrowed. They’ll do that using rich profiles…

How will we do all this? By using some very cool technology and a terrific partnership with leading credit unions. More coming soon! And we do mean soon…

I am very curious about how the federal insuance will work. I want more details on that. It seems like that will encourage reckless lending. “Rich Profiles” sounds like a great cconcept for borrowers but again I need more information to effectively evaluate this. The other two bullet points do not seem enough different to shift the market.

Zopa is also requesting potential borrowers sign up to assist with the testing phase.

We could use some borrowers to pound on the site, take out loans, and make sure all our bells and whistles are…ringing and whistling.

If you were thinking of borrowing on Zopa, have good credit (FICO 640+), and are a U.S. resident 18 or over, drop us a line:
questions@zopa.com

Edit: Zopa was mentioned in a WSJ article today and in the WSJ blogs where the comments are critical of Prosper.

Lending Club Referral Program – It’s Official!

Although not yet formally announced, Lending Club now has an affiliate referral program. Rex Dixon, Director of Social Media Content at Lending Club, has confirmed it in the P2PNoBank Forums. I believe the deal is the same as Prosper’s referral program — $25 for both referrer and the new person who signs up using the link. However, the details are still vague, so check back at the forum while Rex answers more questions about the affiliate program. I’ll also post a summary of the clarifications.

Update: The referral program is now $25 to $50 cash bonus. $25 for funding your account with $500 or receiving a loan and $50 for funding your account with $1000

Create your Lending Club affiliate link like the one below replacing your Lending Club ID with mine: https://secure.lendingclub.com/refer.action?referrer=PersonalLoanPortfoliocom

Please note that I do not recommend using the email system at Lending Club for referring people until they have addressed the issue of the second link to Lending Club not containing the referral code. I mentioned this issue on P2P No Bank forums. Instead you should construct your own email using the link format above to insure that both parties receive the credit.

Update (11/21/2007): Rob from lending club posted some clarifications on the Lending Club affiliate program.

WSJ writes about P2P Lending

The WSJ recently wrote about P2P lending in the article “Doing Loans with Web Neighbors.” The article covers tips for both borrowers and lenders, but they are the basics such as diversify loans and factor in defaults and fees. The article also lists a great story of a borrower who saved a significant amount of money on her monthly payments and raised her credit score.

A year ago, Nicole Newberry was in a financial hole so deep that she had trouble making the minimum payments on her credit cards. Then a co-worker told her about Prosper.com, a peer-to-peer lending Web site… Within 10 days of posting on Prosper.com, Ms. Newberry received a $9,000 loan at 19% annual interest — enough to pay off all her credit cards, which at that time carried 25% to 27% interest rates. As a result, her monthly payment dropped to $330, from $800 before consolidation. Her credit score, once a subprime 580, is now 680 and steadily rising.”

With that kind of credit score increase, I would recommend that Ms. Newberry consider taking out a second loan and use it to pay off the first one. She could drop her monthly payment even further. Prosper only recently announced the option of taking out second loans that would make this strategy possible.

The WSJ article lists the big players in the P2P lending market including:

  • Prosper founded in February 2006 with $90.5 million in loans and 440,000 members. (Rate Ladder says $100 million+.)
  • LendingClub.com started in May 2006 for Facebook and has since opened up has 20,000 participants and more than $1 million in loans.
  • Lending Circle (now virginmoneyus.com) started in May 2007 exclusively for lending among friends and family has brokered more than $200 million in loans.

The article is a good introduction to the P2P lending marketplace, but introduces no revelations. If you are new to researching P2P lending, it is a good article to read. Otherwise, you can skip it…

Kintera to Connect Alumni with Lending Club

Kintera, which offers several product lines (but no clear strategy) such as fund raising, software, donor relations, website creation, and email marketing, branched out again by recently announcing a new P2P lending program to Lending Club to access Kintera’s Alumni network. (Currently Kintera is trading at under $2 per share on the Nasdaq.)

Kintera® Inc. (NASDAQ: KNTA) today announced that Lending Club, an online people-to-people (P2P) lending service, has joined the Kintera Connect Partner Program. The new Kintera Connect open application integration platform enables developers and partners to integrate directly with Kintera technology, and extend their value within the nonprofit sector.

As a Kintera Connect partner, Lending Club will integrate with Kintera’s Alumni Engagement Center Solution to provide a seamless link of information from users on Kintera’s alumni site to LendingMatch™, Lending Club’s proprietary technology that helps match lenders with borrowers using connections established through social networks, associations and online communities.

“Being a Kintera Connect partner allows us to share our advanced P2P lending technology with top alumni networks nationwide who are powered by Kintera,” said Renaud Laplanche, founder and CEO for Lending Club. “What this means is that for the first time alumni can go beyond donations; they can invest in each other and in their community, bypassing the banks to get better rates.”

Kintera Connect, the company’s open application integration platform, enables clients and partners to integrate with Kintera technology. Kintera Connect platform features applications provided by Kintera and its partner network such as customizable browser tools that enable clients to utilize the extensive segmentation capabilities of Kintera’s technology quickly and easily directly from the browser toolbar…

Blah, blah, blah… I have worked in both finance and IT and that still makes very little sense. If you removed every buzz word, you would be left with [Read more...]