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Prosper.com Shifts Gears on Loan Market

Posted by Peer-Lend on 17th August 2008

Prosper.com’s latest site update announcement (August 14, 2008 – details on their blog) included the following very brief note which signals a major shift in market dynamics – and, potentially, depending upon details which were not released (and are not apparent – and, note to Prosper, therefore not transparent), has implications even to the overall platform concept:

Faster Listings for Qualified Borrowers
In an effort to get higher-quality borrowers through the Prosper loan application process more quickly, we’re testing a streamlined listing process where some borrowers post listings without adding a title, picture, or description. You’ll start seeing these listings on the marketplace, with titles like “My personal loan for [category]“.

While there were no further details about the exact criteria for this new “streamlined” process, depending upon how Prosper has structured this process on the backend, the following cases (or a blend/mixture of these cases) are quite likely to qualify for this new “credit details only” listing type:

  • Loans which have a near certainty of funding (based upon a comparison of the exact loan characteristics with the available pool of lender “portfolio plan” dollars which are waiting to be automatically bid on exactly such loans.)
  • Loans which have a high probability of funding (based upon the funding of past loans of similar characteristics.)
  • Loans which have a high credit quality and are therefore more subject to competition from traditional credit outlets (lowering the barrier to entry for prime/near-prime borrowers who are accustomed to instant approval)

A number of lenders have mentioned to me, in private, that they feel this change robs them of the contextual information, contained in the usual “Why do you want a loan?” narrative, written by borrowers, which they believe is necessary to make an informed decision about whether or not to lend to a particular borrower. I understand, and, having done most of my bidding on Prosper manually (without the use of standing orders or portfolio plans – and only after reading the listings), share this concern (and certainly hope that making a “traditional” listing will always be an option for all borrowers, regardless of credit grade – given that a compelling listing always has great potential to attract more bidders and lower a borrower’s final rate) — but — and this is a very important “but” – I do see the efficiency gain inherent in this change, both for lenders who wish to deploy capital more quickly and for borrowers who place a premium on their time – and for a platform which desires to increase originations, especially if those originations are to prime-ish borrowers plucked straight out of the mouth of VISA or MasterCard.

At the same time, though, and, specifically, to address, head on, the major complaint which has arisen (and which will, no doubt, become more plaintive as more of this type of listing populate the marketplace – and more lenders realize there’s been a subtle, but potentially dramatic, shift), I do not see how this change in any way alters Prosper’s positioning as a “Peer to Peer” lending and loan platform. The loans are still funded, in an open auction process, by a mixture of individual lenders – and the loans are still taken out by individual borrowers. And that still sounds like Peer to Peer Lending to me.

While the change certainly will make some percentage of listings less “personal”, and may, therefore, make interaction with the platform somewhat less “social” (or, at least, somewhat less “voyeuristic”), I fail to see how the absence of a kitty picture (and a legally non-binding paragraph about what kind of cabinets the borrower intends to install in their kitchen – to hold their estimated budget’s X dollars of food per month for which they don’t, in reality, actually budget) somehow means that the loans, or the platform, are no longer “peer to peer”.

That said, there is a certain, almost Old World, charm to the idea of “Social Lending” – a very different, if tangentially related, concept – wherein lenders select borrowers to fund based upon some affinity or connection that they might mutually share – and which connection, on Prosper anyway, can only be established through the perusal of a borrower narrative, in the traditional listing format. The days of Social Lending, at least on Prosper, and at least for many prime borrowers, may now be on their way to an end – which is a shame, given that even prime borrowers often benefit, rate-wise, from bids placed by the non-marginal percentage of lenders who enjoy the fun of clicking through listings, looking for that special one that clicks – and upon which they feel comfortable – or even good about! – clicking “Bid Now!”.

(The other side of this coin is that it’s very often possible to exclude borrowers – and therefore not bid on bad loans that may fit your credit screens or fall into your portfolio plans – based upon reading narratives that might make a highschool math or english teacher cry – or make an honest street hustler blush at the sheer brazenness. No longer being able to avoid loans – even many prime/near-prime loans – that clearly make zero sense is a tangible and real loss of informational edge.)

I’ll have more to say on these topics in the coming days – but hope, in the meantime, that Prosper will clarify its position, specifically regarding whether borrowers who qualify for this new streamlined process will retain the option to create a traditional listing, how such an option will be presented to those borrowers (who may not understand that they will be, informationally, “pricing themselves out” of receiving many bids from “social lenders” should they opt for the “streamlined” listings), and, if Prosper is feeling up to it, giving some guidance re: the vision for the marketplace as a whole – and where it may be headed – especially given the (seemingly) contradictory, Hydra-like, directionality of late: the scaling back of listing details – to which many lenders have become accustomed to rely on – for some unknown subset of loans, coupled with, at the same time, enhanced emphasis on “social” features (such as Family & Friend Lending).

Are we on the way to a more granular marketplace – a more “streamlined” prime-ish market and a more “social” sub-prime-ish market – or are we just… confused? Pending some sort of vision statement, we’re left to speculate. And that’s not a comfortable position for anyone.

Posted in p2p lending, peer-to-peer lending, prosper.com | 2 Comments »

Lending Club Shuts Down (Temporarily?)

Posted by Peer-Lend on 8th April 2008

In a major development in the P2P Lending space, one that has implications for the entire P2P Lending model as it currently exists, it appears that LendingClub.com has partially ceased operations. A notification is up on their site that they are no longer accepting new P2P lender registrations and that no further loans may be made by P2P lenders, though they do apparently plan to continue issuing loans to new borrowers, however, the loans will not, strictly, be “peer-to-peer“.

The stated reason for the shut-down is that they have begun a process of registering the loans as securities (presumably with the SEC) and so must enter a “quiet period”. As well, LendingClub claims that existing loans will continue to be serviced and that lenders will still receive payments. Curiously, they also say that borrowers may still register and seek loans though those loans will be funded and owned by LendingClub.

There has been a large amount of speculation recently in many corners that the P2P Lending models might be subject to some legal uncertainty regarding whether the loans should be classified as securities (and would therefore need to be registered with the SEC). The speculation has primarily been concerned with who, in fact, owns the loans (notes), and how exactly that ownership (or various ownership interests) are transferred between the originator of the loan (the P2P Lending company) and the individual “P2P Lender” (more info here).

It is unclear whether LendingClub has ceased operations as a result of an SEC action or whether LendingClub has chosen to bite the bullet and submit to regulation voluntarily. This event could have major repercussions for other P2P Lenders in the US with similar business models.

I received the following email which contains slightly more information than what was available in the onsite notification:

Dear (Peer-Lend),

Lending Club has started a process to register, with the appropriate securities authorities, promissory notes that may be offered and sold to lenders through our site in the future. Until we complete the registration process, we will not accept new lender registrations or allow new commitments from existing lenders. We will continue to service all previously funded loans during this period, and lenders will be able to access their accounts, monitor their portfolios, and withdraw available funds without changes.

The borrowing side of our site will remain generally unaffected by this registration process; borrowers can continue to apply for loans and new loans posted after April 7, 2008, will be funded and held only by Lending Club.

Until the registration process is completed, the company will undergo a quiet period and will not be able to respond to press and other inquiries about Lending Club or the registration process during that time.

Q&A:

Q1. What about money I have begun moving, but is still in transit to Lending Club?
A1.1. If you are in the process of verifying your bank account, you will be able to complete that verification but will not be able to add new funds
A1.2 If you have initiated a transfer, the funds will be displayed in your Lending Club account balance as soon as those funds are available.
A1.3 If you have uncommitted funds, you may request that Lending Club return those funds via the same method used to load the funds. For example,
• If you have initiated an ACH to add funds, these funds will be transferred into your Lending Club account but you will not be able to lend these funds out. You can go into your Lending Club account once the ACH transfer has been completed and withdraw funds back into your linked bank account..
• If you’ve wired funds into your Lending Club account and have not yet committed these funds into loans, you can send a request to support@lendingclub.com for us to wire these funds back to you at no charge.
• If you’ve sent funds by check, and have not yet committed these funds into loans, you can send a request to support@lendingclub.com for us to send you a check by mail for the same amount at no charge.

Q2. What about referrals?
A2.1 The current referral program is terminated. If you have referred someone who has already signed up as a lender or a borrower, or if you have been referred by someone and have already signed up as a lender or a borrower, you will be receiving your referral payment within the next few days.

Sincerely,

Patrick Gannon
Senior Vice President
Lending Club
440 N Wolfe Road
Sunnyvale CA 94085
www.lendingclub.com

Posted in lendingclub.com, p2p lending, p2p loans, peer-to-peer lending, peer-to-peer loans, prosper.com | 6 Comments »

 
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