Peer-to-Peer Lending – Zopa
The economy, and in particular the banking system, is suffering from two major problems.
- People like me, who have savings have no sensible place to put our money. You might just as well bury the cash in the garden. But what do you do if you have a flat?
- Others who want to borrow money, go through so many hoops with the banks, that they turn to dodgy sources of finance.
A quick point on borrowing is that I’ve had spam from the United States offering me loans at up to 180%. Not from suspicious operators, but supposedly reputable UK plcs. A quick letter to my MP and thankfully, he was able to push the rght buttons in government to get it all stopped.
There is a new system of lending called peer-to-peer lending.
A leading company and one of the first is Zopa, which was started by financial processionals in London. Their system is simple.
- Lenders club together to provide loans of up to £15,000 for others. This means that one loan may come from up to a couple of hundred lenders.
- Borrowers are properly credit checked and pay an arrangement fee of £100. One point for borrowers is that there is no fee for early repayment of the loan.
- Zopa does all the processing in the middle and charges one percent for this. So this means if I lend money out at 7%, then I effectively get 6%.
I signed up for Zopa in September 2008 and I now have over £30,000 invested.
From my experience, I now believe that peer-to-peer lending will become more and more commonplace, as we seek to replace the banks with something more akin to the twentieth century. And no I don’t mean the twenty-first century!
Regardless of whom, you borrow from, Prosper takes a small percentage for managing each loan. Calvin Garden
Comment by Calvin Garden | July 9, 2009 |
Zopa are the same. They charge one percent.
Comment by AnonW | July 9, 2009 |