“Local Business Lending Partnership” Gets Hijacked
Lancashire and Funding Circle have called their partnership a Local Business Lending Partnership.
But type that into Google, even with quotes and you get adverts for Wonga and Lloyds TSB.
Click here to see what you get!
Not what you’re looking for at all!
Lancashire And Funding Circle
Lancashire County Council and Funding Circle have got together to form what they call a Local Business Lending Partnership to lend money to small and medium-sized businesses.
it is reported in The Times today and the story has featured on the BBC this morning.
On the face of it, this seems to be a good idea, but why does the council need to get involved?
ING Pulls Out
I heard this story from a friend, who used to broke deals for the Dutch bank.
The effect is summed up in this paragraph from the article.
Last year, the leasing business provided £22bn to help keep British industry running – many of the deals being done direct between banks and large companies. On that measure, ING Lease accounted for 5% of the market.
However, it specialised in the smaller end of the business – farms and young firms that got in touch via specialist brokers.
It is these customers, wanting essentials such as tractor attachments, computers, desks and commercial vehicles, which will bear the brunt of the loss.
It left lots of my friend’s clients without finance, as he deals very much at the smaller end. Last time, I spoke to him, he was thinking of retiring, so leaving his clients further up the river without a paddle.
I think, it shows that we need to get alternative methods of finance in place. This is Funding Circle territory, but at the moment they are not big enough to replace much of ING’s portfolio.
It also illustrates a rule of my friend, David. Never bank with a bank head-quartered outside of the UK.
What Should We Do About The Ludicrous EU Budget?
These are not my words, but those of David Cameron speaking in Dubai, reported here on the BBC.
If you want to see the details of where all the EU’s money goes look at this article.
My conclusions from the graphs there are that too much goes on the Common Agricultural Policy and Administration. It is surely about time that the European Parliament was changed to only meet in Brussels. But that would annoy the French.
A Chinese View On Peer-To-Peer Lending
I found this article in the South China Morning Post.
It would appear that peer-to-peer lending is taking off in China in a big way. Here’s an extract.
According to an unofficial source, there are an estimated 100 such Chinese lenders in operation, with projected total outstanding loans this year of 18 billion yuan (HK$22 billion)
That sounds a lot to me.
The Two Sides Of The Personal Banking Crisis
We have a personal banking crisis in this country and I suspect many parts of the developed world.
A headline in the FT says that the bill for mis-selling PPI has now passed ten billion pounds. And that only includes direct costs to the banks. What about the indirect costs to all of us, who never went near PPI, but are constantly plagued with all forms of nuisance calls and e-mails. Hopefully after the action of Richard Herman, these calls will stop.
We also have the story on the BBC about basic bank accounts offered to those with bad credit histories. Apparently,more and more banks are dropping these accounts.
So what does a basic bank account do. This
These are simple accounts which allow customers to have their wages, benefits, and cheques paid in.
Customers can gain access to their money from some cash machines, or the Post Office.
Bills can be made by direct debit from the account, but these accounts offer no overdraft facility or access to credit – unlike most standard current accounts.
According to the BBC.
In fact that is not unlike the facilities, I use my Nationwide account for.
Although, I do have a credit card, the ability to get my money from virtually all cash machines, full on-line access and a small authorised overdraft, which I never use.
But I never buy anything from my bank or phone them up.
So the opportunities for making money from personal accounts by retail banks from most of their customers is dropping like a stone.
Especially with investors like myself, who use things like Zopa to hold our savings and surplus cash.
It all sounds like to me, that there is a real gap in the market for a personal bank that has these characteristics.
On-line only.
No expensive High Street branches.
No phone lines, with all queries dealt with on-line.
No cheque books.
A simple savings account.
Small overdrafts.
Cash out from any cash point.
Even some of the new entrants to banking like Metro, Marks and Spencer and Tesco don’t seem to be ditching the physical branches. With all the work I did with a major clearing bank in the 1970s, I know that these contribute significantly to the cost of doing everything.
The only certainty is that banking will go this way and there is going to be a lot more empty spaces on the High Street. I just wonder what is going to fill them. We can only have so many mobile phone and payday loan stores.
Applying Control Engineering Principles To Pensions
Pensions are a nightmare and more rubbish is talked about them than any other financial matter, except possibly credit cards.
I’m in some ways typical, but the size of my pension pot is not typical.
When I worked for Metier, our wonderful accountant, Brian, set me up with a pension that I can live on.
I also have an income from the cash I got from selling the stud.
And when the DWP sorts it out I’ll have my State Pension.
So basically, I have a fixed sum coming in each month, from which I take my living expenses. Which of course varies on a month by month basis.
So at the end of each month I have a current account, which either has a small surplus or perhaps a small deficit. If it’s a surplus, the money goes into my Zopa account and if it’s a deficit, I withdraw a proportion of the payments made in at the first of the month.
So Zopa acts like a deposit account, that pays a reasonable rate of interest. The great thing, is that it costs me nothing to transfer money to and from Zopa.
There is of course a slight risk with Zopa, but I’ve used it long enough to have developed a philosphy that minimises bad debt.
Effectively, I’m using Zopa to damp out the fluctuations in cash flow, just as a control engineer might add damping to a feedback system.
Bad Karma
My financial advisor has just left on his bicycle to go home to South West London. I did suggest as it was raining that he cycle to Canonbury station and get the North London line most of the way.
He didn’t as he said that was Bad Karma.
Zopa Start Processing Early
I check my Zopa account every morning when I get up.
At 6:30 this morning, I had £121.91 on offer, with 27 offers totally £2630 being processed.
Now at 7:30, it’s £221.91 and 26 (£2530)
So someone has already said, that a proposed loan shouldn’t be approved.
I Missed This One
I was searching for innovative financial ideas and found this article by Anthony Hilton in the Standard. He says this about Castle Trust.
But the prize for creativity and innovation this week undoubtedly goes to Castle Trust, with a totally new approach to the housing market. On the one hand, it has created investment funds that will track the Halifax house price index. On the other, it will use these monies raised from investors to offer a new form of mortgage finance whereby it will fund 20% of the cost of a house in return for a share of the profits (or indeed or a portion of the losses) when the house is sold.
I’ve never heard of Castle Trust before, but it does show how people in the City are having ideas, that benefit both investors and borrowers.
Long may they think!