Now that we are well past the mid-point of 2008, it's a good time to look at where we are with one of the most talked about online financial subjects of the decade: person-to-person or social lending.
Currently, there are two U.S. companies actively originating unsecured, multi-purpose P2P loans (note 1):
- Prosper: Through July, the leader in the market is running 10% ahead of its 2007 loan-origination pace. The company has funded $55 million and is on pace to do just under $100 million for the year. Website traffic is up 15% compared to a year ago (see graph below) and through July there have been 13% more loan listings (see previous coverage here, Finovate 2007 Best of Show video here; monthly volume reports here).
- Zopa: The company, which isn't technically person-to-person (the loans are originated by six credit union partners), but definitely has a social aspect to its loan program, has not revealed any numbers, but they have 475 loans listed on its "browse all borrowers page." Assuming, average loan size of $8000 to $9000, they are doing less than $1 million per month. Zopa is using Google AdWords to pitch "instant approval" with a credit score of 640+ (see screenshot below), an aggressive marketing move, especially combined with the 8.49% APR touted on the landing page (see screenshot below; previous coverage here, FinovateStartup 2008 Best of Show video here).
In addition, there are three more P2P lenders that appear very close to launching or relaunching:
Lending Club: The company, launched in May 2007, has been essentially closed to new business since March as they retooled its loans into securities for regulatory reasons. However, the company is scheduled to present at our Oct. 14 Finovate conference, implying that they will be out of their quiet period by then (previous coverage here, Finovate 2007 video here). - Loanio: The startup appears to finally be very close to launching based on an a Sep. 3rd email sent to its house list announcing the launch "in just a few weeks" adding in parenthesis (yes, we mean it this time!). The company will likely be the first to offer a co-borrower loan application (previous coverage here; Finovate Startup video here).
- Pertuity Direct: The newest competitor in the space is Pertuity Direct which we wrote about last week. Its website claims a Sep. 15 launch and we look forward to seeing their first public demo at Finovate on Oct. 14.
Finally, there are also several companies looking to launch P2P services in 2008 or 2009, including Globefunder, Community Lend (Canada) and one we just heard about today Swap-A-Debt.
Forecast revision
Last December we published our second detailed Online Banking Report on Person-to-Person Lending. In that report, we predicted just under $200 million in originations this year. However, due to the inactive period at Lending Club, the delay in Loanio's launch, and the more conservative approach by Prosper lenders, we are lowering the 2008 forecast by 25%, with an expected total of $135 to $150 million for the year as follows:
- Prosper ($95 to $105 million)
- Lending Club ($25 to $30 million)
- Zopa ($5 to $10 million)
- Loanio ($1 to $5 million)
- Pertuity Direct ($1 to $5 million)
P2P lending traffic from Compete (July 2007 through July 2008)
Zopa AdWords ad on "loanio" search
(4 Sep 2008, 1 PM PDT from Seattle IP address)
Landing page (4 Sep 2008, link here)
Notes:
1. There are also specialists involved in the student loan piece (GreenNote and Fynanz) along with Virgin Money and Loanback which help with person-to-person loan documentation and servicing.
2. Top-right graphic from April 2008 ABC News segment on Lending Club and person-to-person lending.
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Comments (1)
I think thats a smart idea to revise downward. Here are some additional thoughts:
1. Lending Club are in a quiet regulatory phase, and that likely requires a reconfiguration of their model, with reduced lenders after they 'relaunch'.
2. Prosper have serious credit issues that are not yet under control.
Posted by Colin Henderson | September 5, 2008 11:01 PM
Posted on September 5, 2008 23:01