A Tale of Four Loan Markets (1)
Peer to Peer
Lending: Zopa and RateSetter
Early banknote @AD 940, China, courtesy Wikipedia
Prolonged
low savings rates coupled with a reduction in bank lending has led to fringe banking that
excludes the traditional banking sector.
According to the consumer organization Which?, the
best savings rates
currently available from the banking sector are:
Bank
|
Term
|
Minimum deposit in
pounds*
|
APR interest %
|
Post Office
|
30-day call
|
500
|
1.6%
|
Shawbrook Bank
|
1 year
|
5,000
|
1.95%
|
FirstSave
|
2 years
|
1,000
|
2.35%
|
Shawbrook Bank
|
3 years
|
5,000
|
2.65%
|
Vanquis Bank
|
4 years
|
1,000
|
2.91%
|
FirstSave
|
5 years
|
1,000
|
3.15%
|
*All deposits are guaranteed up to 85,000 pounds by
the Financial Service Compensation Scheme
This and subsequent articles on this
blog will focus on the new loan markets, where the risks are much higher than
for bank savings accounts. While the
Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) or the Office of Fair Trading oversees all
these markets, their characteristics - risk, liquidity, transparency, return
and loan size - vary greatly. There are four main classes of loans.
1. Peer to Peer lending (P2) - Where
individuals lend to individuals. An intermediary screens and assesses the
risk of the borrower. He matches lenders and borrowers so that the lender's
funds are spread over as many borrowers as possible, thereby reducing the risk
of a single large default. The intermediary, which operates online, takes a fee
from the transaction. Sometimes the intermediary sets up a fund to protect
lenders from borrower defaults. There is no secondary market for the loans,
they are not guaranteed and they are not eligible for independent savings
accounts (ISAs).
2. Peer to Business lending (P2B)
- Where individuals lend to small businesses. An intermediary
assesses the risks of the borrower and informs the potential lender of the
borrower's rating. The lender bids an interest rate that he or she believes
compensates for the risk profile of that specific borrower. The lender may bid in small sums, called
'parts', for many different business borrowers. The intermediary matches
borrowers and lenders and takes a fee for this service. There is a secondary
market for these loans, but they are not guaranteed nor are they eligible for
ISAs.
3. Order Book for Retail Bonds
(ORB) - Where individuals buy bonds from established companies listed on
the London Stock Exchange. Individuals must assess the risk of each
investment and purchase the bonds via a trading platform. ORB bonds have
a secondary market, they are not guaranteed and, if bought with more than 5
years to maturity, they are eligible for ISAs.
4. Mini-bonds- Where individuals
buy bonds from individual companies directly. The bonds, which are often
unsecured, are marketed directly by the company to the public. The companies
are usually privately held and they are much smaller than ORB bond
issuing companies, but larger than P2B loan issuers. They are not
required to provide a detailed prospectus and it is often difficult to assess
their credit worthiness. Mini-bonds do not have a secondary market, they
are not guaranteed nor are they eligible for ISAs.
------------------------------------------------------
Peer to Peer (P2P) loans
Five candidates for P2P loans, courtesy Wikipedia
P2P got going in 2005 with the idea of using the internet
to match people who wanted to borrow money for relatively small purchases
(20,000 pounds is now the upper limit at Zopa) with savers who wanted a
better rate of return than they were offered by the banks.
Typical borrowers are people who use the loan
to buy consumer durables (cars, computers etc.), make home improvements or pay
off credit card debt. They are credit screened and assigned a risk rating by
the intermediaries. Consequently, the rate of interest they pay is below that
they would have to pay to a formal lending institution.
The average saver lends about 3,500
pounds, though Zopa claims it has two lenders who are owed over a
million pounds and several hundred who are owed over 100,000 pounds (interview
with the Guardian, 12 August 2013).
P2P debt
management companies currently fall under the responsibility of the Office of
Fair Trading, where they are required to obtain consumer credit licenses.
However, the oversight for P2P will pass to the FCA from April 2014.
This is likely to result in more controls, higher costs and, consequently,
lower lending rates for savers.
Zopa (acronym for Zone of Possible
Agreement) Ltd.
Zopa was founded by former employees of the
internet bank Egg in 2004 and it began trading in 2005. Zopa soon became
the biggest intermediary for P2P, and it has changed its operating model
many times since 2005. It eliminated high risk and youth borrowers. It has
changed the programming used to match lenders and borrowers thereby preventing
savers gaming the system to control lender queues. And it now includes a fund,
called Safeguard, to compensate lenders for losses. The consequence is that Zopa
pays lenders less interest than previously.
The Safeguard (SG) fund of 1.8 million pounds, while small, would
seemingly cover 700 million in loans if Zopa's current default rate of
0.25% is maintained. Zopa has lent 165 million this last year and 427
million since its founding in 2005. Zopa is not covered by the Financial Service Compensation
Scheme.
Any UK resident over the age of 18 can sign up on Zopa's
website and offer as little as 10 pounds for a bit of a loan. Advertised
interest rates, net of fees, are 5% for savers, although this is above the
rates currently recommended as 'trackers' at its website:
For loans of 2 and 3 years, 4.0% APR
For loans of 4 and 5 years, 4.4% APR
The procedure:
·
The
lender deposits funds with Zopa and the
company spreads the investment in small bits between many lenders. The minimum
loan period is 2-3 years and the maximum from 4 to 5 years.
·
The
lender sets an interest rate that 'bids' for the loan, and his position in the queue for loans depends on a) the demand
from borrowers and b) the rate other lenders are willing to lend at. Interest
payments are made without any deduction for income tax. Alternately, the lender
may offer loans at the 'tracker rate' suggested by Zopa. Either way, the
rates lenders are willing to loan at are matched to borrowers who are willing
to pay (including an uplift for Zopa's margin).
·
The
borrower pays a fee to Zopa, and Zopa takes
1% of the annual interest rate to cover its costs.
·
The
lender receives payments monthly and can elect to
reinvest this amount in new loans. If the lender wants to recover his money
before term, he may do so. The cost to the borrower is a 1% fee to Zopa
plus any additional credit that another Zopa lender might require to
take on the business. If the borrower is in arrears, the lender is not eligible
for RR.
·
The
lender receives a spreadsheet detailing the terms
of the loans and the profile of the borrowers.
At December 2012 Zopa, which is a private company, had a net
worth of 3.5 million pounds.
RateSetter Ltd
RateSetter was
launched in October 2010 "to make peer-to-peer lending simple and safe for everyone."
Two of the founders have worked in banking and the third in a start-up. To
date RateSetter has loaned 141 million pounds, and the company is Zopa's
main competitor
The lending procedure is very similar to Zopa except that the
sums loaned are not parceled out in such small tranches. But while Zopa
has a very active chat room, this is missing from RateSetter.
Latest matched interest rates are somewhat higher than Zopa's,
and they cover a longer span of time:
1 month - 1.7%
1 year - 2.9%
3 years - 4.3%
4-5 years - 5.7%
Like Zopa, RateSetter permits lenders to recoup their funds early, provided another lender is
willing to take on the loan.
And, also like Zopa, RateSetter has a 'Provision Fund' that
reimburses lenders for defaults. The Provision Fund is currently worth 2.4
million pounds and it is financed by borrowers.
RateSetter
does not explain how it earns a commission. However, as the typical offer rates
for borrowing for 5 years are 2.7% above the 5-year rates received by lenders
and the difference for one month is 4.7% (annualised), RateSetter evidently
make a turn on the interest differential.
At March 2013, RateSetter parent company Retail Money Market Ltd.
had a net worth of 1.5 million pounds.
Conclusion
P2P lending rates received by savers have been falling.
RateSetter interest rates for 1 year have declined from 5% in
January 2012 to 2.9% now, while 5-year rates are down from 7.6% to 5.7%. In
part this reflects the fall in savings rates that followed the Funding for
Lending scheme launched by the Treasury.
Lenders can still get better interest rates from P2P than the banks:
Interest rates for lenders/savers
|
Best bank
|
Zopa
|
RateSetter
|
1 month
|
1.6%
|
N/A
|
1.7%
|
1 year
|
1.95%
|
N/A
|
2.9%
|
3 years
|
2.65%
|
4.0%
|
4.3%
|
5 years
|
3.15%
|
4.4%
|
5.7%
|
However, lenders would be wise to consider the risks associated with P2P
before lending
their money:
1.
Savings deposited at banks are guaranteed up to 85,000 pounds by the Financial
Service Compensation Scheme (FSCS). The FSCS does not guarantee any sum lent
via P2P.
2.
Although both Zopa and RateSetter have sinking
funds to compensate
lenders for the default of borrowers, they have no statutory requirement to do
so. At any time they may reduce payments into these funds. And, if there is a
sudden increase in defaults, the sinking funds might prove to be inadequate. In
that event, the lender will suffer a capital loss.
3.
The FSCS guarantees savings deposits at banks. If the bank becomes insolvent, the
FSCS will pay the saver any sum up to 85,000 pounds. In practice, the
government has guaranteed all bank deposits, regardless of their amount (at
Northern Rock, Bradford and Bingley and RBS). However, if the P2P
intermediary fails, the lender is not backed up by the FSCS or the state.
4.
In the event that the P2P intermediary fails, the only recourse the lender has
to recover his money is to contact the borrower and, if necessary, take him to
court. Given the small individual amounts involved and the large number of
lenders for every borrower, any such failure would almost certainly result in a
total loss except for the small amounts currently available in the sinking
funds (3% of loans for RateSetter, less for Zopa).
5.
The two largest intermediaries are very small
companies. Zopa
has a net worth of 3.5 million pounds, RateSetter 1.5 million pounds.
Both are privately owned. While Zopa appears to be profitable, recent
funding from RateSetter shareholders suggest it is not. And Zopa
closed its US operation in 2008.
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