A Tale of Four Loan Markets (2): Peer to
Business Lending
And the ORB Market
William Shakespeare, an investor, courtesy Wikipedia
Several years before his death, Shakespeare retired to Stratford upon Avon.
He had accumulated a large patrimony of "barns, stables, orchards,
gardens, lands, tenements and hereditaments", according to his Will, that
he leased for rent. These income-producing assets were not without risk of
default, but he knew the leaseholders and owned the properties. Most were not
far from his home in Stratford.
Shakespeare took a time-honoured route to accumulating capital. In a
matter of only a few years, individual savers have been offered routes that
bypass the traditional institutions - the banks and official markets. P2P, P2B
and the so-called 'mini-bonds'.
Peer
to Business (P2B) Lending
Funding Circle
launched P2B in the UK in 2010, since when it has matched loans of 188
million pounds. The procedure for lending funds is similar to Zopa's P2P
(see http://thejoyfulinvestor.blogspot.co.uk/2013_12_01_archive.html).
However, unlike the main providers of P2P, Funding Circle does not have any fund
to protect lenders from default. Instead, the intermediary recommends spreading
your loan over many borrowers. It provides a table of expected returns.
Credit rating
|
Net interest before
Default %
|
Estimated Annual Default Rate
|
Annual fee
|
Estimated Annual
Return %
|
A
|
6.4%
|
0.6%
|
1%
|
4.8%
|
A-
|
8.1%
|
1.5%
|
1%
|
5.6%
|
B
|
9.1%
|
2.3%
|
1%
|
5.8%
|
C
|
10.1%
|
3.3%
|
1%
|
5.8%
|
C-
|
11.7%
|
5.0%
|
1%
|
5.7%
|
According to Funding Circle, the average return for the saver is
5.7%. The interest rate that the borrower pays is between 1 and 2% above the
rates quoted in the left-hand column of the table, with the difference going to
the intermediary.
Typical borrowers are:
·
Accountants requiring funds for expansion. 30,000 pounds
for 4 years, with an 'A' credit rating paying an average interest rate of 7.9%
p.a. to Funding Circle.
·
Ecommerce expansion with a 'B' credit rating, 100,000
pounds for 3 years, paying an average interest rate of 10.6%
·
100,000 pounds for 5 years for a Sushi
restaurant with a 'C' credit rating, paying an average interest rate of
10.6%.
In all three cases, the directors guarantee the loan, but there is no lien
on any assets held by the business. The credit ratings come from Experian and
Equifax, who are private enterprises that sell credit checks for profit.
Unlike Shakespeare, lenders to Funding Circle do not own any assets. The capital
value of the loan is as much at risk as the income it provides. Funding
Circle's estimate of the risk of default is based on a very short period of
operation, and the credit ratings must be taken with a pinch of salt.
However, the government is so enamoured with alternative ways of funding small and medium
enterprises (SMEs), that it is financially supporting P2B. Some of the
loans are matched to 10% by the government. Unfortunately for the lender, this
does not include any guarantee of the sums loaned.
Funding Circle, like the P2P intermediaries Zopa and RateSetter, is a
small concern. It
has a net worth of 6.5 million pounds and it has launched a similar business in
the USA. In the event that Funding Circle fails, lenders are promised
the support of Link Financial Outsourcing Ltd, a debt collection agency.
Lenders are told that Link may not charge them more than 2% for its
services, but it is impossible to know how much of the loans made through Funding
Circle would be collected. And Link itself is a small company with a
net worth of 5.2 million pounds.
Order
Book for Retail Bonds (ORB)
The London Stock Exchange launched a new market to sell UK government (Gilts),
supranational, local government and corporate bonds to retail investors in
February 2010.
Although retail investors have always had access to Gilts, Eurobonds and
Convertibles, ORB offers an easier and cheaper way of buying bonds and
in smaller quantities - as low as 1,000 pounds initially and 100 pounds
thereafter. Individuals can now buy these securities online at their usual
broker. ORB has also encouraged smaller and less credit worthy
businesses to sell bonds to the public.
ORB had a retail turnover of 11.2 billion pounds in the month of November 2013. The
largest single bond was National Grid's 'linker'. It offers 1.25% over
the annual increase in the Retail Price Index and it matures 6 October 2021.
Coupons are paid half-yearly and the bond is currently priced at 109p.
A variety of bonds is on offer. These include fixed rate (or conventional)
bonds, floating rate notes, index linked bonds ('linkers'), zero coupon bonds
and convertible bonds. And ORB has a liquid secondary market.
The Financial Conduct Authority oversees ORB and, as a result,
the information available to the public is complete.
Places for People is but one of many UK property companies to tap the ORB market.
Its prospectus for the bond it issued in June 2011 runs to 92 pages. Moody's
gives the bond an Aa3 rating and, at the current price of 106.2, it yields 2.8%
to maturity in 3 years time. This is a conventional bond with a coupon fixed
at 5% and its maturity date fixed for 27 December 2016.
For investors wishing to use the tax shelter of an ISA or SIPP, any ORB bond with a
maturity exceeding 5 years is eligible for inclusion. This is a clear advantage
over P2P and P2B loans, which are not eligible for an ISA or SIPP.
One such eligible bond was recently issued by Bruntwood Investments, a large, private property company. Its 6% 24 July 2020 bond yields 5.0% to
redemption at its current price of 105.7. Although the bond is not rated by any
credit agency, it has a charge on Bruntwood's properties. Pieces as
small as 100 pound face value (106 pounds) may be bought on the secondary
market. Bruntwood may redeem the bond early by paying the higher of par
(i.e. 100) or the equivalent price of a 4.75% Gilt maturing in 2020 +0.5%. This
would currently be much higher than the price of the bonds. Were Gilt prices to
fall, then Bruntwood could redeem the bonds at a lower price. But in
this scenario, Bruntwood's bond would also have declined in value on the
secondary market.
Conclusion
The ORB bond market offers the individual investor the
opportunity of creating a portfolio of bonds that fit his or her requirements.
In the secondary market, individuals can invest as little as 100 pounds. Funding
Circle's P2B offers better rates to the saver than a bank and, very often,
than a bond traded on ORB.
Interest rates for lenders/savers
|
Best bank
|
Funding
Circle
|
ORB
|
|
3 years
|
2.65%
|
5.7%
|
2 to 4%
|
|
5 years
|
3.15%
|
5.7%
|
3 to 6%
|
However, Bank interest and ORB bonds (with 5 years duration) are tax-free
for ISA and SIPP holders, who may not use P2B. Consequently, for 40%
rate taxpayers the alternatives to P2B usually offer better after tax
returns.
And P2B is a much more risky proposition than ORB:
1. P2B loans are for small businesses that might, and do,
disappear. ORB bonds are issued by the UK government or large,
well-known enterprises whose audited accounts are publicly available. The Gilt
and Corporate bond market has a long history.
2. The vetting procedure
for P2B is quick & easy and superficial. ORB issuers must
prepare a prospectus and the vetting procedure is based on a long experience of
bond defaults.
3. P2B loans are backed
only by the directors. ORB issuers come with credit ratings by the big
agencies and/or are backed by valuable assets
4. The companies that organise the P2B market are small and
lightly regulated by the Office of Fair Trading. A failure by an intermediary
will almost certainly lead to lenders losing money. Meanwhile ORB is
part of the London Stock Exchange and it is regulated by the Financial Conduct
Authority. However, this does not eliminate the risk of a default on ORB.
5. The notional returns
on P2B may be overstated, as this is a new market with little experience
of loan defaults. On the other hand, for very small sums P2B offers
lower transaction costs.
6. The secondary market for ORB is very liquid. In the case of P2B,
if the borrower is behind on his payments, the lender cannot sell on the loan.
Good post. I find the P2B model fascinating and think its a great innovation. But as an investor I think the risks are too unknown. It will be interesting to see how the default rates vary during the next crisis we see, whenever that may be.
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