ONE woman wants to pay off medical bills. An Ohio couple wants US$5,000 to start a home business. An Illinois college student needs help with tuition.
With bank loans drying up amid financial turmoil around the world, these would-be borrowers aren't looking to traditional channels for money. They have turned to the fast-growing online industry of peer-to-peer lending, in which online companies like Lending Club, Prosper and Loanio connect people who need money with those who have it.
Through this peer-to-peer arrangement, borrowers get the money they want, typically at lower rates than through a credit card or bank, while individuals lending the money collect higher interest rate returns than they might find in more traditional investments.
Twelve traditional banks turned down Tim Murphy's request for a US$25,000 loan to start a gourmet popcorn shop in an Atlanta suburb, but he found 97 different individuals willing to share in lending him the full amount through Lending Club.
Murphy's 150-square-meter store now offers a dozen varieties of popcorn, including parmesean and garlic, ranch-flavored and nacho cheese.
"It's growing, slowly, but growing, said Murphy.
While demand for peer-to-peer loans is on the increase as traditional banks tighten their lending, the model is not without its problems.
Prosper earlier this month stopped signing up new lenders while the Securities and Exchange Commission evaluates its regulatory filings, a process that could take up to six months.
The amount of new lending on Prosper each month was already declining from a peak in May and average interest rates were increasing.
With the United States economy sliding toward recession, lenders are becoming leery of tying their money up in a peer-to-peer loan that typically runs three years and with borrowers who could default.
Better than stocks
Nevertheless, the model is still enticing for some investors and the peer-to-peer sites say they are here to stay.
Eric Di Benedetto of San Francisco said he and a partner have loaned nearly US$1 million to hundreds of borrowers, and so far have found much better returns - averaging above 12 percent - than they could have garnered elsewhere. "The stock market hasn't really done well over the last few years," said 43-year-old Di Benedetto. "We were looking for something that was relatively safe while returning double-digit returns. Banks have made a business of this for hundreds of years."
Fresh avenues
Sheryl Garrett, a financial planner based in suburban Kansas City, Missouri, has advised some of her clients to invest their money in peer-to-peer lenders.
"All the stars are in alignment when credit is tight and investment opportunities have dried up," she said. "This is a way for borrowers to get the capital they need to keep our economy going, but also provide the investor - the lender - an opportunity to work in something they feel a lot more comfortable about than the stock market."
And a new company, Loanio, entered the market on October 1, aiming at borrowers who have been turned away from other lending sites because of poor credit.
More than 1,000 people signed up to participate within Loanio's first week, according to CEO Michael Solomon. The company encourages borrowers to use friends and family as co-signers and verifies a borrower's financial footing for a fee, Solomon said.
"A lot of traditional lending channels have been drying up," said Solomon, who is hoping the approaching Christmas shopping season will boost borrowing interest. "This is a nice complement."
Lending Club, based in Sunnyvale, California, limits itself to borrowers with good credit histories and brags of a default rate of less than 2 percent. It has started a secondary market where lenders can cash out of their loans early, after seeking regulatory approval from the Securities and Exchange Commission.
"The social lending industry is here to stay," said Lending Club CEO Renaud Laplanche, who cites the upheaval in financial markets as "the perfect storm" for his business, which has done about US$20 million in loans in 18 months.
"Because of the credit crunch, borrowers have much less of an opportunity to get a good rate if they get a loan at all, and for lenders the average interest rate is 12 to 13 percent, a double-digit net return, which is a lot better than the stock market," Laplanche said.
Prosper generates revenue by collecting a one-time 2 to 3 percent fee on funded loans from borrowers, and assessing a 1 percent annual loan servicing fee on lenders. Lenders bid to fulfill borrower loan requests by offering the lowest interest rate they are willing to accept.
Another company, Virgin Money, a unit of Richard Branson's Virgin Group, is also expanding into the United States and now offers mortgages in the United States as traditional banks back away.