Posts Tagged ‘peer to peer lending’

Weekly Microfinance News & Announcements 4/13/2012

posted: 2012-04-13 @ 5:46 pm EDT

Forget microcredit: microsavings work much better

By Oxfam Blog, Microcredit has been getting a bad press recently – criticised for eye-watering interest rates, high indebtedness levels, and excessive hype in terms of its development impact. Oxfam America reckons it has a much better alternative – helping poor people to save first and then borrow. Last week, I interviewedJeff Ashe (right), who runs Oxfam America’s renownedSavings for Change initiative. Here are some key points.

Heroic vs. Homegrown Entrepreneurs?

By Tanyella Adams, Huffington Post, When we think of “social entrepreneurship”, we tend to focus on the really big organizations that have had a huge impact, groups like Teach for America or Grameenthat are dealing with national or global issues of poverty, inequality and justice.

[Video] Starbucks CEO talks US economy, job creation

By CNBC Video, tsinews.com, Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz speaks to the “CBS This Morning” co-hosts about his new fund aimed at creating jobs in the U.S., and why he thinks he can help fix the economy.

John Mack Joins Board of Alternative Lending Company

By David Benoit, Wall Street Journal, John Mack is not riding into the retirement sunset. He is instead diving into alternative banking startups. The former chairman and chief executive of Morgan Stanley has yet another new gig: Lending Club, a lender that matches investors directly with borrowers through its website.

Weekly Microfinance News & Announcements 1/27/2012

posted: 2012-01-27 @ 6:00 am EST

Microfinance: A Help or Hindrance to the Poor?

By Morgan Wharton, PolicyMic While these situations represent legitimate fears associated with the social contract that microfinance clients must adhere to, they should not be sufficient enough to deter potential clients from accepting microcredit. Roodman also criticizes the …

Debate: Moving Financial Inclusion Beyond Microfinance

By Microlinks If microfinance has not achieved its objective in substantially reducing poverty, what are the pathways to financial inclusion that will contribute to this objective?

Share the Wealth: ‘Bank On Baton Rouge’ opens doors for needy individuals

By Jay Meyers, LSU That world is a reality for one in four people living in Baton Rouge who are either unbanked or underbanked, meaning they don’t use a bank or credit union …

First National Bank to Offer Mobile Wallet Solution to Unbanked

By Bryan Yurcan, Banktech South Africa’s First National Bank is partnering with retailer Pep to offer its mobile wallet device to the unbanked and underbanked.

Combining microfinance and health

By Microfinance Focus Microcredit Summit Campaign and Freedom from Hunger have joined hands to reach more than 700000 microfinance clients with health education and services over the next five years. The goal of the alliance is to work …

Muhammad Yunus – A History of Microfinance | TEDxVienna

By Vlad Gozman, TEDxVienna … University where he developed the concepts of microcredit and microfinance. He is the author of Banker to the Poor and two books on Social Business Models, and a founding board member of Grameen America and Grameen Foundation.

Grameen’s business empire

By The Economist Muhammad Yunus, winner of the 2006 Nobel peace prize, founded Grameen Bank in 1983 to provide tiny loans to poor rural women. Grameen became a global model for microfinance. It also spawned 48 other firms in sectors that stretch from textiles to mobile …

Peer to peer lending: the murky future with America’s new consumer protector

By Alex Lee, Reuters Blogs (blog) By way of background, peer to peer (P2P) lending microcredit institutions sprang up in 2005 in order to provide needy borrowers with viable alternatives to normal commercial bank loans. This industry had as its backbone, the seemingly novel concept of …

Weekly Microfinance News & Announcements 1/20/2012

posted: 2012-01-20 @ 6:00 am EST

What’s an Entrepreneur? The Best Answer Ever

By Eric Schurenberg, Inc.com As an entrepreneur, you surely have an elevator pitch, the pithy 15-second synopsis of what your company does and why, and you can all but repeat it in your sleep. But until recently, I’d never seen a good elevator pitch for entrepreneurship itself—that is, what you do that all entrepreneurs do?

Kiva’s Secret Project To Let You Give Peer-To-Peer Loans | SOCAP

By SOCAP Blog But many lenders assumed–not surprisingly, given Kiva’s marketing and web design–that the smiling face on the other end of the PayPal transaction got the exact cash they lent out. A minor kerfuffle ensued in 2009 when a blogger broadcast …

Social impact is an integral part of investors agenda – Microfinance Focus

By Microfinance Focus Bob Annibale speaks about the vision of Citi Microfinance for the global microfinance sector. … There also are significant unbanked and underserved communities in the United States and we have some very interesting partners and initiatives there too, particularly for savings and asset building. At Citi, we continually look for innovative solutions to tailor our existing products to our wide variety of clients and partner MFIs and to specialized banks, microfinance funds and donors. Mobile …

Banorte targets Mexico’s underbanked with mobile-based service

By Finextra … has teamed with payments specialist Rev Worldwide to launch a mobile-based financial services programme aimed at the country’s millions of underbanked. …

Obama to Elevate SBA Chief

By Emily Maltby, The Wall Street Journal President Barack Obama said Friday that he will exercise his executive authority to elevate the head of the U.S. Small Business Administration to a cabinet-level position.

ZestCash Closes $73 Million in Funding

by Juan Carols Perez, PCWorld Traditional “payday” lenders offer small, short-term loans to borrowers who are known as underbanked, because they can’t get loans from banks and other ..

Session Take-aways: The Rise of P2P Lending

posted: 2010-05-21 @ 3:56 pm EDT

By Rob Packer, conference attendee

Even though the peer-to-peer (p2p) model is one of the oldest forms of lending, the Web has revolutionized process. Websites mean that instead of just being friends or family members, lenders and borrowers can now be complete strangers, encouraging borrowers to “market” their personal stories to lenders to get a loan.

This was the introduction to the conference session on the rise of P2P lending.  Although I work for P2P lender Kiva, this panel discussion helped me better understand the differences between the various online microfinance lending and investing websites; Kiva, Lending Club, and Microplace were represented on the panel.

Kiva, the oldest of the three, is a non-profit organization that uses an intermediated lending model. Online lenders or social investors who have proven to be exceptionally risk-tolerant lend $25 or more to a borrower, the client of one of Kiva’s many microfinance institutions around the world.  When the borrower pays the loan back, the lender receives their original $25, which they can then re-loan (and if the borrower doesn’t pay back, the lender doesn’t receive anything either).

Similarly, Microplace connects lenders with borrowers online, but allows lenders to earn interest on the loans they make.  A social investor’s money is pooled and invested in microfinance projects throughout the world with a return of 1 to 3%. However, although both Kiva and MicroPlace consider that the importance of the stories of microfinance is one of their reasons for success, Lending Club works on an anonymous basis, much like a traditional bank. There are savings and lending portfolios that essentially cut out expensive “middle men” (banks), helping to provide cheaper loans to people the U.S. for a variety of purposes ranging from loans to pay for honeymoons to loans to pay off credit-card debt to more traditional microfinance loans to set up or improve businesses.

What struck me most about the discussion—and much of the conference as a whole—is the link between microfinance and traditional banking. The traditional target markets for microfinance institutions fall outside those of conventional banking: when bank lending contracts (as it has during the recession), the market for microfinance grows and even laid-off bankers find they can’t get bank loans. This environment helped p2p lending grow in 2009.

Kiva, for example, saw its loan activity increase, and 2009 was its most successful year to date. MicroPlace continued to provide returns on the money invested, outperforming bank accounts as well as stocks in terms of returns. Rob Garcia from Lending Club provided the most interesting food for thought when he mentioned that borrowers on Lending Club are more likely to pay off their Lending Club loan than their credit card, because they perceive that their web-based loans come from an “Average Joe,” while credit cards are part of the banks that have caused so much anger in the crisis.

My main takeaway on the discussion was that while the three different organizations may appear similar, they are all very different.  Essentially, only Lending Club is a true peer-to-peer lender (Kiva and MicroPlace are intermediary-based). And it was this diversity that made me realize that these websites are here to stay.

NOTE: All 3 presenters encouraged the audience to try P2P lending out and experience it first hand.  With as little as $25, you can start to make a difference in a borrower’s life on any of their websites.  At the session, Rob Garcia of Lending Club offered conference participants a $50 lending club credit to help people get started. Use “MicroFinanceUSA” as the secret code, or use this link to open your account.

Rob Packer is Portfolio Manager for the Americas at Kiva, working worldwide to connect people through lending to alleviate poverty. He has recently completed a Fellowship with Kiva which saw him based in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan and Barranquilla, Colombia.