<td id="kg486"><optgroup id="kg486"></optgroup></td>
<button id="kg486"><tbody id="kg486"></tbody></button>
<li id="kg486"><dl id="kg486"></dl></li>
  • <dl id="kg486"></dl>
  • <code id="kg486"><tr id="kg486"></tr></code>
  • Who Needs Banks?

    Mar 21, 2014

    PayPal and Lending Club Want to Make Small Business Loans

    Who Needs Banks? PayPal and Lending Club Want to Make Small Business LoansLots of companies have tried to use technology to improve small business lending with data, collecting information about merchants from their social media profiles, online accounting software, and reviews to help lenders decide whether to make loans. Alternative companies such as OnDeck and Kabbage have succeeded at increasing loan volumes and speeding approval times. But their loans usually cost more than bank loans or credit cards—sometimes much more.

    Lending Club and PayPal are now betting that the high-tech approach can also bring borrowing costs down for Main Street businesses that don’t qualify for bank loans. Lending Club, the peer-to-peer lender likely headed for an initial public offering later this year, launched a small business lending program last night. And PayPal (EBAY) today said it would expand a program that has provided “tens of millions of dollars” in working capital to businesses that used PayPal in the last six months.

    Lending Club is the 800-pound gorilla in the peer-to-peer lending world: The San Francisco company has historically operated as a marketplace where investors can fund consumer loans, and says it’s originating loans at a pace of $750 million every three months. Now it will also facilitate commercial loans for amounts ranging from $15,000 to $100,000.

    Small business owners can apply online for loans ranging from one to five years, with interest rates from 5.9 percent to 29.9 percent, the company said. Lending Club Chief Executive Officer Renaud Laplanche says the average interest rate will be 12.5 percent. For now, ordinary investors can’t fund small business loan on Lending Club. The program is limited to institutional investors such as hedge funds, insurance companies, and family offices that manage wealth for the very rich, but eventually the company plans to let anyone invest. Those investors supply the capital for loans and recoup interest payments. Borrowers pay Lending Club an origination fee of from 1 to 5 percent in addition to interest payments.

    Lending Club isn’t the first company to try peer-to-peer lending for small business loans. SoMoLend and Funding Community tried and failed; Funding Circle and Dealstruck are currently making a go of it. Nor are peer-to-peer lenders the only nonbank lenders trying to improve on rates offered by merchant cash-advance companies, which can carry effective APRs from 30 percent into the triple digits. Newer lenders like Fundation and existing companies such as OnDeck have also launched loan products that may be competitive with Lending Club’s rates.

    Allowing hedge funds and other institutional investors to invest directly in small business loans on Lending Club doesn’t represent a big shift, says Peter Renton, a prominent blogger on the subject of peer-to-peer lending who recently launched an investment fund. “Every small business has an institutional investor as their creditor already,” he says. (He means banks.) The bigger change will come when Lending Club opens its small business lending platform to ordinary investors, says Renton, allowing people to crowdfund loans to businesses in their local communities. “I really believe that’s how businesses who are one tier down from a bank loan will get loans,” he says. “People want to fund in their local communities.”

    PayPal is offering a more specialized product. In September the company launched a pilot program to offer merchants that use its online payments system working capital loans through a Utah bank. Merchants can borrow as much as 8 percent of their total annual sales on PayPal, to be repaid in daily installments until the business has repaid the principal, plus a fixed loan fee. In an example furnished by the company, a merchant with $100,000 in annual sales borrows $8,000; PayPal collects 15 percent of the borrowers’ daily PayPal sales until she has paid back the $8,000, plus interest of $594, about 7 percent of the principal.

    Brian Grech, portfolio manager for the PayPal program, says the company has enough data on its merchants to make good underwriting decisions. It also has an incentive most lenders don’t: If a PayPal merchant expands her business, she’ll probably receive more PayPal payments, generating more transaction fees for the company. Grech wouldn’t say how much money PayPal plans to lend. But he considers the program “permanent,” and says he’d like to increase the size of the loans and explore lending to merchants who don’t use PayPal as a way to attract new customers to the payments system.

    Source: Bloomberg Businessweek


    Copyright ? 2017, G.T. Internet Information Co.,Ltd. All Rights Reserved.
    主站蜘蛛池模板: 国产亚av手机在线观看| 女人扒开裤子让男人捅| 又粗又长又色又爽视频| 一二三四在线观看免费高清视频 | heyzo小向美奈子在线| 欧美黑人玩白人巨大极品| 国产精品成人免费视频电影| 九九99re在线视频精品免费| 色婷婷亚洲十月十月色天| 小泽玛利亚在线观看国产| 亚洲电影免费观看| 久久黄色精品视频| 扒开双腿疯狂进出爽爽爽动态图 | 中文字幕亚洲欧美| 特级aaa毛片| 国产深夜福利在线观看网站| 久久久不卡国产精品一区二区 | 成年免费视频黄网站在线观看 | 一个人看的www片免费中文 | 亚洲性无码av在线| 国产精品白丝在线观看有码| 无码人妻精品一区二区三区蜜桃| 免费人成在线观看69式小视频| 67194在线看片| 日韩免费高清专区| 免费看国产一级片| 男女一边摸一边做爽的免费视频| 无遮挡边吃摸边吃奶边做| 人妻丰满熟妇av无码区| 韩国理论福利片午夜| 成人亚洲国产精品久久| 亚洲日产综合欧美一区二区| 里番全彩本子库acg污妖王| 女同一区二区在线观看| 亚洲av永久无码精品网站| 精品欧美一区二区三区四区| 国产精品美女久久久久AV福利 | 视频二区好吊色永久视频 | 动漫美女被到爽了流漫画| 金8国欧美系列在线| 成人午夜视频免费看欧美|