First Look: Zopa Opens in the United States with Depository Model

Zopa US opened a private beta Saturday morning, emailing selected customers that had previously signed onto its mailing list. Both of our listed email addresses received invites.

We'll look closer at the new service in our upcoming Online Banking Report on P2P lending, but what stands out is the business model: part P2P lender, part deposit-taking financial institutions, part charitable organization, part broker, and part lead-generation site. I'm not positive you can be all of those things at once, but it will be fascinating to see if Zopa and its partner credit unions can pull it off.

How it works
To understand how the Zopa US system works, you must first realize that all loans and all deposits are held at the six partner credit unions (see list below). So in that way, Zopa is a pure lead-generation play.

Zopa "investors" put their money in fixed-rate, 1-year certificates of deposits held by a credit union partner. Borrowers take out 5-year fixed-rate personal loans, again from a credit union partner. This part is pure depository financial institution, with Zopa as a broker. 

Finally, the P2P/social finance aspect comes into play with the requirement that all depositors must choose to "help" at least one borrower by reducing the borrower's loan payment. The depositor has the choice of accepting the highest rate of interest, currently 5.1%, and making a token donation, or sharply reducing the APY on the Zopa CD in order to provide more financial assistance to Zopa borrowers. Depositors select who they want to help from the listed loans. An obvious scenario would be a grandparent investing a substantial sum into low-interest Zopa CDs, so that a child/grandchild could take out a 5-year loan to help with a down payment on a house. But depositors may also help a stranger whose story they find appealing. 

Our preliminary take
Zopa has removed much of the uncertainty from the P2P lending process. But by eliminating the risk, they've also reduced available returns. Marketing Director Wade Lagrone, with whom I spoke Saturday afternoon (as Zopa engineers hammered away on the final tests), believes that U.S. investors overwhelmingly prefer low-risk, fixed-income investments and will prefer this P2P model.

I'm not convinced yet. It seems like a somewhat convoluted path to buy a simple CD. First, you must set your deposit rate, choose one or more borrowers to help, and finally join one of the six credit unions. The website makes the process relatively straightforward, but it's not the same as simply dropping a few grand into an online bank. 

On the other hand, the ability to donate all or part of your deposit's interest-yield could appeal to certain investors, especially the well-heeled looking to help family members obtain below-market-rate loans for defined purposes (home purchase, education, business expansion, etc). And eliminating lender risk removes the huge chore of keeping lenders happy and informed about their book of loans. 

Another potential problem is lack of transparency for borrowers. To obtain a Zopa loan, prospective borrowers fill out a nonbinding "loan quote." Not until after this application is made, and a credit inquiry logged, do borrowers find out if they will receive the lowest rate of 8.75% or the highest of 16.99%. And borrowers have no idea whether they will receive "help" from investors to lower their payment, and effectively reduce the APR of the loan.

Screenshot: Zopa CD setup (1 Dec 2007)
Zopa investors (aka lenders) select the rate of return for their 1-year CD and then choose a borrower to help by offsetting a portion of their Zopa loan payment.

 
Appendix: Credit Union Partners
The six U.S. credit union partners of Zopa US:

  • Addison Avenue Federal Credit Union
  • Affinity Plus Federal Credit Union
  • FirstTech Credit Union
  • FORUM Credit Union
  • Provident Credit Union
  • USA Federal Credit Union

Congestion at the Starting Gate? Three New U.S. P2P Lenders Set to Launch: Zopa, GlobeFunder, and Loanio

Less that two years after the first P2P launched in the U.S., it looks like we'll soon have at least five companies chasing this new market, six if you include Virgin Money.

The most well known is Zopa, the person-to-person lending pioneer which opened in the UK in 2005 and now has nearly 200,000 members. Its long-awaited U.S. launch is scheduled for next week. I'll be speaking with marketing director Wade Lagrone tomorrow, but Jane Kim broke the news in today's Wall Street Journal (here). The market forecast in the article, predicting as much as $9 billion in P2P originations by 2017, is from our upcoming Online Banking Report on P2P lending (note 1). 

Zopa is working with six credit unions, including FORUM Credit Union, to match lenders with borrowers. And unlike other P2P lenders, Zopa's is guaranteeing the lender's principal. That will reduce potential returns, but make participation more like buying a CD from a bank. So, it will be interesting to see how the company differentiates its offering from traditional bank/credit union fare. We'll have more when the site opens to the public next week.

        

We also hear that GlobeFunder and Loanio are about to launch, possibly yet this year. Loanio has not revealed its strategy, but GlobeFunder is positioning itself as a microlender in the same vein as the Nobel prize-winning approach of Grameen Bank. For more info, read the GlobeFunder blog.  

All three will be included in our upcoming Online Banking Report (note 1). We'll also look at Prosper, Lending Club, LoanBack, and Virgin Money (formerly Circle Lending).

Note:

1. Online Banking Report subscribers will have access to the report as soon as it is published on Dec. 8. Nonsubscribers can put their name on the announcement list here and receive a prepublication discount code to save 10%. Please mention "P2P report" in the subject line.

Zopa’s International Expansion

Link to Zopa ItalyI think I understand Zopa’s delayed U.S. launch a bit better now. Apparently, the company is looking to expand not just in the U.S. but in Asia as well (along with the previously announced Italian licensee).

Here’s a quote from a recent blog entry

“…we have had over 100 different teams in over 40 countries get in touch with with us, looking to launch a version of Zopa locally. These have ranged in distance from France to New Zealand, and included countries as diverse as Brazil, Mexico, Canada, India, Japan, Korea, Taiwan, Australia, South Africa, Ghana, Turkey, Spain, Germany, The Netherlands, Poland, Slovakia, Lithuania and Romania.”

We’ve seen that interest at Online Banking Report as well. Our Feb. 2006 report on Prosper and P2P lending was our best selling issue of all time. We’re planning an update later this year, hopefully with an analysis of Zopa’s U.S. version, which the company still says is coming this year.  

Virgin Money to Enter U.S. Market Through Acquisition of CircleLending

This is a very interesting bit of news today. Virgin Group PLC, the high-flying UK-based company run by Richard Branson, says it will be using Waltham, MA-based CircleLending to enter the U.S. financial services market. Virgin's financial services are marketed under the Virgin Money brand in the UK (see screenshot below) and several other markets.

If you take a broad view, CircleLending was the first pure peer-to-peer lender in the U.S., five years before Prosper got its start (see previous coverage here). However, CircleLending has historically limited its involvement to servicing loans made between family members, not brokering the deals or vetting the applicants like Prosper and Zopa.

However, from the sounds of it, that will be changing under the new majority ownership by Virgin USA. According to Asheesh Advani, CEO/Founder of CircleLending:

"(CircleLending will be the) launching pad to brand Virgin in the U.S. in financial services"

According to the American Banker article here, the new venture's first product, sold under the Virgin name, will be a direct mortgage that blends "friends and family" funds with capital from a financial institution and/or the secondary market. They also said they will have a credit card and are looking at student loans.

It will be interesting to see how they use peer-to-peer finance in its efforts. Anthony Marino, Virgin USA's SVP Corporate Development told American Banker:

"(the CircleLending platform) provides a broad opportunity to address consumer needs, and the Virgin brand allows us to bring a unique tone of voice to the market,"

And,

"We are … building a major, Virgin-branded financial services company in the U.S."

Analysis
These are not new concepts, but with the Virgin marketing muscle behind them and the integration of peer-to-peer tools, the newcomer could carve out a significant niche in the massive U.S. mortgage lending business. The new entity could also leverage the CircleLending platform to compete directly with Prosper and Zopa in the U.S. and  importing the resulting product into the UK to compete with Zopa there.

Virgin Money UK homepage

Zopa Provides Update on U.S. Launch Plans

Zopa email 19 April 2007 update on US launch plans Without providing specific dates, Zopa sent an email to its house list today providing a progress report on its upcoming U.S. launch (see inset). The person-to-person lending exchange now expects a national launch rather than the state-by-state approach previously announced.

The company said it's completed its site redesign, underwriting system, ID verification system and product lineup. And signaling the importance of its U.S. launch, Zopa named a new CEO, Doug Dolton, who will run both the U.S. and U.K. operations out of San Francisco.  

The email raised more questions about the exact business model to be employed, saying only that it's "made adjustments to Zopa necessary for launching in the U.S." Zopa has been talking to credit unions about partnering, but no announcements have been made (previous coverage here).

Social Lending Pioneer Zopa Celebrates Second Birthday

The nascent market of online social or person-to-person (P2P) lending turned two as its pioneer, UK-based Zopa, celebrated its second birthday today. In addition to slapping a this enormous "2" button on its homepage (see screenshot below), the company marked the occasion with an open house at its headquarters, an online lunch-time webcast, and an online giveaway of ten iPod shuffles (see the text of the email message sent to Zopa lenders and borrowers here).

Zopa's homepage on its second birthday (7 March 2007)

The Latest Numbers out of Zopa

According to Easier Finance (thanks to PaymentsNews for the link):

  • Zopa has 135,000 members
  • Zopa lenders have received on average 6.75% before-tax annual return after fees and defaults
  • Zopa borrowers have obtained loans at rates as low as 4.2% APR
  • The current default rate is only 20 basis points, 0.2%

Zopa continues to create a considerable buzz in the UK. The company's homepage links to 42 articles from a diverse range of publications, most recently The Sunday Times and The Daily Mirror. And my favorite, an awesome piece from the UK's public-service Channel 4, that is unlike anything I've ever seen on U.S. news (click the play button below). 

The YouTube replay of the 4-minute feature was posted to Zopa's blog March 1 along with TV clips from CNBC and Fresno, CA news. The Channel 4 piece covers the topic of "social lending" in general and primarily covers Zopa, but near the end, another UK alternative lender is interviewed, Fair Finance <fairfinance.co.uk> is interviewed. We'll look at Fair Finance in a separate post.

 

More Supply than Demand at Zopa

link to Zopa homepage In a blog post today, person-to-person lender Zopa told its U.K. lenders that, due to a seasonal "lack of creditworthy borrowers," it would take a bit longer to lend out their money this month. However, the company predicted a seasonal upturn in January as more good borrowers looked for funds. The company reminded lenders that they still earn 4.25% on idle funds held by Zopa.

Top 25 Web 2.0 Financial Websites

Since its September launch,  Your Credit Advisor <yourcreditadvisor.com> has posted several trendy lists to attract traffic to its credit card application portal. The latest entry, "Top 25 Web 2.0 Apps for Money, Finance, and Investment."

The article includes helpful summaries of each site's capabilities. It's a good jumping-off point to do a little outside-the-box thinking about Web-based finance (see also, Online Banking Report #135/136, "How to Web-2.0 your Online Banking").

This list includes:

  • Two loan sites: Zopa and Prosper (see previous coverage here)
  • Six personal finances sites: Three we've covered: Dimewise, foonance, ioweyou (see our previous coverage here) and three new entrants: NetworthIQ, MedBillManager and Wesabe, a fascinating social money site we'll cover later this week
  • Five real estate sites: Homethinking, iiProperty, Rentometer (owned by iiProperty), Trulia, and Zillow (see our Zillow coverage here)
  • Two miscellaneous sites: PayScale, cFares
  • Ten investment sites: BullPoo, Motley Fool's CAPS, DigStock, FeelingBullish, GStock, MoneyTwins (foreign currency), SaneBull, StockTickr, WikiFinancial

Zopa to Offer Lender Guarantees

Click for Zopa home pageIn a blog post today, person-to-person lending pioneer Zopa announced several usability improvements in its upcoming release, a new My Zopa screen and Quick Lend area.

But what caught our eye was Zopa's upcoming option to guarantee the return of principal for its lenders. There's no free lunch, of course, so an insurance premium must be paid when lenders choose this option. Even though that will cause returns to fall to a more "normal" rate, it could be a psychological boost that brings in more funds. At minimum, it will generate press coverage.

The new guarantee is still awaiting U.K. regulatory approval. We'll look at it in more detail when it becomes available. 

Prosper Launches Group Ratings, Schedules User Meeting

Person-to-person lender, Prosper, announced its first annual user meeting next February in San Francisco. Registration is a refundable $25 and includes an all-day session with dinner on Monday, Feb. 12, and a half-day on Tuesday, Feb. 13.

The agenda has not been published. Online signup is here.


The October newsletter (see End Notes for screenshot) also announced the arrival of the group ratings, an important milestone for the nine-month-old service. Group ratings promise to help lenders locate borrowers with better-than-expected likelihood of repayment. If it works, Prosper could become a major force in consumer lending. If it doesn't, the company will have to find another way to beat the loan default odds. 

For more information:

  • For prior coverage of Prosper and its U.K. rival Zopa, look here.
  • For detailed analysis of the market, see Online Banking Report #127 published in March

End Notes (click on the link below to see Prosper's Oct. newsletters)

Banner advertising at About.com's banking blog <bank.about.com>

Bofa_ads_aboutdotcom

Landing page for direct navigation to <bankofamerica.com/nofeemortgage>

Bofa_nofeemortgage_url

Landing page from bank's Google ad on "bank of america mortgage no fee"

Bofa_mtg_landing

Zopa Emphasizes Community with New Homepage

Although you may have little interest in the niche market for person-to-person loans (previous coverage here), you should keep tabs on the websites of Zopa and Prosper to see how they build a community of borrowers and lenders.

The new Zopa homepage (see screenshot below) features several interesting community-involvement devices:

  1. "I'd like to meet…" tool in upper left
  2. Community factoid ticker running across the middle of the screen (see list of factoids below)
  3. Community tab in primary navigation (top)

Zopa home 18 Oct 2006 CLICK TO ENLARGE

"I'd Like to Meet" tool
This tool, placed in one of the most-viewed areas of the homepage (upper left), allows users to find like borrowers and lenders. Using drop-down boxes, users may narrow their search to just borrowers in a single city, oI'd like to meet tool CLICK TO ENLARGEr those of a certain age or age range, and so on (see inset). 

Unfortunately, we were unable to see the results since our search queries just showed an endless "search in progress" graphic image.

Community factoid ticker
Even though scrolling tickers are annoying, they do draw attention. Since Zopa must make prospective users comfortable with its novel service, it makes sense to be mildly annoying to get the point across that Zopa is a vibrant and fast-growing community. However, the 3-minute cycle time (before stopping) is too long; a 30-second scroll along with a link to more factoids would be better.

In our test at 7:00 PM London time Oct. 18, there were 17 items running across the screen in this order: 

  • 1,571 Johns have joined since we launched …
  • 4,350 members have registered so far this month …
  • 480 Zopa members have logged into their accounts today …
  • 553 Sarahs have joined Zopa so far …
  • Adrian from HULL has just joined …
  • In the last hour, 8 new members joined …
  • Lorraine just offered 50 to Zopa borrowers …
  • Mark from OXFORD just had a loan reserved in the B market …
  • More members come from London than anywhere else …
  • The average age of a Zopa member is 36 …
  • The last member from the Isle of Wight to lend was Laurence …
  • The last person to join from Aberdeen was Clare …
  • The most common name amongst Zopa members is David …
  • There have been 4,875 requests for loan quotes in the last 24 hours …
  • Thomas recently paid in using their debit card …
  • We have 595 members from Leicester …
  • Yesterday, 251 new members signed up …

Community tab
The Community tab in the site's main navigation leads to a page jammed with more community-building features and tools including (see screenshot below):

  • Company blog
  • Member discussion board
  • Finance news as gathered by "Zopa and friends"
  • Zopa newsletter
  • Member story (monthly feature)

Zopa vmain community page CLICK TO ENLARGE

Summary
A good effort by the person-to-person lending pioneer. We look forward to the company's U.S. launch while passing along our regrets to the recent passing of its founder Richard Duvall (memorialized in this Oct. 17 Zopa blog entry).

Zopa Courting U.S. Credit Unions

Zopa_logo_2According to OpenSourceCU, a blog operated by website designer Trabian, person-to-person lender Zopa is actively soliciting credit unions to partner with the U.S. version of its service scheduled to open later this year (see NB Sep 7). One idea floated by Zopa's Wade Lagrone to attendees of the Taps Lending Symposium put on by Forum Solutions, was requiring Zopa borrowers to join a credit union in order to participate.

Longtail_chartIt's not as far-fetched as it sounds. In our analysis of peer-to-peer lending published in March (see Online Banking Report #127), we identified a number of ways financial institutions could benefit by referring customers to competitive loan marketplaces. It helps you serve the "long tail" of borrowing, those specific situations that your underwriting cannot accommodate, but where you still want to satisfy the customer to retain their other banking business.