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Still in favour of Zopa

May 8, 2008

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A year ago I wrote about Zopa, a (then) new loan concept that wanted to bring people together in order to facilitate a lending and borrowing market that wouldn’t require banks. The concept is remarkably easy - on the one hand we have people with spare cash looking for a good and (reasonably) safe return while at the same time we have people out there who are looking for some spare cash (i.e. a loan). Why not make these people talk directly, instead of forcing the former group to deposit their savings into a bank account with a mediocre interest rate and subject the latter to bank’s exorbitant fees (exceptions apply)?

After I had been watching the Zopa site grow for quite some time, I decided that it was time to join the fun and have a go at it myself. With the house purchase one of my major short-term goals at the minute, I didn’t want to tie up a lot of capital for a long time, hence the amounts I’m allowing myself to use at Zopa are fairly small (£ 25 in total at the minute, increasing by about £ 10 a month). Nevertheless I figured I had seen enough to share my experience with the site so far…

Signing up: Ideally this should have been a fairly easy process, especially since I was intending to become a lender, not borrower. However, due to money laundering regulations Zopa is still required to verify your identity and address. Since we’ve moved to our current flat only a few months ago, this identity check could not be carried out online and I had to submit the usual proof of identity and address documentation. This is nothing unique to Zopa and I’ve encountered the same issue several times before with banks, credit card and loan companies. In the end it took only 2 days for them to process my documents and I could sign up successfully! :-) Overall impression: good.

Customer Service: Apart from the registering process I’ve had several other encounters with the Customer Service department relating simple queries as well as a functionality problem at one point. The usual way of contacting them is by sending an email and the response time is always within the promised 1 - 2 business days. All requests were dealt with swiftly and the team is very helpful and always friendly. Overall impression: excellent.

Transferring money: There are three major ways you can transfer money into your Zopa account: Debit card by phone (for instant transferral) or online (for transferral within the same business day), standing order (similar to the way you’d set up the standing order for a savings account) or by bank transfer (longest of all methods as it takes about 3 days to reach your account). With either option you will receive a confirmation email when your funds reach the account and are ready to be used. To transfer money out, you will need to have your bank account confirmed with Zopa. To do that, you simply need to transfer £1 by bank transfer once for them to be able to verify the account belongs to you. At this stage, you cannot transfer the money in your Zopa account to anybody else but yourself. Overall impression: very good.

Lending in Zopa Markets: With Zopa you have two major lending options - Markets
or Listings. If you allocate your money to the Markets section, most of the work matching your lending offer with a borrower request will be done behind the scenes for you. You merely see your money moving between the stages of being offered (currently available), processing (matched to a borrower, loan verification in progress), lent out and late payments (hopefully very few in the latter category). To determine your rate of return you can either give Zopa your desired rate of return and the longest amount of time you’re willing to tie up your capital or you can fine tune your offer by indicating an exact rate of return per market segment. These segments are determined by the borrowers credit rating and the duration of the loan and range from A* for 12 months to C for 60 months. Zopa is helping you to offer realistic rates by quoting you a range of rates that other lenders are offering.

My experience with the Markets section is thoroughly positive. I’ve got all my lending offers at the higher end of the market range and yet I find that my available money is usually processing within a time span of about 2 days. I’ve only had one slight hiccup so far that was explained to me and hence resolved by the Customer Service team within 2 days (my Zopa account contained a little less than the shown £ 10 due to the Zopa fees being earmarked but not deducted every month). Overall impression: good

Lending on Zopa Listings: Zopa Listings are essentially an eBay-like reverse auction system where borrowers advertise their borrowing needs together with an explanation of their finances and lenders can quote how much they’d be willing to lend to this one borrower and at which rate. All quotes get aggregated throughout the duration of the listing. When the borrower’s desired loan amount has been reached (i.e. funding is at 100%), lenders can continue to quote and hence will start outbidding each other with lower rates. Eventually only the minimum number of lenders with the lowest rates will be kept in the listing and hence will be able to lend their money to the borrower. The advantage of the Listings is that you might be able to get a higher rate than you’ve quoted in the Markets section by bidding at the last minute - similarly to how you can get a bargain at eBay through sniping (or old-fashioned pressing of refresh and bidding on the last second).

I’ve only (actively) participated in one Listing so far which ended at 4.20am in the morning. I waited to submit my quote until half past midnight and went to bed hoping lots of people would have already done the same. By the time I submitted my quote, I was about 50 offers (out of 130) away from being excluded so I felt pretty safe and happy as I had a good impression of the borrower. Unfortunately I was out-bid just 15 minutes before the end of the Listing… :-( In any case, the entire process was certainly exciting and I’m intending to look out for other Listings as soon as I fund my Zopa account with more money (waiting for the paycheck, anyone?). Overall impression: excellent

Total verdict: For me, Zopa turned out to be everything I expected and wanted it to be. Obviously I can’t really comment on the bad loan rate at this stage, but then I don’t think it is a major part of evaluating Zopa itself. Every lender can adjust the risk he or she is willing to take by only offering money in certain (high-quality) markets or reducing the term of the loan they’re happy to accept. I believe that people might be less likely to default on their loans when they know that they owe their money to individual people, not big face-less institutions - if you had the choice, whom would you pay back first? Your neighbour or the bank? I might be wrong, but this is what I would like to believe and Zopa’s low bad-loan quota might prove just that.

If you’re intrigued by the concept and would like to explore alternative ways of making money / earning a return on investments, I urge you to give this a go. Sign up here to get £30 when you start lending (minimum amount applies) and become part of the Zopa Community. Trust me, it’s fun! :-D


A year ago on Simple Pound: Investment Choices - Summary

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Zopa markets or how to cut out the middle-man

April 20, 2007

I have recently come across the Zopa website, which claims to connect lenders and borrowers without involving banks - thus guaranteeing both parties better rates. The whole site is built around a community of people either willing to lend or people seeking to borrow money - from each other directly, rather than going to their local bank and thus making these institutions even richer than they already are.

And it seems to work as they are quoting quite competitive rates of 5.95% APR for a £5000 loan over 36 months, while promising lenders an average of 6.75% pa for their money (after bad debt and fee, before tax). Since I am not planning to take out a loan very soon, I was more interested in the lender aspect of this. It is essentially a bond based on an individual (and his credit rating) rather than a government or corporation - only with a much better return.

Zopa logoAnd here’s how it works: If you decide you have got some money left over that you wish to temporarily make available to someone else, you create an account with Zopa and transfer your money in, specifying which credit rating you will accept and for how long you want to lend the money. Their credit scores range from A* (very reliable) to C (still reliable, but less credit history - e.g. a student), which is based on an extensive identity-, credit- and risk-check. According to them, a person with a credit rating of “C” is still more creditworthy than the majority of the population. Well, that sounds good, but is obviously very difficult to prove…

The interest you get for your money depends upon the duration you’re intending to lend money and the people you’re happy to lend to. Since the website essentially functions like a market, the actual interest rate you are receiving will be based on supply and demand. So in order to get a decent return, you should put down your money for as long as possible (5 years) and ideally to C-rated people, because for these categories demand will potentially be highest. Obviously decisions like that depend upon you’re own risk attitude!

There is no lower limit for how much money you can put in the Zopa account - people start at sums of £10 or use Zopa as a regular savings account and make small monthly contributions. In most cases you won’t be lending to a single person, but your money will be spread across various people seeking a loan. This is an in-build protection mechanism based upon the wisdom that diversification limits risk. And if the conditions of your lending aren’t appealing to anyone in the market-place (for instance, your lending period is too short), you will still earn 4.5% interest on the money in the Zopa account - which is more than I am making with my savings at the moment!

Zopa lend-borrowAs I said at the beginning, I’m beginning to really like this idea. Especially since you will know where your money is going and in most cases people also share what they are using the money for. In short this means that whenever you decide not to spend your money but put it in your Zopa account, you could potentially help fulfilling someone else’s dream!

Head over to their website for more information! And please, if you’ve had any experience with Zopa at all, leave a comment and have the rest of us benefit from your knowledge! ;-)

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