Subscribe
Logo
Logo
  • Topics Icon Topics
    • AI Icon AI
    • Banking Icon Banking
    • Blockchain/DeFi Icon Blockchain/DeFi
    • Embedded Finance Icon Embedded Finance
    • Fraud/Identity Icon Fraud/Identity
    • Investing Icon Investing
    • Lending Icon Lending
    • Payments Icon Payments
    • Regulation Icon Regulation
    • Startups Icon Startups
  • Podcasts Icon Podcasts
  • Products Icon Products
    • Webinars Icon Webinars
    • White Papers Icon White Papers
  • TechWire Icon TechWire
  • Search
  • Subscribe
Reading
P2P Lending Is Dead
ShareTweet
Home
Blog
P2P Lending Is Dead

P2P Lending Is Dead

Fintech Nexus Staff·
Blog
·Apr. 6, 2015·2 min read

American Homeowner Preservation Logo

[Editor’s note: This is a guest post from Jorge Newbery, Founder and CEO of American Homeowner Preservation, LLC. American Homeowner Preservation is a bronze sponsor and will be in attendance at LendIt USA 2015 on April 13-15. In this post, he talks about the need for larger investors in the p2p lending.]

AHP-Guest-Blog-P2P-Lending-Is-Dead

First, disco bit the dust. Then, punk rock keeled over. Now, peer-to-peer lending has been annihilated. Who murdered P2P? Wall Street. BlackRock. Wealthy bankers. The guys I was shoulder-to-shoulder with last week in Las Vegas. At ABS Vegas 2015, billed as the largest capital markets conference in the world, the P2P/Online Lending 101 session attracted a Standing Room Only crowd.

However, this crowd was not made up of peers. These were killers.

Often called P2PL, this contemporary lending mechanism entails lending money directly between investors and borrowers, without using a traditional financial institution. Like eBay, Airbnb, Uber and other peer-to-peer services, P2PL represents an efficient take on a longtime business.

In the U.S., the leaders in P2PL have been Prosper and Lending Club. These are platforms where customers, looking for lower-interest loans than they can secure through a bank or by using their credit cards, are paired up with investors who want a solid, steady return.

At Lending Club, the larger of the two leading firms with about $4 billion in loans in 2014, a borrower with good credit history and stable income can get a loan for as little as $1,000 and as much as $35,000. Both borrower and lender pay Lending Club a fee, and the interest that the borrower pays goes to the lender.

The online architecture of P2PL platforms reduces the cost of lending dramatically from what bricks-and-mortar banks have to spend, enhancing the returns on these loans.

P2PL is a 21st-Century phenomenon. It started in 2005 in the United Kingdom, with a company called Zopa, and the next year in the US with Prosper and Lending Club. Just six years later, those two US firms had reportedly serviced 180,000 loans, for a total value of $2 billion.

Not surprisingly, those big numbers drew the attention of Wall Street. While P2PL initially attracted ordinary citizens to invest in modestly sized consumer loans to people like them, over the last few years those peer investors often have been elbowed out and replaced by Wall Street’s finest.

Last summer, Blue Elephant Capital Management said it would invest more than $300 million in loans through peer-to-peer platforms. BlackRock Inc., the world’s largest asset manager, has amassed $330 million of Prosper loans, which amounted to about one-sixth of the loans Prosper had made between late 2013 and early 2015, according to Bloomberg Business. These are just two among many Wall Street-style firms looking to get a piece of P2PL’s above-market returns.

I was there in that expo hall at ABS last week. As I looked around, this was not a crowd of small-time peer investors. These were Wall Street bankers, lured by the attractive P2PL returns.

Why was I there? I wanted to befriend the executioners. As the P2PL sector gets overly crowded, I want these assassins to help homeowners avoid foreclosure. My firm, American Homeowner Preservation, crowdfunds the purchase of non-performing mortgages from big banks. These pools of loans are acquired at big discounts. This empowers AHP to deliver sustainable solutions to struggling families and keep them in their homes.

To date, AHP has been supported primarily by peer investors. We need larger investors to help more families stay in their homes. We need institutional capital.

We need killers.

This article originally appears at Huffington Post: https://www.huffingtonpost.com/jorge-newbery/p2p-lending-is-dead_b_6705154.html

  • Fintech Nexus Staff
    Fintech Nexus Staff

    This piece was created by one of our content team members. Reach us at [email protected]

    View all posts

Tags
American Homeowner Preservation
Related

LendIt Fintech USA: the best fintech event of 2020

Now is the time for community

London is Open

Three shifts in fintech [Tel Aviv]

Popular Posts

Today:

  • 5 Founders Driving Humanoid AIThe Humanoid Era: 5 Leaders Defining Physical AI Sep. 10, 2025
  • FundedFunded: Reevo lands $80M seed to unify GTM chaos into one AI-native system Nov. 7, 2025
  • MomentFunded: Moment raises $36M Series B to automate fixed income for financial institutions Jul. 18, 2025
  • 122In Founders We Trust Aug. 6, 2025
  • VercelType It, Ship It: Vercel Wants Everyone to Be a Coder Aug. 20, 2025
  • FNWhen AI Runs the Deal: What’s in the VC Automation Stack? Oct. 8, 2025
  • FNWhy Your Loan Portfolio Models Are Lying to You (And What to Do About It) Nov. 4, 2025
  • FNFrom Inspiration to Action: Stefan Weitz and the Rise of HumanX Nov. 12, 2025
  • Copy of Fintech Nexus – Newsletter Creative (1)Unpacking PayPal’s Missed Moment: 7 Takeaways Feb. 5, 2026
  • FNOura’s CEO Tom Hale on Democratizing Health with AI and Data Mar. 12, 2026

This month:

  • FNMerge CEO on building the pipes behind AI, and starting with zero code May. 21, 2026
  • FN“A race against time” – Fenrock AI’s CEO on fighting the impending wave of AI fraud May. 7, 2026
  • Private Fintech Has Quietly Become Bigger Than Public Fintech. Now What?Private Fintech Has Quietly Become Bigger Than Public Fintech. Now What? May. 28, 2026
  • Stephanie Sher, Founder, Integral VenturesIntegral Ventures’ Stephanie Sher is all about seeing diamonds in the rough May. 14, 2026
  • What is Really Going on With Private CreditWhat is Really Going on With Private Credit Apr. 30, 2026
  • Chris Taylor Fractional AIFractional AI’s CEO Chris Taylor on Scaling the Unscalable Jul. 23, 2025
  • FNThe Bank Charter Gold Rush: What’s Really Happening and What it Means for Banking Feb. 12, 2026
  • How Traversal Prevents Million-Dollar OutagesHow Traversal Prevents Million-Dollar Outages Apr. 30, 2026
  • MomentFunded: Moment raises $36M Series B to automate fixed income for financial institutions Jul. 18, 2025
  • Santiago SuarezInside Addi’s mission to build a fairer financial system in Colombia Feb. 19, 2026

More News
  • About
  • Contact
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
Subscribe
Copyright © 2026 Fintech Nexus
  • Topics
    • AI
    • Banking
    • Blockchain/DeFi
    • Embedded Finance
    • Fraud/Identity
    • Investing
    • Lending
    • Payments
    • Regulation
    • Startups
  • Podcasts
  • Products
    • Webinars
    • White Papers
  • TechWire
  • Contact Us
Start typing to see results or hit ESC to close
lis digital banking USA Lending Club UK
See all results