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Topics Covered
- What is peer to peer (P2P) lending?
- P2P lending won't replace banks so quickly
- How does it work: the example of Zopa
- Some open issues and questions
Talk Citation
Milne, A. (2016, October 31). An overview of peer to peer (P2P) lending [Video file]. In The Business & Management Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved December 26, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/PWXR8334.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Transcript
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0:00
This talk is going to provide
an overview
of "Peer-to-Peer or P2P Lending";
that's sometimes
called "Marketplace Lending",
for example,
in the United States.
I'm Professor Alistair Milne,
Professor of Financial Economics
at Loughborough University,
in the UK.
And I specialize in my research,
amongst other things,
in financial technology.
0:20
So what is peer-to-peer
or marketplace lending?
Well, it's direct lending
from an investor to a borrower.
So what's different
from most bank loans
is that there's no
bank balance sheet involved.
There isn't a bank taking
a deposit, then making a loan.
Rather the investor,
which could be a household
or possibly an investment fund,
lends directly to a borrower,
which could be a household,
or maybe a small business,
or indeed
it could be some sort of
investment opportunity as well.
The idea is inspired
by the "sharing economy",
so new platforms,
mobile, online platforms,
such as Napster,
which was the initiative,
now failed, which
changed the music market,
Uber, and Airbnb in taxis
and hotel accommodation
bookings.
It is a little bit different,
as we'll discuss in a moment.
In practice,
quite a lot of the investment
comes from large financial
institutions.
It's grown quite rapidly from
small beginnings a decade ago.
So in the US the largest
peer-to-peer
or marketplace lenders
is Lending Club,
there's also Prosper
and some others.
In the UK, we have the very
first peer-to-peer lender,
Zopa, Funding Circle,
who specializes in small
business lending,
Ratesetter, Thincats and others.
China has seen spectacular
growth in peer-to-peer lending.
But the regulation
on the development of financial
system is very different there.
So it's rather different,
more speculative,
more risky than what's
taking place in the US and UK.
It's also been appearing
in other countries too,
so Spain, Australia, and others
are beginning
to see developments.
As I've said, in the US,
it's got a different name,
"marketplace lending".
So I'm gonna tell you a bit more
about peer-to-peer lending.
The background,
the overall question,
"Is this going to replace
banking, as we know it?"
As you'll see,
I'm going to suggest that
while this is an important
development,
it's not quite such a dramatic
change as some have suggested.