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Peer-to-Peer (P2P) Lending

Peer-to-Peer Lending (also known as P2P Lending or Marketplace Lending) is a clever way to connect people who need to borrow money with people who have money to invest. Think of it as a financial matchmaking service. Instead of going to a traditional bank, a borrower applies for a loan on an online P2P platform. On the other side, investors, like you, can browse these loan requests and choose to fund small portions of many different loans. In essence, you become the bank! The platform acts as the intermediary, handling the paperwork, assessing the borrower's creditworthiness, and processing payments between the two parties for a fee. This process cuts out the hefty overhead of a traditional bank, which can mean lower interest rates for borrowers and potentially higher returns for investors. It's a direct, technology-driven approach to lending and borrowing that has created an entirely new asset class for everyday investors to explore.

How Does It Actually Work?

For an investor, the process is refreshingly straightforward. While platforms differ slightly, the core journey is usually the same:

  1. 1. Choose Your Platform: You start by researching and selecting a reputable P2P lending platform and opening an account.
  2. 2. Add Funds: You transfer money into your P2P account, just like you would with an online brokerage.
  3. 3. Go “Loan Shopping”: This is the fun part. You can browse individual loan listings, which detail the loan's purpose, the borrower's risk grade, the interest rate, and the term. Alternatively, most platforms offer an auto-invest tool that automatically spreads your money across loans that meet your pre-defined criteria (e.g., risk level, loan duration).
  4. 4. Diversify: The golden rule of P2P is not to put all your eggs in one basket. By investing small amounts (e.g., €25 or $25) in hundreds of different loans, you practice diversification and reduce the impact of any single borrower failing to pay you back.
  5. 5. Collect Returns: As borrowers make their monthly payments, you receive a proportional share of the principal and interest, which lands back in your account. You can then choose to withdraw this cash or reinvest it into new loans to harness the power of compounding.

The Lure for Investors

Why bother becoming a mini-bank? The appeal of P2P lending boils down to a few key attractions:

A Value Investor's Angle on P2P Lending

True to our philosophy, we don't just chase high returns. We look for value and, most importantly, manage risk. Here’s how a value investing mindset applies to P2P.

Understanding the "Business"

When you invest in a P2P loan, you are in the business of lending. The most critical part of this business is assessing risk. While you can't meet the borrower, you can—and must—assess the platform that's doing it for you. Before investing, dig into the platform's history, its management team, and its business model. Most importantly, scrutinize its underwriting standards and historical default rate. A platform with a long, consistent track record and rigorous credit checks is a much better “business partner” than a new one with loose standards chasing growth at all costs.

Finding Your Margin of Safety

The father of value investing, Benjamin Graham, taught the importance of a margin of safety—a buffer between the price you pay and the intrinsic value you get. In P2P lending, your margin of safety isn't found by getting a “cheap” loan, but by protecting yourself from the primary risk: borrower default. Your margin of safety is built through radical diversification. By spreading your capital across hundreds, or even thousands, of loans, you ensure that the failure of a few borrowers won't wipe out your returns. The interest payments from the 99 successful loans should more than cover the losses from the one that defaults. This is the only reliable way to protect your principal in the P2P world.

The Unavoidable Risks

P2P lending is an investment, not a savings account. Your capital is at risk, and it's vital to understand how you could lose money.