$64.62 LendingClub Bonus
December 9, 2009
If you are looking to start getting into the P2P (person to person) lending game, LendingClub is offering a $64.62 bonus when you open a new account and start investing. They came up with that amount since they say that banks made $6.462 billion last quarter, so they are offering you a piece of that.
If you have read my previous posts I have been burned doing p2p loans through Prosper.com.
LendingClub has always prided themselves in having a stronger review process. I have a few loans with LendingClub and believe it or not they are all current with no charge offs. I am currently earning a 9.86% return from what they tell me, which if those loans stay current isn’t that bad considering how low interest rates are. I have been debating throwing a little more money into LendingClub but Prosper has left such a bad taste in my mouth I am still on the fence.
Regardless, just remember that if you start p2p lending you are doing so at your own risk. I imagine now that the economy is turing around a bit the chance of defaults is probably much lower than what I went through.
To qualify for the $64.62 you need to open a new account through this promotion link and link a bank account. Once that is complete the bonus will be deposited into your account. You must invest that bonus into lending club loans and cannot withdraw it.
Unfortunetly the link they gave me doesn’t talk about the bonus, but here is the small print I was sent:
** The special referral bonus program begins December 3, 2009. Referrals must use your special link between 12.03.09 and 12.31.09 at midnight in order to qualify for the $64.62 bonus. The referral must complete registration as a Lending Club investor and link a bank account in order to receive the bonus funds. Bonus funds may not be withdrawn and must be invested in Lending Club notes. Funds received may be taxable, please consult with your tax advisor. Recipient is responsible for all taxes, if any, due.
And here is a screenshot of the promo info when I log into my account. Click on it for a larger photo…
Free $25 From LendingClub Promo
March 30, 2009
There is a new LendingClub Promo where you can get $25 when signing up as an investor (lender). If you are new to the whole Person-2-Person investing, check out my latest Lending Club post for more info.
The $25 Lending Club bonus will be deposited in your account after you have created a new investor account, link a bank account and make a deposit into your Lending Club account. There is no expiration date on this LendingClub bonus, which means this could end at any time.
I need to refer you for you to qualify for the $25 bonus. If you are interested, please complete the form below and I will generate a referral for you to your email. (Please give this some time as I need to generate this manaully for you.)
cforms contact form by delicious:days
(Don’t worry, your email address is safe with us. We will delete it as soon as the referral is generated. We never have and never will send out spam to you!)
I have had a good experience with LendingClub. I wish I could say the same thing for Prosper.com since I am now moving everything from Prosper to LendingClub. P2P lending is a unique way to spread out your investments as well as helping out someone in need
If you are looking for another way to invest your money and get $25 along with it, why not try it out.
P2P Lending – Switching from Prosper to Lending Club
March 11, 2009
After logging into my Prosper.com account for the first time in a while, I was shocked to see how bad all my loans are performing. I went from 1 charge off to 9 in about 4 months along with 6 late loans.
I am now in the red and most likely will lose even more then the $62.74 I have lost thus far. I was an early investor in Prosper when they opened in 2006, so you can see that I would have been better putting my money in a savings account.
A few months ago, after reading some comments from my previous prosper posts, I decided to give LendingClub a try. LendingClub works the same as prosper but touts stricter underwriting guidelines to help weed out those unsavory borrowers.
I set up an account and funded 8 loans. I did 2 loans with an A credit rating, 4 with a B credit rating and 2 with a C credit rating. After watching these loans over the past few months, I have been surprised that they are all current, even through this current recession. Two of those loans have been paid off completely. My average rate of return is 9.75%. This is pretty good considering the current savings rates out there.
Since this has been a successful test I have decided as I receive payments from my Prosper loans that money is going directly into a new LendingClub loan. I have not funded a new Prosper loan since May last year, so I am hoping LendingClub can help make up for my losses at Prosper. I still feel that person to person lending is a great way to invest and that the company that can get a handle on bad borrowers will ultimately win the prize. Right now, I am pretty sure that Prosper isn’t the one!
Lending Club Reopens to Lenders while Prosper Shuts Lending Down
October 15, 2008
Thanks to writer Debtkid who pointed out in my last post that LendingClub has completed it’s SEC registration and reopened the site to lenders yesterday. You can now apply to become a lender or start lending additional funds if you are currently registered.
The interesting thing was that not only did I receive an email from LendingClub stating that they are reopening, I also received an email the same day from Prosper.com saying that they are now registering with the SEC.
Here is an exerpt from the email:
Until we complete the registration process, we will not accept new lender registrations or allow new commitments from existing lenders. If you’re an existing lender, your current lender agreements will be unaffected; your existing loans will continue to be serviced; you’ll be able to track and monitor your loans; and you’ll be able to withdraw funds from your Prosper account.
If you’re a borrower with an existing loan, you will continue with your current borrower agreement and be unaffected by the registration process. If you’re a borrower seeking a loan, you will still be able to create a new loan listing, which we will endeavor to fulfill through alternative sources.
This is interesting that they will try to fulfill your loan through other sources. I am curious as to what those may be. I am not too concerned with this since the lack luster performance I am having with Propser has me taking out all my money and puting it into LendingClub loans. In the past 3 months I have seen 5 bankrupicies and many late payments at Prosper where my LendingClub portfilio is still going strong and is completely current.
If you are looking for a way to diversify your investements, then P2P lending may be an option for you. I would recommend that before you start lending you read some of the help forums to understand risks as well as what makes a good balanced portfolio of loans. There’s money to be made there, you just need to do it smart!
Lending Club Update
October 10, 2008
I wanted to do a quick follow up on my Lending Club account. For those of you that don’t know what Lending Club is, they are a peer to peer loan service where regular people like you and I can get money or loan money to others. Lending Club is a competing service to Prosper.com.
Well after logging into my account, I was pleasntly surprised to see that all 25 of my loans are current. My average return is 17% on all 25 loans. My Lending Club account is far superior to my Prosper.com account where I currently have 8 loans out of 22 that are in bankrupcy. I am begining to think that Lending Club is better able to weed out the scammers.
Due to the economic slowdown I am seeing many more people trying to borrow money from Lending Club. I am going to add a few more hundred dollars into it to try to increase my return. I am also thinking of taking a Lending Club loan out and reinvesting that money back in as loans to others. Hey with an 18% return, I don’t think I could do much better anywhere else!!!
Prosper.com Experiment Update III
April 28, 2008
It’s been about a month and a half since my last Prosper experiment update so I thought I would share what is going on with it.
Well not much new to report, and that is good news! All 37 loans are still current, and I was able to pick up another $50 loan (Credit Rating: AA @ 11.00%) with payments from the outstanding loans. This puts me now at 38 loans with an average interest rate of 13.01% One of my loans is also being paid off, so should have enough in my account to pick up another $50 loan. I think I am going to go a little riskier this time to increase my overall loan percentage. One of the loans went late last week, but then was paid up in a few days, so I received a late payment fee of $.03. That loan was an AA Credit Rating, so I assume he just forgot to pay it. I’ll definitely take the late payment!!
One thing to remember is that if you decided to get involved in lending on Prosper, make sure as soon as your account reaches $50 (minimum loan amount) you bid on another loan as the prosper account does not pay interest on the cash balance in your account. To keep that loan interest rate up there you need to keep all your money into loans.
So far things are going well and I hope it continues this way. Only time will tell what a possible recession my do to my loans, but as I said before this was throw away money for me, as had I invested it the stock market, I would have lost it all!









