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Loanpad P2P - Reviews, experiences, info or updates, post them here. I'm having a dabble.
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Sea_Shell
Posts: 10,025 Forumite

Morning all
I've seen this name pop up a couple of times in various threads, but can't see that there is a dedicated thread for them.
I've had a quick look at their website, and on the face of it, it seems like a pretty good deal, somewhere between cash and a S&S ISA.
I realise that capital is at risk, and the interest rate isn't guaranteed, but how have people found them to be?
I might have a couple of grand that could find a home here...assuming it is all at is seems.....is it??!
Many thanks.
I've seen this name pop up a couple of times in various threads, but can't see that there is a dedicated thread for them.
I've had a quick look at their website, and on the face of it, it seems like a pretty good deal, somewhere between cash and a S&S ISA.
I realise that capital is at risk, and the interest rate isn't guaranteed, but how have people found them to be?
I might have a couple of grand that could find a home here...assuming it is all at is seems.....is it??!
Many thanks.
How's it going, AKA, Nutwatch? - 12 month spends to date = 2.60% of current retirement "pot" (as at end May 2025)
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Comments
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If you are comfortable with the general risks of P2P, this is money you don't need to be sure you can access at a specific time (thinking of what happened at Ratesetter) and you're only investing a small proportion of your total assets, then LoanPad is a good option. I'd probably go there if I decided to return to P2P investing in the future. I don't have any personal experience using them, but have looked into the offering.
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The P2P Independent Forum is a good place to look about P2P companies.
Here is link to the forum regarding Loanpad.
Loanpad | P2P Independent Forum
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Thanks for that link to that forum. Very helpful.
It would seem that they are gaining new investors rapidly...not sure if that is actually a good thing!?!
I suppose it would raise questions of do they have enough potential borrowers to cover the influx of new cash, and is there enough liquidity to get you money out when needed. A run on the platform etc. especially if interest rates rise in "protected" accounts so you can get closer to 3-4% elsewhere.
Also what interest are they charging their borrowers, if they can afford to take their cut AND payout 4% interest to investors?
I might have a dabble with £100-£200 to "test the water" and see what the platform/website is like, before committing any more than that.How's it going, AKA, Nutwatch? - 12 month spends to date = 2.60% of current retirement "pot" (as at end May 2025)1 -
Sea_Shell said:I suppose it would raise questions of do they have enough potential borrowers to cover the influx of new cash, and is there enough liquidity to get you money out when needed. A run on the platform etc. especially if interest rates rise in "protected" accounts so you can get closer to 3-4% elsewhere.
Also what interest are they charging their borrowers, if they can afford to take their cut AND payout 4% interest to investors?
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I suppose it would raise questions of do they have enough potential borrowers to cover the influx of new cash, and is there enough liquidity to get you money out when needed. A run on the platform etc. especially if interest rates rise in "protected" accounts so you can get closer to 3-4% elsewhere.I am not familiar with Loanpad but I am with 'Assetz Capital' - a longer established P2P company operating in a similar way .
Also what interest are they charging their borrowers, if they can afford to take their cut AND payout 4% interest to investors?
They struggled during the Covid crisis but survived, and seem to be coming out of the other side.
There was a run on the access accounts and withdrawals had to be stopped . Now 18 months later they are mainly back to normal.
In fact the problem now is generating enough new borrowers after the hiatus of Covid.
Their typical interest rate on individual loans is around 6% . They seem to charge the borrower around 1 % more + a 2% set up charge .
As Marcon says in the heady days of P2P, some platforms were offering 12% interest . It only came out later they were charging borrowers 18% . Only borrowers who were desperate/dodgy would agree to that, and then inevitably default and it would turn out the valuation of the security was overblown ( or fraudulent ) and recovery rate was poor . So in the end these P2P companies went bust and people lost varying amounts of money.
Like with most things the less return on offer , the lower the risk .
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Just watching this video (I'm about 20mins in so far). Interesting so far!!
https://youtu.be/MWspJb66WaA
How's it going, AKA, Nutwatch? - 12 month spends to date = 2.60% of current retirement "pot" (as at end May 2025)0 -
Sea_Shell said:Thanks for that link to that forum. Very helpful.
It would seem that they are gaining new investors rapidly...not sure if that is actually a good thing!?!I suppose it would raise questions of do they have enough potential borrowers to cover the influx of new cash, and is there enough liquidity to get you money out when needed. A run on the platform etc. especially if interest rates rise in "protected" accounts so you can get closer to 3-4% elsewhere.
All requests by lenders to get their cash back so far have been serviced on time, I.e. Next day for the Standard account and 60 days for the Premium account. There is current about £1.5m in unassigned cash on the platform that can be used to service withdrawal requests. There was a run during the early days of the covid crisis, as there was on many P2P platforms, but all withdrawal requests were still serviced on time. Loanpad is fairly well structured to handle a run as their maximum loan term is 24 months, and the vast majority are 12 months or less. So, given that there are 118 extant loans, each month there are many loans repaying. During a run they would stop curating new loans and use the repayments to service withdrawal requests. Since most cash on the platform is in the premium account they get 60 days notice of the majority of withdrawals, so they have time to adjust their lending strategy. They also have a liquidity partner lined up to help in exceptional times, I'm not sure of how that works.Also what interest are they charging their borrowers, if they can afford to take their cut AND payout 4% interest to investors?I might have a dabble with £100-£200 to "test the water" and see what the platform/website is like, before committing any more than that.
There's an interview with Louis Schwartz the CEO on the FinancialThing's website that would be worth a look. (EDIT: you beat me to it)
Good luck.3 -
Albermarle said:As Marcon says in the heady days of P2P, some platforms were offering 12% interest . It only came out later they were charging borrowers 18% . Only borrowers who were desperate/dodgy would agree to that, and then inevitably default and it would turn out the valuation of the security was overblown ( or fraudulent ) and recovery rate was poor . So in the end these P2P companies went bust and people lost varying amounts of money.
Like with most things the less return on offer , the lower the risk .
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Sea_Shell said:
I might have a couple of grand that could find a home here...assuming it is all at is seems.....is it??!4 -
Thrugelmir said:Sea_Shell said:
I might have a couple of grand that could find a home here...assuming it is all at is seems.....is it??!
Maybe, maybe not.
It seems less bother than chasing round after regular savings accounts!😉
Time is a commodity I have plenty of. (Hopefully that bus will miss me!)How's it going, AKA, Nutwatch? - 12 month spends to date = 2.60% of current retirement "pot" (as at end May 2025)2
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