Peer-to-peer banking
Peer-to-peer banking is an online system that allows individual members to complete financial transactions with one another by using an auction style process that lets members offer loans for a specific amount and at a specific rate.
Operation
Buyers have the option to look for an amount and rate of interest that meets their needs. All members are categorized by their risk level. Members can browse for other people based on various demographic information.
Since P2P banking does not use third party banking institution intermediaries the rates and terms are often much more favourable for the members.[1][2][3]
Unlike conventional banking where the spread between deposit rates and lending rates are consumed to finance the bank's administrative and logistic expenses, both lenders and borrowers get to save such costs, while paying certain commission to the P2P portal provider and/or the credit rating agency.
P2P banking and financing has been proposed as a method to accelerate the development renewable energy projects while more equitably distributing the return on investment. [4] These concepts have now been instituted by Energy in Common and Kiva in their green fund.
Models of P2P Banking
The following two pictures show the difference between the peer to peer banking approach and the normal way with a financial institute.
-
Traditional banking model (simplified)
-
Peer to peer banking model (simplified)
See also
- Lending Club
- Person-to-person lending
- Peer-to-peer
- Peer-to-peer renting
- Social peer-to-peer processes
- Peer-to-peer_lending
External links
References
- ^ "Peer-to-peer lending is surging in the US, and it could hurt big banks"m businessinsider.com
- ^ "Peer-to-peer lending", consumer.org.nz
- ^ "The Disappearance Of Peer-To-Peer Lending", Forbes
- ^ K. Branker, E. Shackles, J. M. Pearce, “Peer-to-Peer Financing Mechanisms to Accelerate Renewable Energy Deployment” The Journal of Sustainable Finance & Investment 1(2), pp. 138-155 (2011).