http://www.lendingstats.com/lenders/CTI-Lending
Thats pretty stupid lending.
Ooh, I remember that guy. I was always amazed at how bad he was at picking loans.
I still remember back in the beginning when a couple of people on the official forums were saying that HR's were the sweet spot for picking loans. My recollection was that it wasn't until summer of 2006 before someone who screen-scraped group loan screens falsified that statement, saying that the data looked two to three times worse than the Experian data on annualized default rates on "all bank card products." Later it was "vetted HR borrowers" that were the sweet spot, which again proved to be false.
CTI-Lending did the most bidding the three months before the Performance Page on Prosper.com showed an "estimated performance".
I think most of us were rather stupid, thinking that, with less information (summaries from one credit report--not even seeing an actual credit report, let alone information from all three CRAs), and, for most of us, no experience, that we could beat banks at their own game. Worse, we were doing this with a new segment of the debt market that lacked any kind of meaningful data, with loans that banks had pretty much abandoned (banks seem much eager to hand out credit cards than to issue signature loans).
I forget when the pninen charts started, but those should have been a wake-up call to let lenders know that the vast majority of lenders are making stupid loans. Alas, some had sunk substantial sums into loans before realizing the risks were high.
The rule of thumb still applies: if the returns are greater than expected, look for one of two things: unrecognized risk, or hidden fraud. In Prosper's case, I think it was unrecognized risk that many borrowers would be defaulting (and outright fraud by some borrowers).