Typical Prosper misleading press release:
http://blog.prosper.com/2010/04/16/prosper-marketplace-closes-147-million-series-d-round/Prosper Marketplace Closes $14.7 Million Series D Round - 04/16/10
Prosper.com, the world’s largest peer-to-peer lending marketplace with nearly one million members and over 32,000 funded loans totaling over $194 million,
Prosper is only the largest in terms of originations -- the majority of which have already been repaid or defaulted. Of that $194 million in originations, a mind-blowing $44 million has already been charged of (NET of any recoveries) -- almost 1 dollar out of every 4. Prosper has only a paltry $33M in active loans.
And the vast majority of those "million members" are people who registered, looked around, and haven't been seen in years, or were "friends" (or sock puppets) of long-ago borrowers. How many of those "million members" actually lent or borrowed a penny -- around one in twenty?
“We were attracted to Prosper because it offers a game-changing solution and is poised to capitalize on the consumer lending market in a substantial manner,” said Court Coursey, Managing Partner at TomorrowVentures. “Prosper is the leader in the space and positioned to be at the forefront of revolutionizing fundamental aspects of the financial services industry for many years to come.”
Bwahahah -- Prosper is only "the leader in the space" based on its now repaid or defaulted ancient originations. LendingClub is now originating close to
400% of Prosper's current originations. The only thing Prosper is "positioned to be" is the same old mismanaged and unethical company we are all familiar with.
Prosper, America’s first peer-to-peer lending marketplace, maintains approximately two-thirds of the U.S. peer-to-peer lending market
By current actual originations? Um, no. That would be LendingClucb.
Prosper crossed the $1 billion milestone in consumer loan demand in March 2008 and has now surpassed $1.8 billion in demand.
What a completely worthless metric -- How much of that "$1.8 billion in demand" is repeated loan listings from crap borrowers that had 0.000% chance of ever funding?
“This latest round of financing strengthens our leadership position and our charge toward continuing to pave the way for bringing the benefits of a third way of banking – peer-to-peer lending – into the mainstream.”
Um no -- you ceded that "leadership position" to LendingClub.
Larsen continued, “The reset button has been hit for consumers who are frustrated with credit companies and a dearth of financing options,
How about "hitting the reset button" on Prosper? Starting with firing Larsen and the rest of top management, and replacing them with people who care about lenders' interests (and who know what they are doing).