Found this on the net. Something like prosper.

Now another post about an investment opportunity you may come across on the internet.. the website is called Zopa Welcome to Zopa (UK) - The first lending and borrowing exchange.
The idea is more less the following:

–> People who have spare money give it to a bank. Banks then do whatever they like with it. Some of it they lend to people who need to borrow. Some of it they give to their shareholders. Some of it they gamble on the price of tin, or the dollar going down, or whether there’ll be floods in Asia. Banks make lots of money from all this, a fraction of which they give back to their customers.
–> Zopa though lets people who have spare money to lend it directly to people, like them, who want to borrow it. No bank in the middle, no huge overheads, no unethical investments.
–> To minimise any risk, the money each lender puts in is spread amongst at least 50 borrowers (and likewise each borrower gets their money from a number of different lenders).
–> Zopa is, therefore, for people who want to be a part of something new. Who want to join a community of like-minded individuals and lend to them and borrow from them in a trusting but secure way.
–> Zopa is for people who are looking for a better rate of return. Zopa’s interest rates aren’t squeezed by middlemen (the banks) because there are no middlemen - that’s the Zopa idea.
–> Zopa is for creditworthy people who earn money in new ways, in ways that banks don’t always recognise. People who are self employed, people who have peaks and troughs to their income, people who would be invisible to a bank’s credit rating system but are seen and validated by Zopa’s.

We are moving from a consumer society of mass production to a society where we are defined more as individuals,” says Zopa CEO Richard Duvall. Yet in banking, Duvall points out, “there are still enormous corporations controlling our money.” Duvall believes that a nimble Zopa can trounce banks in assessing credit by gauging things that banks typically don’t review, such as a person’s eBay ratings. And he’s injecting a social aspect into lending. Just as in a social network, lenders can read the online profiles of the people borrowing their money. “If I borrow from real people,” Duvall says, “I’m more likely to pay back than if I borrow from a faceless bank.”

I don’t really know whether it is something worth putting your money into, but it is certainly sth new that will change the market.
Welcome to Zopa (UK) - The first lending and borrowing exchange


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