Tracking a Bad Prosper Loan

by pfincome · 7 comments

in High Yield Investments

Peer to Peer Lending

I have recently written posts detailing my lending and borrowing activity through my Prosper.com account. If you are interested, please check out the following posts -

Today I would like to discuss a loan that has gone bad. In my post Creating a new Income Stream using Prosper, I note that one of my current loans at Prosper.com was 1 Month Late. As of today, the loan is now 2 Months Late. The details of this bad loan are shown below.

Origination Date Title Credit Grade Lender Rate Debt To Income Loan Status Winning Amount
1/30/2008 Paying off my credit card debt from Pepperdine University A 14.75% 24% 2 months late $50.00

At the time of bidding on this loan, I did not have my criteria set for placing my bids (see my post on Creating a new Income Stream using Prosper to view my criteria). The listing seemed to be legitimate to me as the individual was looking to pay off credit card debt that was incurred from college. I received my first net payment of $1.69 on February 29, 2008 which brought the principal balance down to $48.88. When the next loan payment came up in March, there was no activity. Then in April, Prosper was showing the funds were in transit and the payment would be applied. However, a few days later, the funds in transit were no longer visible on the loan and the principal balance remained at $48.88. Over the next couple of weeks, this happened several more times (at least 3 more that I can remember). Each time it appeared funds were in transit, they would disappear a few days later. Once the loan became 1 Month Late, it was then sent to collections. After a few days, it appeared that the collection agency collected the funds and the payment was in transit. Once again, a few days later the funds in transit disappeared and the balance remained the same. This happened one additional time through the collection agency. It has been about 2 weeks now since the latest attempt by the collection agency to collect the funds. There has been absolutely no activity on the loan since then and I am starting to assume the worst.

While I understand that the worst case scenario is that I lose my remaining balance of $48.88, the activity of this loan is extremely frustrating. When opening up my account, I assumed that I would have loans that would go bad and accepted the risk. However, I did not expect a loan like this (at the time of bidding) would go bad. The rate (14.75%) was not unreasonable and I thought I was helping someone get out of debt. The past few months have helped me put in perspective why you should pay your bills on time. While I am very rarely late on the payment of a bill, I now have a better appreciation for making my payments on time or even in advance. I have really never been so concerned with ~$50 in my life as I am now.

I still plan on moving forward with my Prosper lending activity. I feel comfortable at this time with my strategy and criteria for bidding on loans. To date, I have brought in $50.69 in interest, so assuming the worst and I lose the remaining $48.88 on this loan, I will still be ahead.

Do you have a story about loans on Prosper going bad? I would like to hear about experiences that other Prosper lenders have had about delinquite or defaulting loans.

Article written by John

Hi, I am John and I run PassiveFamilyincome.com. I am a father of two wonderful boys and am married to a great wife. Each and every day I am working to build passive income streams so that I can eventually leave my job and spend more time with my family! You can find me on Twitter - @PFIncome!

Disclaimer Notice - Please understand that I benefit financially from any products or services you may decide to purchase as a result of clicking on one of the links contained in this article or on this site. For more information, please refer to our Disclosure Policy.

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{ 4 comments… read them below or add one }

1 Ralph June 3, 2008 at 11:10 pm

Well, I don’t have any experience as a Prosper lender yet, but I can say that it’s great that you are looking at your net overall and not just the one defaulted loan.

Best of luck in your continued prosperity.

Reply

2 passivefamilyincome June 4, 2008 at 7:35 am

Ralph – Thanks for the comment! Yeah, I am trying to look at the BIG picture but I still get fumed when people don’t pay their bills. At the same time, I feel fortunate to only have one bad loan at this point.

Reply

3 7m7y_Jason June 9, 2008 at 3:13 pm

I’ve been in Prosper since their start and have had a few loans go bad as well. Those bad loans have brought my returns down to the same level I could have gotten in a S&P 500 Index fund.

So, for the same returns, I can spend time reviewing loans, placing bids and refining criteria … or I can do nothing.

Plus, my broker will lend me 50% of the value of my S&P 500 fund; but, I cannot find any way to leverage my Prosper notes.

Propser has actually turned out to be fairly unattractive … unless they find a way to eliminate the bad debts so that returns remain higher than the “do nothing” alternatives.

Reply

4 passivefamilyincome June 10, 2008 at 12:17 pm

7m7y_Jason – Yeah, I plan on sticking with Prosper through the end of the year to see what return I can get. I have since changed my bidding criteria to not include loans like this one. Not sure how much it will help but I will see. Thanks for the visit!

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