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Funding Circle Suspends Its Secondary Market In Response to Coronavirus

Posted 4 years ago

Funding Circle Suspends Its Secondary Market In Response to Coronavirus
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Author: Sacha Bright & Oliver Murphy

P2P lender Funding Circle has suspended its secondary market indefinitely as it reacts to the outbreak of Covid-19, Nextfin has learnt.

In an update, the lender said that the decision forms part of a number of measures introduced recently to protect investor returns through the platform.

Such measures include tightening credit-risk parameters and strengthening the recovery capability to support businesses borrowing through the platform.

Any loans which had previously been listed on the secondary market are to be delisted over the next week.

Sacha Bright, CEO of NextFin said: “In light of the pandemic, all P2P sites should respond in the same way and suspend their secondary markets, to protect investors. It is good to see Funding Circle as well as the whole industry self-regulating to protect investors during the Covid-19 outbreak.”

In a statement issued on its website, the Funding Circle Team said: “As a regulated platform, we also want to ensure that loans bought and sold by investors on the secondary market are priced fairly. This means taking into account the wider economy and how it might impact small businesses.”

“The businesses you have lent to are good, creditworthy businesses and we expect returns to remain resilient over the coming period. However, given the current environment, we have decided to be prudent and pause all loan part sales on the secondary market.”

“This does not affect your ability to access funds from the monthly repayments you receive from borrowers. If your lending is turned off you will typically receive 3-5% back of your outstanding portfolio every month.”

“Pausing the secondary market means you will no longer be able to sell your loan parts to other investors, or purchase existing loans from other investors. If you currently have an active sale request, no further loan parts will be sold, and your loan parts will be delisted over the next week.”

Disclaimer:

To the best of our knowledge, the information we have provided is correct at the time of publishing. SEIS and EIS tax benefits are dependent on your financial circumstances. Sacha Bright is not a solicitor or accountant and we recommend that you seek professional advice on any topic discussed. 

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Tagged: P2P



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