Chris Larsen | |
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Born | 1960 (age 63–64) [1] |
Nationality | American |
Education | San Francisco State University (B.S.) |
Alma mater | Stanford Graduate School of Business (M.B.A.) |
Occupation(s) | Angel investor, business executive |
Years active | 1990s-present |
Employer | Ripple Labs (Executive Chairman) |
Chris Larsen (born 1960) is an American business executive and angel investor best known for co-founding several Silicon Valley technology startups, including one based on peer to peer lending. In 1996, he co-founded the online mortgage lender E-Loan, [2] and during his tenure as CEO E-Loan became the first company to freely provide consumers' FICO credit scores. [3] By 2000, E-Loan's market value was estimated at $1 billion [4] In 2005, Larsen left the company when it was sold to Banco Popular. [5] [6] In 2006, he co-founded Prosper Marketplace and he served as CEO until 2012. [7] Later in 2012, he co-founded the company Ripple Labs, Inc., which developed Ripple, [8] software that enables the instant and direct transfer of money between two parties. [9]
Self-described as "radically pro-consumer," Larsen has been a vocal advocate of financial privacy in California, [10] and in 2001 he co-founded the coalition Californians for Privacy Now. [10] He has appeared as a speaker at industry events [11] [12] such as Sibos, SWIFT's flagship conference, and written articles for publications such as American Banker. [13] He is also a board-member or advisor for organizations such as Credit Karma, the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC), Qifang, and Betable. [14]
On January 4, 2018, Forbes estimated Larsen's worth at $59 billion, briefly putting him ahead of Mark Zuckerberg and into fifth place in their list of world's richest people. [15] In 2020, he ranked No. 319 in the Forbes 400 list of the richest people in America. [16]
In 2020, Larsen and Ripple each donated US$1 million to five San Francisco food banks for COVID-19 relief efforts. [17]
Chris Larsen was born in San Francisco, California, in 1960. [18] His mother worked as a freelance illustrator, while his father worked as an aircraft mechanic for United Airlines at San Francisco International Airport. [10] After high school, Larsen attended San Francisco State University, where he earned a B.S. [14] in international business and accounting in 1984. [10] He began working for Chevron after college, doing financial audits in Brazil, Ecuador, and Indonesia. [10] He graduated with an M.B.A. from the Stanford Graduate School of Business in 1991. [18]
In the early 1990s, Larsen began working at a mortgage lender in Palo Alto, California. Becoming friends with his colleague Janina Pawlowski, they quit their jobs together in 1992 [2] to found a mortgage business, [4] By 1996, they had switched their focus from loans to the development of a mortgage lending website. [2] Both Larsen [3] and Pawlowski had been frustrated with aspects of the mortgage lending industry, and saw the internet as a way to circumvent agent commissions and other fees. [2] Initially raising $450,000 in funding from friends and family, Larsen and Pawlowski moved from their small Palo Alto office to a larger "low-rent site" in nearby Dublin to work on the project. [2]
The E-Loan website became accessible to the public in 1997, and having success [2] [4] as one of the first online mortgage lenders in the United States. The website allows borrowers to search and shop for loans directly, without the fees charged by brokers and sales agents. [9] The website would later begin offering direct home equity and car loans as well. [4] By 1998, E-Loan was running into difficulty funding their operations. [4] Pawlowski had served as chief executive officer for the first two years, and in 1998 she offered to switch jobs with Larsen, taking Larsen's previous role of President. [19]
Pawlowski and Larsen were in talks with Intuit over a $130 million buyout in the fall of 1998. Forbes wrote that "Pawlowski and Larsen, who together held a 40% stake and had placed 20% more in an employee stock plan, would each walk away with $10 million in cash and $16 million in Intuit stock." Days before the deal closed in August, however, Yahoo CEO Timothy Koogle pitched a deal to buy a 23% stake of E-Loan's outstanding shares for $25 million. Both Larsen's and Pawlowski's payouts would be less, but they would retain control of the company and the E-Loan brand would survive. [2] Choosing to work with Yahoo, [4] E-Loan also raised venture capital from Softbank [19] and Sequoia Capital. [20] In 1998 E-Loan had total annual revenues of $6.8 million, [19] and the following year Larsen offered the role of CEO back to Pawlowski, though she elected to remain President. [4] [19]
In late March 1999, E-Loan filed for an initial public offering, [2] and it went public in June 1999. [4] The company processed $470 million of mortgage loans in the first quarter of 1999, [19] and by the second financial quarter, revenues for the year had reached $4.6 million. [19] E-Loan lost $13 million in the third quarter of 1999, [4] though revenues overall had grown from the year before by 200%. [4] As of October 1999 the company employed around 350 people. [4] That year overall E-Loan processed 5000 loans, which at 25% of the online mortgage loan market was the highest percent of any online company. [2] [19] By February 2000, E-Loan's market value was estimated at around $1 billion, [4] with Larsen serving as both CEO and chairman. [14] During his tenure E-Loan became the first company to freely provide consumers' FICO credit scores. [3]
Larsen has described himself as "radically pro-consumer," and in the early 2000s he became a vocal advocate of financial privacy in California. [10] In 2001, a bill sponsored by Assemblywoman Jackie Speier proposed [10] a requirement for consumers to opt in before financial services companies could share or sell personal information such as bank balances, phone numbers, and social security numbers. While the bill had public support, [21] it was initially defeated by pro-business legislators. In response, Larsen co-founded the coalition Californians for Privacy Now, helping fund the project with $1 million of his own money. [10] Larsen spearheaded the collection of 600,000 signatures in support of Speier's bill, which was almost double the required amount to issue a ballot to state voters. [10] The signatures, combined with a lobbying campaign by Consumer Watchdog throughout 2002, [10] led to major financial firms and legislators withdrawing their opposition, and the bill passed in August 2003. [10] [21] Speier acknowledged Larsen's influence on the ruling, stating "without Chris Larsen, California's financial privacy law, which sets the standard for the rest of the nation, would never have become a reality." [10]
As of May 2004, E-Loan had sold over $18.9 billion in consumer loans since its inception, and the company had remained profitable for eight quarters in a row. [10] Larsen stepped down as CEO in early 2005 to start Prosper Marketplace and remained chairman until E-Loan was sold to Banco Popular [5] in 2005. [6]
In 2005, Larsen and John Witchel co-founded Prosper Marketplace Larsen served as CEO. [7] From 2006 to 2009, Prosper operated a variable rate model, acting as an eBay-style online auction marketplace with lenders and borrowers ultimately determining loan rates using a Dutch auction-like system. [22] Through the website, [6] borrowers can request personal loans, while Prosper handles the servicing of the loan and distributes borrower payments and interest back to the loan investors. Prosper also makes borrowers' "credit grades" public, [6] and verifies identities and select personal data. Larsen himself had funded 450 loans through the website as of 2008, with borrowers as diverse as homeowners, college students, credit-card users, and entrepreneurs. [6] By 2008, Prosper had facilitated the funding of over $120 million in loans, with an average loan amount of $7,000. [6] In 2008 Fast Company named Prosper to its Fast 50 List of the "most innovative companies of the year." [6]
External videos | |
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Jim Breyer, a partner at Accel Investments, interviews Chris Larsen about Prosper at an industry panel (October 25, 2006) |
The company soon ran into regulatory opposition from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), [5] as current loan regulations were focused on traditional banks, not technology startups. [12] In 2008, Prosper filed its first prospectus with the SEC, changing its business model to use pre-set rates based on a formula evaluating each prospective borrower's credit risk. [23] [24] In 2011, Larsen was outwardly supportive of the Occupy Wall Street movement, raising money to help feed protesters at the nearby OWS encampment in San Francisco. [12] By the end of the year, Prosper had facilitated $271 million in peer-to-peer loans, and the company had received a total of $74.5 million in funding from investors such as Jim Breyer, Tim Draper, Omidyar Network, Nigel Morris, and Court Coursey. [12] On March 15, 2012, Larsen announced that he would be resigning from his role as CEO, though he remained chairman of the company. [7]
External videos | |
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Chris Larsen interviewed about Ripple by Deirdre Bolton on Bloomberg Television's Money Moves (2014) |
In September 2012, Larsen co-founded the company OpenCoin, which began developing a new payment protocol called Ripple, based on a concept developed by Ryan Fugger. [8] The Ripple protocol enables the instant and direct transfer of money between two parties. [9] As such the protocol can circumnavigate the fees and wait times of the traditional correspondent banking system, [3] [9] and any type of currency can be exchanged including gold, airline miles, and rupees. [25]
To maintain security OpenCoin programmed Ripple to rely on a common ledger that is "managed by a network of independent validating servers that constantly compare their transaction records." Servers can belong to anyone including banks or market makers. [9] The company also created its own form of digital currency in a manner similar to Bitcoin, using the currency to allow financial institutions to transfer money with negligible fees and wait-time. [5] On May 14, 2013, OpenCoin announced that it had closed a second round of angel funding, and among their earliest investors were Andreessen Horowitz, Google Ventures, and IDG Capital Partners. [9]
In September 2013, OpenCoin changed its name to Ripple Labs, Inc., [26] with Larsen remaining CEO. [27] Ripple Labs then announced that the source code for the peer-to-peer node behind the Ripple payment network was open source. Ripple Labs continued as the primary contributors of code to the consensus verification system behind Ripple, which it said could integrate with banks' IT systems. [27] In 2014 Ripple was the second-largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization, after Bitcoin. [28] Also that month, Ripple Labs was named one of the 50 Smartest Companies by MIT Technology Review . [29] Ripple Labs was then ranked No. 4 on a list by Fast Company of the World's Top 10 Most Innovative Companies Of 2015 In Money. [30]
Larsen has appeared as a speaker or panelist at number of industry events, [11] [12] [31] including the IIF Annual Memberships Meeting in 2014. Larsen has also written articles on banking systems and other technical topics for publications such as American Banker. [13]
In the early 2000s, Larsen established the Chris Larsen Scholarship Fund at San Francisco State University, and the school named him Alum of the Year in 2004. [10] As of 2014, he is a member of the Young Presidents Organization (YPO) and he serves as a board-member or adviser for organizations such as Credit Karma and the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC). He served as an advisor to the Silicon Valley Community Foundation's policy committee against payday lending. [14] He is also on the board of Oportun. [3] [11]
In October 2024, Larsen donated $1 million worth of XRP (at the time of donation) to Future Forward, a super PAC that's supporting Vice President Kamala Harris' presidential campaign. In total, Larsen has given around $1.9 million to support her campaign directly and through PACs. [32]
Larsen has made several standout donations, including a $1 million donation to Pennsylvania Democratic Governor Josh Shapiro and nearly $7,000 to John Deaton, a Massachusetts Republican rival of Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren, a prominent critic of cryptocurrencies. He also donated $250,000 to Nancy Pelosi's Victory Fund in 2022 and backed a pro-Biden PAC in 2020. [32]
In finance, a loan is the tender of money by one party to another with an agreement to pay it back. The recipient, or borrower, incurs a debt and is usually required to pay interest for the use of the money.
A reverse mortgage is a mortgage loan, usually secured by a residential property, that enables the borrower to access the unencumbered value of the property. The loans are typically promoted to older homeowners and typically do not require monthly mortgage payments. Borrowers are still responsible for property taxes or homeowner's insurance. Reverse mortgages allow older people to immediately access the equity they have built up in their homes, and defer payment of the loan until they die, sell, or move out of the home. Because there are no required mortgage payments on a reverse mortgage, the interest is added to the loan balance each month. The rising loan balance can eventually exceed the value of the home, particularly in times of declining home values or if the borrower continues to live in the home for many years. However, the borrower is generally not required to repay any additional loan balance in excess of the value of the home.
A financial transaction is an agreement, or communication, between a buyer and seller to exchange goods, services, or assets for payment. Any transaction involves a change in the status of the finances of two or more businesses or individuals. A financial transaction always involves one or more financial asset, most commonly money or another valuable item such as gold or silver.
Predatory lending refers to unethical practices conducted by lending organizations during a loan origination process that are unfair, deceptive, or fraudulent. While there are no internationally agreed legal definitions for predatory lending, a 2006 audit report from the office of inspector general of the US Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) broadly defines predatory lending as "imposing unfair and abusive loan terms on borrowers", though "unfair" and "abusive" were not specifically defined. Though there are laws against some of the specific practices commonly identified as predatory, various federal agencies use the phrase as a catch-all term for many specific illegal activities in the loan industry. Predatory lending should not be confused with predatory mortgage servicing which is mortgage practices described by critics as unfair, deceptive, or fraudulent practices during the loan or mortgage servicing process, post loan origination.
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Prosper Marketplace, Inc. is a San Francisco, California-based financial services company. Prosper Funding LLC, one of its subsidiaries, operates Prosper.com, a website where individuals can request to borrow money, open a credit card, or invest in personal loans.
Peer-to-peer lending, also abbreviated as P2P lending, is the practice of lending money to individuals or businesses through online services that match lenders with borrowers. Peer-to-peer lending companies often offer their services online, and attempt to operate with lower overhead and provide their services more cheaply than traditional financial institutions. As a result, lenders can earn higher returns compared to savings and investment products offered by banks, while borrowers can borrow money at lower interest rates, even after the P2P lending company has taken a fee for providing the match-making platform and credit checking the borrower. There is the risk of the borrower defaulting on the loans taken out from peer-lending websites.
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