Rebuildingsociety.com

Last updated

Rebuildingsociety.com
Type Limited
Founded United Kingdom (2011)
FounderDaniel Rajkumar
Headquarters,
Key people
Matthew Doyle, Richard McGrail, Kylie-Jo Greeff
Products Peer-to-peer lending
Website www.rebuildingsociety.com

Rebuildingsociety.com is a Leeds-based peer-to-peer lending platform, founded in 2012 by Daniel Rajkumar, to facilitate the online arranging of finance between lenders and small and medium-sized enterprises. [1] The first loans were completed in February 2013. [2]

Contents

Since early 2021, Rebuildingsociety.com has been subject to FCA investigations and some of its activities have been suspended.[ citation needed ]

Operation

The Rebuildingsociety.com website operates as a lending platform by allowing approved businesses to publish a loan application. [3] Investors can subscribe to parts of the loan after assessing the business's information, committing an amount of their choice, with an interest rate of their choice.

The website was one of the early peer-to-peer lending platforms to have launched in the UK prior to the regulation of the industry. [4] Research by the website in late 2013 found SME owners were still largely unaware of peer-to-business lending and rely on personal borrowing to support their businesses. [5]

Regulatory Enforcement

Since 26 February 2021, all appointed representatives have been closed to new regulated business. [6] This limits what activities the company can do and may lead to further enforcement actions or restrictions.

Potential returns

Returns can vary considerably due to multiple factors.

As of 12 January 2014, the average interest rate payable to lenders from 25 loans completed was 15.57% gross. Earnings are reduced by any defaults which are forecast to be up to 7% depending on the risk appetite of the lender. [7]

Regulation

The Financial Conduct Authority undertook to regulate the peer-to-peer lending industry from April 2014. [8]

As of 22 February 2017, Rebuilding Society transitioned from interim permission to full FCA authorisation, [9] [10] with the following permissions:

Pensions and ISAs

In 2014, the UK government announced it was considering setting up a separate type of tax-free individual savings account (ISA) for people who want to lend out money. The new ISA would be for people who lend money via peer-to-peer borrowing sites. [11]

Rebuildingsociety.com opened IFISA (innovative finance ISA) pre-registrations in March 2017. [12]

In January 2015, Rebuildingsociety.com announced a new partnership with SIPPclub, which was intended to allow qualifying investors to invest through a specially-designed self-invested personal pension (SIPP). The platform’s investors were to be able to invest via an EvolutionSIPP. [13]

Growth and maturity

The company said in 2013 that one in four savers was ready to invest. [14]

Non-bank lending grew at its fastest rate since 2008 in the year to October 2013, with over £10.5bn of credit arranged through peer-to-peer lending, invoice discounting, asset finance and leasing. [15] Rebuildingsociety.com passed the £1m of lending mark in October 2013 [16]

As of 14 August 2014, total advances stood at around £3.5m, [17] while in January 2015 it passed £5m of loans completed. [18] In August 2016, total lending surpassed £10.4m, [19]

Council Partnerships

In February 2018, the firm began a partnership with its Leeds City Council to provide funding to other Leeds based businesses. [20]

Awards and Commendations

Rebuildingsociety.com achieved the following awards:

Technology

Their website offered a licensed version of its technology to other businesses looking to break into the peer-to-peer lending industry through White Label Crowdfunding. In August 2013, it announced its first three clients. [23]

Related Research Articles

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.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Zopa</span> British financial services company

Zopa Ltd. is a British financial services company which offers deposit accounts, personal loans and credit cards. It began as the world's first peer-to-peer lending company in 2005 and gained a full banking licence in 2020. The peer-to-peer side of its business closed in December 2021.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Funding Circle</span> Commercial lender

Funding Circle is a commercial lender. Originally it was a peer-to-peer lending marketplace that allowed the public to lend money directly to small and medium-sized businesses. Through this exchange businesses access lower costs of financing than they would get at a bank and the public are able to become lenders and in doing so make a return on their capital. It closed its lending option to "retail investors" between 2020 and 2022, and then announced, in March 2022, that it had made the closure permanent.

RateSetter is a British personal loan provider, founded in 2009 as one of the pioneers of peer-to-peer lending. The London-based company traded in the United Kingdom and through a locally-owned and run business in Australia. The UK business was acquired by Metro Bank in September 2020, leading to closure of the peer-to-peer products in April 2021.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Assetz Capital</span>

Assetz Capital is a British company which makes property-secured loans to businesses. It was established in 2012 as a peer-to-peer or "marketplace" lender which allowed private and institutional investors to lend money directly to small businesses (SMEs) and property developers. In December 2022 it became solely funded by institutional capital for new lending.

ThinCats UK business lender

ThinCats is an alternative lender that provides business loans to mid-sized UK businesses using capital from institutional investors including pension schemes and asset managers. Founded in 2011, ThinCats operates throughout the UK with offices in Ashby, Sheffield, Birmingham, Glasgow and London.

LendInvest is a non-bank mortgage lender in the UK, and is a property lending and investing platform. As an alternative Fintech lender in the property market, LendInvest provides finance to property professionals and small and medium-sized businesses (SMEs) around the UK. It also makes it possible for individuals, corporates and institutions to invest in secured property loans originated and underwritten by its mortgage team.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">British Business Bank</span> UK state-owned economic development bank

British Business Bank plc (BBB) is a state-owned economic development bank established by the UK Government. Its aim is to increase the supply of credit to small and medium enterprises (SMEs) as well as providing business advice services. It is structured as a public limited company and is owned by the Department for Business and Trade. The bank has its headquarters in Sheffield.

Lendico was a multinational company, operating a peer-to-peer lending platform. It was taken over by Dutch bank ING Groep in early 2018 and now operates as a subsidiary. The international online marketplace for business and consumer lending was founded in December 2013 by the incubator and venture capitalist, Rocket Internet. After launching in Germany, the company expanded into Spain, Poland, Austria, South Africa, the Netherlands and Brazil. Using the crowdfunding model, the company based in Berlin, Germany, directly connects investors and private and business borrowers. Lendico is led by Friedrich Hubel and co-founder Clemens Paschke. Currently, Lendico Brazil still exists but is an independent company from Lendico Global Services.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">The House Crowd</span>

The House Crowd was a UK peer to peer lending and crowdfunding platform that allowed people to invest in bridging loans and property development loans from £1,000. In 2018, the business achieved authorisation from the Financial Conduct Authority and launched their Innovative Finance ISA. As of January 2019, The House Crowd had funded 368 properties, raised over £93 million and paid investors returns in excess of £38 million. The House Crowd was placed into administration on 24 February 2021.

LendingCrowd is an online peer-to-peer lending company, based in Edinburgh, Scotland. As the first Scottish based crowdlending firm, LendingCrowd has created a platform that enables investors to support small and medium-sized businesses by lending personal capital through small loans whilst earning a monthly interest payment.

Alternative finance refers to financial channels, processes, and instruments that have emerged outside of the traditional finance system, such as regulated banks and capital markets. Examples of alternative financing activities through 'online marketplaces' are reward-based crowdfunding, equity crowdfunding, revenue-based financing, online lenders, peer-to-peer consumer and business lending, and invoice trading third party payment platforms.

Funding Tree is an FCA regulated online crowdfunding platform headquartered in London, UK. The website officially launched in August 2014, becoming the world’s first fully regulated loan and equity-based crowdfunding and peer-to-peer business lending platform.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Folk2Folk</span>

FOLK2FOLK is a Marketplace lending platform (MPL) specializing in secured lending for business owners across the rural and regional parts of the UK. It matches businesses looking for capital with individual (retail) and institutional investors who receive a fixed interest rate from 7.5% p.a. secured against UK land or property. Investors receive the same interest rate that the Borrower pays, with FOLK2FOLK making its profit from an arrangement fee and annual renewal fee charged to Borrowers.

Ezubao was a peer-to-peer lending scheme based in the eastern Chinese province of Anhui. It was set up as an online scheme in July 2014, attracted funds of about 50 billion yuan from 900,000 investors, and ceased to trade in December 2015. On 1 February 2016, the scheme was closed down and 21 involved people were arrested. Zhang Min, the president of the parent company, Yucheng Global, told investigators that the company operated as a Ponzi scheme. Following its establishment, Ezubao grew rapidly, masquerading as a legitimate investment opportunity while operating under the guise of peer-to-peer lending. Revelations about the fraudulent nature of Ezubao’s operations emerged after an exposé in late 2015, leading to public outcry and intensified scrutiny by regulatory authorities. The scale of Ezubao’s Ponzi scheme, which orchestrated a sophisticated ruse involving fake projects and returns, was unprecedented in China, contributing to an estimated loss of billions of yuan for investors. The scandal not only devastated the finances of nearly a million individuals but also prompted a nationwide tightening of regulations on the peer-to-peer lending industry, aiming to close loopholes and restore investor confidence.

EdAid is a funding platform for higher education, based in the United Kingdom, with offices in Dubai, London, New YorK, Sydney and Toronto. EdAid partnered with university and professional schools to defer tuition payment, interest-free.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Funding Societies</span>

Funding Societies is a Southeast Asia’s digital financing platform for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), headquartered in Singapore. It was the first such platform in Singapore to engage an escrow agency to independently and safely manage investors’ funds. In Indonesia it is known as Modalku. Since its launch, it has disbursed more than US$2.6 billion in business financing to MSMEs through more than 5.1 million loan transactions.

LandlordInvest is a peer-to-peer lending platform that enables people to invest in residential, commercial, and semi-commercial bridging and development loans. The platform's target audiences are professional property investors and landlords. It was the first residential property-backed Innovative Finance ISA made available to UK savers.

Capital Match is a invoice financing platform for small and medium enterprises (SMEs) in Southeast Asia. Headquartered in Singapore, it operates an online platform for SMEs to seek funds from investors.

E-money Capital Ltd is a financial intermediary services brand in the United Kingdom established in 2001 as a division of Sir Stelios Haji-Ioannou's easyGroup and since 2018 has been owned by Andrew De Candole.

References

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  2. Ian Briggs (19 February 2013). "rebuildingsociety.com gives boost to businesses". The Business Desk.
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  4. Art Patnaude (27 March 2013). "'Crowdfunding' Takes Hold in the U.K". The Wall Street Journal.
  5. Kathryn Hopkins (8 February 2014). "SMEs can use more small business lenders". The Times.
  6. "NewRegister". register.fca.org.uk. Retrieved 8 December 2021.
  7. Elaine Moore (26 July 2013). "Risk and reward in the p2p revolution". Financial Times.
  8. Jonathan Moules (7 December 2012). "Government boost for peer-to-peer lending". Financial Times.
  9. Erin Hobey (27 February 2017). "UK Lending Platform RebuildingSociety Awarded Full FCA Authorization, May Now Offer Innovative Finance ISA". Crowdfund Insider.
  10. Claus Lehman (27 February 2017). "Rebuilding Society Receives Full FCA Authorisation". P2P Banking.
  11. BBC News (17 October 2014). "Government to consult on new Peer-to-Peer lending ISA". BBC News.
  12. Suzie Neuwirth (27 February 2017). "Rebuilding Society opens IFISA pre-registrations after gaining FCA approval". Peer to Peer Finance News.
  13. Ryan Weeks (8 January 2015). "P2P Pension Products Proliferate". AltFi News.
  14. Suzan Uzel (4 June 2013). "Savers ready to invest in new peer-to-peer industry". Yorkshire Post.
  15. Andrew Bounds (22 October 2013). "Non-bank lending to small businesses at highest level since 2008". The Financial Times.
  16. Angel News (25 November 2013). "rebuildingsociety.com facilitates over £1 million of loans to SMEs". Angel News. Archived from the original on 1 December 2013.
  17. Wanda Rich (14 August 2014). "RebuildingSociety marks unprecedented month as loans soar to £3.5m". Global Banking and Finance.
  18. Nick Moules (29 January 2015). "RebuildingSociety passes £5m of loans". rebuildingsociety.com.
  19. Juana Wells (26 August 2016). "Largest UK P2P lending websites by funds raised". SMN Weekly.
  20. Marc Shoffman (8 February 2018). "Rebuildingsociety partners with Leeds Council to support local businesses". Peer2Peer Finance News.
  21. "Defaqto". defaqto.com. Retrieved 23 November 2019.
  22. Michael Lloyd and Marc Shoffman (1 October 2021). "Peer-to-Peer Finance News Power 50". Peer2Peer Finance News.
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