HarMoney, New Zealand's only licensed peer-to-peer lender, said it has commitments for $100 million mainly from four investors it plans to lend to consumers with a sliding scale of interest based on their credit risk.
HarMoney, whose online platform went live four weeks ago and officially launched today, matches investors with borrowers of up to $35,000 with interest rates ranging from 9.99 per cent to as high as 39.99 per cent depending on their assessed risk profile. Investors may get a 12 per cent risk adjusted return on loans that are broken up into $25 "fractionalised notes" which attract interest.
"We've had millions of dollars of borrower demand and we've had hundreds of retail investors sign up and put money in the platform, which is very encouraging," chief executive Neil Roberts told BusinessDesk.
Read also:
• Heartland buys into HarMoney
• Peer-to-peer lending gets NZ green light
Earlier this week, Heartland New Zealand chief executive Jeff Greenslade said the Christchurch-based bank had invested a "meaningful amount" into the peer-to-peer lender's pool of funds, without disclosing the dollar figure. Heartland also has a 10 per cent stake in HarMoney. Roberts declined to identify the other three investors.