Lending Club Update – February 2013

It’s been six months since I last updated the performance of my (dwindling) Lending Club portfolio. As a reminder, we’re in the process of winding down our holdings there. We’re down to less than $700, from roughly $10k at the peak.
It’s been awhile since I’ve updated our Lending Club performance so I thought I’d share some details. As you may be aware, we’ve been winding down our holdings there, though we still have a decent chunk of money there (around $2k) and it’s still performing reasonably well.
Last August our portfolio looked like this:
- 202 loans are current
- 205 loans have been paid off
- 0 loans are currently 16-30 days late
- 11 loans are currently 30-120 days late
- 34 loans have defaulted and/or been charged off
and our net annualized return (NAR) stood at 7.1%.
As of now, our portfolio looks like this:
- 110 loans were current
- 295 loans had been paid off
- 1 loans were currently 16-30 days late
- 6 loans were currently 30-120 days late
- 40 loans had defaulted and/or been charged off
with a current NAR of 6.7%.
So our returns are continuing to slip and our defaults are continuing to mount, but 6.7% isn’t too shabby, especially when you consider that I’ve pretty much ignored our portfolio for the past two years.
What about you? If you’ve been investing with Lending Club, how are things going? When reporting your results please be sure to give us an idea of how many notes you’re holding and how long you’ve been at it.
Disclaimer: Discover is a paid advertiser of this site.
Reasonable efforts are made to maintain accurate information. See the Discover online credit card application for full terms and conditions on offers and rewards.
Modified on March 2nd, 2013 - 7 Comments
Filed under: Saving & Investing
About the author: Nickel is the founder and editor-in-chief of this site. He's a thirty-something family man who has been writing about personal finance since 2005, and guess what? He's on Twitter!
Related articles...
» Lending Club to Issue Revised Tax Documents» Putting Lending Club on Auto-Pilot
» Lending Club Update – December/January Performance
» Lending Club Update – April 2010 Performance
» Testimonial From a Peer Lending Borrower
» Lending Club Update – March 2012
» Lending Club Update – March 2013
» Lending Club Update – May 2011 Performance
Was this article useful? Please sign up to receive our content via e-mail:
7 Responses to “Lending Club Update – February 2013”
Leave a Reply
Top Cards by Category
Earn 100 Reward Dollars after you make $1,000 in purchases in the first three months of Cardmembership.
Earn 25K Membership Rewards(R) points after you spend $2,000 during your first three months of Card membership.
Consumer friendly credit card with a great low rate of 7.25% and save on interest charges. No balance transfer fees and no annual fee.
The new Discover it card is out to change the way people think about credit cards. No annual fee. No overlimit fee. No foreign transaction fee & no pay-by-phone fee. No late fee on your first late payment. And Discover won't increase your APR for paying late.*
The new Discover it card is out to change the way people think about credit cards. No annual fee. No overlimit fee. No foreign transaction fee & no pay-by-phone fee. No late fee on your first late payment. And Discover won't increase your APR for paying late.*
Consumer friendly credit card with a great low rate of 7.25% and save on interest charges. No balance transfer fees and no annual fee.
Limited Time Offer: Get 25,000 Membership Rewards(R) points after you spend $5,000 in the first three months of Card membership. Enroll and select a qualifying airline to receive up to $200 annually in statement credits for incidental fees, such as checked bags and in-flight refreshments, charged by the airline.
The new Discover it card is out to change the way people think about credit cards. No annual fee. No overlimit fee. No foreign transaction fee & no pay-by-phone fee. No late fee on your first late payment. And Discover won't increase your APR for paying late.*
- How to Become a Millionaire
- How to Get Out of Debt
- The Best Dollars I've Ever Spent
- How Our Estate Plan is Structured
- How We Paid Our Mortgage In Less than 10 Years
- Money Making Ideas
- How to Manage Your Asset Allocation with Multiple Accounts
- Consumption Smoothing - Save While the Saving's Good
- How to Save on Groceries
- How Much Life Insurance Do You Need?
- Eleven Great Books About Money
- Dave Ramsey is Bad at Math
- Dish Network Customer Service SUCKS
- $8,000 Homebuyer Tax Credit
- Pay Off Mortgage Early or Invest?
- How to Claim the First-Time Homebuyer Tax Credit
- Termite Control: Sentricon vs. Termidor
- How Much Should You Pay a Babysitter?
- Ethanol Blended Gas = Lower Mileage?
- Reduced Credit Limits? Share Your Experience
- $15,000 Homebuyer Tax Credit
- Will Mac OS X Lion Kill Quicken 2007?
- Buying Furniture off the Back of a Truck
How to save money on insurance
- How I cut my spending in half to take a job I loved
- Working longer: Fallback or fallacy?
- More money, more happiness: Do you think money can buy happiness?
- Overdraft fees soared to $32 billion in 2012
- How do you combat prom inflation?
- How should you choose a bank? Look in the mirror.
- The cost of clean water
- College debt 101
- Is it possible to live debt free?
- How to prepare for a home appraisal
February 9th, 2013 at 11:44 am
Thanks for the update. It seems even with a lot of charge offs you still get a decent NAR. I was concerned it would happen but it seems like if you diversify you’ll still likely beat the nonexistent savings interest rates of today.
February 9th, 2013 at 4:54 pm
Hi there. Looks like you have had quite the run with Lending Club, and you’re right – 6.7% is nothing to sneeze at. I’m on the other side, just getting started. Did you use any of the statistics tools like those offered at NickelSteamroller? I think those are helpful to find borrowers who are less likely to default.
It’s great to read an article cataloging an exit from Lending Club. Most of the ones I read these days are people getting in.
February 10th, 2013 at 9:51 am
Why are you dwindling down your holdings? Is it the losses or potential for more losses that would lower your current rate of return? Or is it just the time to track these investments?
February 10th, 2013 at 10:40 am
Tony: It’s just too much of a time sink for what I get out of it.
February 11th, 2013 at 5:21 pm
Re: “Too much of a time sink”
I imagine Lending Club will have a feature someday to auto-invest for you. At that point, lending with them will become dramatically more passive.
February 11th, 2013 at 5:37 pm
Simon: They do offer this now in the form of their PRIME accounts, which is perhaps something I should be looking into… Ding! Idea for another article.
February 12th, 2013 at 10:59 am
I should also note that the stated NAR is a bit of an overestimate since it doesn’t account for things like idle cash. I’ve run these numbers in the past, and it typically shaves a few tenths off the NAR. Still a decent number, but not quite as high as advertised.