bigfoot12
Member of DD Central
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Post by bigfoot12 on Dec 6, 2016 20:07:54 GMT
There is a new look statistics page, but I can't see secondary market turnover on it. Has anyone seen that number anywhere else?
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voss
Member of DD Central
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Post by voss on Dec 7, 2016 9:58:18 GMT
The new layout looks like Marketing got their hands on something that used to be useful but is so no longer. I used to look at the balance of partial/whole loans to see if Fishy Calculators was keeping to its promise to make the split 50:50. But that graph is no longer there.
The new page implies incorrectly at top RHC, where there is a link to log in, that I am now logged out.
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voss
Member of DD Central
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Post by voss on Dec 7, 2016 11:30:31 GMT
Agreed - I can't point to the 50:50 on their web site. However, they once said to me: "Please always assured [sic] that an even balance of whole loans and partial loans are distributed throughout the history of FC". I think that by even balance they were referring to a running total by value. I thought that the running total might be over 13 weeks as that was the length of the time axis on their (no longer available?) partial/whole loans graph.
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Neil_P2PBlog
P2P Blogger
Use @p2pblog to tag me :-)
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Post by Neil_P2PBlog on Dec 7, 2016 11:57:03 GMT
It looks great, marketing should be very happy!
On the diversifying your loans chart the educational part is showing return variance between a diversification of 0 and 200 loans, anything between 200 and 800 is a waste of space IMO. Looking at their current chart there seems to be a sweet spot around 80 loans, where the downside has plateaued but there is still an above average proportion of returns in the 95th percentile.
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blender
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Post by blender on Dec 7, 2016 17:18:00 GMT
It looks great, marketing should be very happy! On the diversifying your loans chart the educational part is showing return variance between a diversification of 0 and 200 loans, anything between 200 and 800 is a waste of space IMO. Looking at their current chart there seems to be a sweet spot around 80 loans, where the downside has plateaued but there is still an above average proportion of returns in the 95th percentile. That's good. So if I adjust my number of borrowers to 80 I will have the best chance of beating the averages. (I think it is 14 at present).
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