stub8535
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personal opinions only. Not qualified to advise on investment products.
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Post by stub8535 on May 17, 2017 8:12:16 GMT
I decline your invitation to talk via e-mail or phone. Having nothing to hide I will retain my freedom to speak truthfully in public. Engage on p2p independent forum. The truth is easier to maintain than twisted versions of it, just look at high placed politicians/ dictators for examples... ----------- Having posted facts about Rebuilding Society on twitter, linkdin and facebook I have had a message inviting me to talk via e mail. That above is my response. Let us see if engagment happens. danraj rebsrep
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stub8535
Member of DD Central
personal opinions only. Not qualified to advise on investment products.
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Post by stub8535 on May 17, 2017 19:02:36 GMT
I come here at the request of Daniel Rajkumar following his multiple calls to me today in which he requested I edit my prior posts.
I will not change my prior posts and stand by the statements as being factual. However, I will ask questions you may be able to engage with Daniel.
Lets start with the easy ones.
1 By what date will you have made your Leeds festival address disability friendly?
2 why is your platform deal flow so woeful?
3 what are the barriers to you changing your bad debt reporting?
Now the harder ones
4 why did it feel to me like you made an offer for me to compromise my integrity and freedom of speech by accepting a "promotional (monetary) sum" equivalent to my total platform defaults figure to "enable me to try another lending strategy"?
5 will you please repeat what you said about the golfer loan to me on here for all to see?
You now have my e mail address. It was not hard as you rang me having got the mobile number from my Rebuilding society user account. Please send any further questions or statements you wish me to consider by email (only). As nearly 2 hours of my time was taken up listening to you on the phone today, considering your offer without you considering that I, as my mothers carer, cannot afford to break off what I am doing by way of assisting her with her routines
Stuart
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Post by danraj on May 17, 2017 22:45:43 GMT
Good evening Stuart, I called you to have a constructive dialogue regarding various issues in a courteous manner. Since there isn't a way I could reply to your opening post without reading as being confrontational and contentious; which reflects badly on us both and frankly isn’t necessary. I tried to interpret your grievances and offered my sincere effort to redress your issues. I politely asked you to neutralise the tone and to ask considered questions, in a professional manner, which I’m pleased to respond to below: - I'll let you know once my video has been edited. There was around 8 hours of footage taken from 6 cameras at the event. I'm expecting to have it later this week, possibly tomorrow.
- Because we have all borrower advertising and marketing on hold while we embed some new services to the loan application process. This will make it easier to receive borrower bank statement data and accounts info. However, while we are doing this work we are wanting to limit the applications received. This will change in July-August when I forecast we will be able to list 10-15 loans per month. Please bear with us.
- Bad Debts are currently defined as loans we have written off, whereby we expect no further recovery, normally after bankruptcy. Given the courts and legal proceedings this can take years. From our conversation, I understand that you believe loans at 180 days past due should be marked as a 'Bad Debt'. From our initial research, we learned that lenders wanted a ‘final' state whereby they should not expect any further recovery. A borrower may have failed to keep to the repayment schedule (and therefore be in default) but may continue to make (some form of) repayments for several months. We believe that lender understand that 'Defaulted' loans are in recovery, and that the finality comes from the 'Recovered' or 'Bad Debt' states.
- It’s a pity my intentions were ill received… After reviewing your account, I can see why you are so jaundice from P2P lending... You have managed to select loans, promptly before they fall into default. Your transaction gain suggests you profited from other sellers discounting their position on the loan, which can occur when a borrower falls behind with its repayments. I noticed in November 16 you started selling various microloans, but did not withdraw the balance until the end of December. During this time, you had a substantial balance earning 0%, which will have reduced your net return. Your investment style of chasing discounted loans, is very untypical and a high-risk strategy which I would discourage. I think you have been unfortunate, and I invited you to try a different investment strategy, offering for you to take a new and different investment approach. I really feel that if you are more diligent in selecting loans, that you will enjoy healthy returns, as with the vast majority of investors. I don’t think that ‘having another go’ needs to limit your ‘freedom of speech’. But if you don’t accept my suggestion, then you’ll not have the opportunity to build a performing portfolio.
- wrt the golfing commentator loan, you mentioned that because he’s going through a divorce you believe his personal assets may be negligible in the event of a recovery and that most his business comes from a single customer. I agreed with you that there is a high client-concentration risk, but that both risks were visible in the loan profile for investors to read. If you think we should compile a list of key risks and highlight these to lenders then I’m happy to take your thoughts and comments on what specific risks you think should be called out and explained in some additional detail.
I take my hat off to your social work Stuart. Some of my friends are social workers, they never get enough support. I respect your decision to leave the asset class and the disenchantment you feel with the P2P lending sector. Owing to your experiences, I will consider some alerts we can use, to help highlight potential risks to new lenders.
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Post by dodgeydave on May 18, 2017 2:06:54 GMT
Later today i am going to start stock piling popcorn for July or August.
Quote " This will change in July-August when I forecast we will be able to list 10-15 loans per month. Please bear with us."
You are struggling to fill your current loan applications. Most receiving extensions .
Very interesting times ahead.;-)
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kevinkelly
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Post by kevinkelly on May 18, 2017 9:24:10 GMT
Are all investors going to be offered a "promotional (monetary) sum"? If so, I accept.
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jonno
Member of DD Central
nil satis nisi optimum
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Post by jonno on May 18, 2017 16:13:06 GMT
Are all investors going to be offered a "promotional (monetary) sum"? If so, I accept. Yep same here. And as for an "alternative investment strategy"?
How about putting the "promotional (monetary) sum" in an investment that is as far away from ReBs as it could possibly get
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kevinkelly
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Post by kevinkelly on May 18, 2017 18:08:52 GMT
Are all investors going to be offered a "promotional (monetary) sum"? If so, I accept. Yep same here. And as for an "alternative investment strategy"?
How about putting the "promotional (monetary) sum" in an investment that is as far away from ReBs as it could possibly get
Join the queue. I'm first after stub8535 and I already have plans in place to use mine to good effect. I must say it's really good of Daniel to make such an offer. I just hope it's not yet another empty promise from ReBS...
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Post by rb5286 on May 18, 2017 18:09:38 GMT
'1 By what date will you have made your Leeds festival address disability friendly?'
What has that got to do with P2P investing?
It is busy-body moaners like you that discourage engagement from platforms. I'd rather time was spent on recovering defaulted loans than trying to engage with someone who obviously has some sort of vendetta against Rebs. How did you invest exactly? just click, click, click and expect 18% returns without any problems? please do us a favour and take you negativity somewhere else.
If you don't like it, get out. That's what I'm doing at the moment.
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Post by rb5286 on May 18, 2017 18:15:22 GMT
'It’s a pity my intentions were ill received… After reviewing your account, I can see why you are so jaundice from P2P lending... You have managed to select loans, promptly before they fall into default. Your transaction gain suggests you profited from other sellers discounting their position on the loan, which can occur when a borrower falls behind with its repayments. I noticed in November 16 you started selling various microloans, but did not withdraw the balance until the end of December. During this time, you had a substantial balance earning 0%, which will have reduced your net return. Your investment style of chasing discounted loans, is very untypical and a high-risk strategy which I would discourage. I think you have been unfortunate, and I invited you to try a different investment strategy, offering for you to take a new and different investment approach. I really feel that if you are more diligent in selecting loans, that you will enjoy healthy returns, as with the vast majority of investors. I don’t think that ‘having another go’ needs to limit your ‘freedom of speech’. But if you don’t accept my suggestion, then you’ll not have the opportunity to build a performing portfolio.'
There's my answer there :-) live by the sword...
Don't blame the platform (which has it's faults) for your greedy stupidity.
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kevinkelly
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Post by kevinkelly on May 18, 2017 18:31:11 GMT
'1 By what date will you have made your Leeds festival address disability friendly?' What has that got to do with P2P investing? We (I) don't know yet what, if anything, Daniel's address has to do with P2P as we (I) can't actually hear what is being said, which is why I asked for a transcript. I would think Daniel believes the address to have some merit to ReBS investors else he wouldn't be arranging for a professional edit to be made available.
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Post by bobjones70 on Sept 24, 2017 23:23:36 GMT
Stuart you're obviously not comfortable incurring losses. This type of investment is completely inappropriate for you and you should never have signed up for any of it. I'm very sorry that you were manipulated into engaging in behaviour far riskier than you realised. It should be noted however that the people manipulating you were not in fact this company: they are very clear that it's a risky business - it's just that many of their customers believe, wrongly, that these warnings are exaggerated. No, you were led by the nose not by REBS but by the fact the entire banking system is telling you that no matter where you park your money, it's never going to keep up with rising prices, hence if you plan to sit on a thousand pounds for the next thirty years, by the time you want to take it out it'll be worthless. It's rational, under those circumstances, for you to seek higher yields that won't destroy your hard work.
Unfortunately that's what you get for living in a communist country. When everyone rails against 'the rich', while calling for ever greater services from government, of course the financial environment will tend to sacrifice the needs of savers for the needs of borrowers, so that the state can meet all the demands being made of it. The only shield against the mountains of debt building up year after year would normally be the lobbying of savers, but since everyone despises 'the rich' and resents one person having more than another person, any appeals to preserve your bank balance will fall on deaf ears.
There's no easy answer to any of this unfortunately, but stressing yourself out by risking your savings by lending them to unknown businessmen based on their personal guarantees that they'll pay you back with interest some day (honest) doesn't seem like something that meets your life's needs very well at all.
Daniel Rajkumar has made you a rather generous offer, and it's surprising to me that other lenders aren't up in arms about it, given that in effect he's asking all of them to share in your losses! You should grab it with both hands, put your money back in the bank in a safe 0.7% ISA account, and try to offset any losses from inflation with additional top-up savings funded through under-consumption.
Once you survive and come out the other side of this socialist experiment, you'll be in the tiny minority of working people with the wherewithal to rebuild society for real. Instead of having egg on your face for having made mistakes (when in fact peer-to-peer lending is just gambling, no better than picking a horse with 'form'), your prudent and frugal nature will finally be recognised for what it is: a deep virtue, in fact the principal human virtue responsible for the very existence of civilisation itself.
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adrian77
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Post by adrian77 on Sept 25, 2017 17:13:36 GMT
Above is very interesting if not a bit sad and worrying. However I really think the market will very soon deal with this situation which may be of comfort to some of the contributors...
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ben
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Post by ben on Sept 25, 2017 18:07:58 GMT
Looks like a good example of why a secondary markets are not always a good thing. Buying loans as they are discounted without understand the reasons why someone is selling at a discount. With the way a lot of secondary market are set up this is going to happen more and more.
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stub8535
Member of DD Central
personal opinions only. Not qualified to advise on investment products.
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Post by stub8535 on Sept 25, 2017 19:56:51 GMT
Looks like a good example of why a secondary markets are not always a good thing. Buying loans as they are discounted without understand the reasons why someone is selling at a discount. With the way a lot of secondary market are set up this is going to happen more and more. Please do not take anything written by platform rep as an accurate reflection of what was said on the phone call nor how I operated my account. That is all.
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jimbo
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Post by jimbo on Oct 26, 2017 1:48:04 GMT
Above is very interesting if not a bit sad and worrying. However I really think the market will very soon deal with this situation which may be of comfort to some of the contributors... I'm a little late to respond to this, but I have a strong interest in keeping up to speed with the level of Central Bank intervention post-2008 that has distorted global markets - particularly credit/debt markets into their present form. In a nutshell, I don't expect markets to fix any of this quickly given the level of Central Bank intervention that's juiced them up and the zero interest rate policy that has led to the current sad state of affairs, re. negligible safe yield on savings deposit. There's a good summary of the current global market situation here: northmantrader.com/2017/10/24/liquidity-wave/... and a timely warning here: www.youtube.com/watch?v=vBJ-p0ybhzs&feature=youtu.be... and here is the July quarterly review from a UK fund manager for whom I have the utmost respect: www.ruffer.co.uk/#ruffer/who-we-are/review-archive/36The key takeaway for me from the Ruffer article was the following: "The credit crunch of 2008 was the natural onset of the cold winter which removes the excesses of the long prosperity which preceded it; the Fed turned the radiators on, thereby artificially prolonging the summer, and now that it, too, is ending, we are looking once again at the elemental corrective to economic excess – a destruction of savings.
It is our job to protect clients to preserve the wealth in winter, as well as to encourage its growth in summer. As always, we are less interested in when it will happen, and more interested in the shape of the difficulties if and when they arise. If our analysis is correct, there will be few hiding places, and, unlike the last twenty–five years, cash will not be safe."Personally, I don't think a Cash ISA will protect anybody with savings from what I perceive to be a coming reset of the global monetary system in the next decade. I would be very happy to be wrong, but have a bad feeling I won't be.
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