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Post by bondorakairi on Aug 25, 2017 10:15:35 GMT
Is that before or after taxes (if they apply in your case)? Before. Hi! Please send your calculation to investor@bondora.com. We would like to look into this and validate againts your account. Thank you.
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Post by gmaxkenny on Aug 25, 2017 11:06:49 GMT
it seems to be a significant drawback of Bondora, compared to e.g. Mintos, that you can not choose loan duration. Am I wrong about this? Bondora recently introduced a new product called Portfolio Pro which enables to choose loan durations now as well among other criteria. Please read more from our Support page on following link - support.bondora.com/hc/en-us/articles/115004218909-What-is-Portfolio-Pro-. Stop pretending to help when in fact your reply is blatant marketing of another useless product to part the unwary from their money. You have caused enough losses and hardship for investors. If you want to communicate with investors why dont you have your own forum on your site,wait a minute diddnt you have one some time ago I wonder what happened to that?
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jo
Member of DD Central
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Post by jo on Aug 25, 2017 11:08:27 GMT
Hi! Please send your calculation to investor@bondora.com. We would like to look into this and validate againts your account. Thank you. Hi guys - I use the basic Excel function =XIRR(Xx:Xy,Zx:Zy). Happy to learn of other methodologies. (in fact there's a post in General today: p2pindependentforum.com/thread/9865/excel-intrate-xirr). Wouldn't be comfortable providing numbers - even by PM, but guess you could work it out from the transfers in/out to my account.
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Post by rahafoorum on Aug 25, 2017 13:36:02 GMT
Using the XIRR for either withdrawals and deposits or alternatively investments and repayments (doesn't account for cash drag) with dates and sums with one side of it being positive and the other negative figure, should give you the correct result. Especially with €0 left on the portfolio there should be no way for misinterpretation either.
Not sure why Bondora would be surprised by this, considering their own extremely optimistic calculation shows nearly 10% of long-term investors (3+ years) as losing money. I'd bet we'll see the percentage increase somewhat as well.
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