The most famous American P2P lending is probably Lendingclub.
It is a publicly traded company on NASDAQ IPOed not that long ago.
Hence plenty of public records if you want to do some detailed research.
Here is a lesser known Canadian version:
Lendingloop.ca
It is risky but still there are some compelling reasons to consider:
1. If you want to invest in small local businesses because you are just tired of giving money to big corps.
2. If you want to revive local mom and pop shops. Haven't they struggled enough? First it was Walmart and then Amazon
3. If you want further diversification of your portfolio
4. If your financial adviser can't provide such a category in your mutual fund collection
5. 8% may not be much, but Canada is falling behind America raising interest rate. What are savers' options?
The most famous American P2P lending is probably Lendingclub.
It is a publicly traded company on NASDAQ IPOed not that long ago.
Hence plenty of public records if you want to do some detailed research.
Here is a lesser known Canadian version:
[url=https://www.lendingloop.ca/?code=97ee7d]Lendingloop.ca[/url]
It is risky but still there are some compelling reasons to consider:
1. If you want to invest in small local businesses because you are just tired of giving money to big corps.
2. If you want to revive local mom and pop shops. Haven't they struggled enough? First it was Walmart and then Amazon
3. If you want further diversification of your portfolio
4. If your financial adviser can't provide such a category in your mutual fund collection
5. 8% may not be much, but Canada is falling behind America raising interest rate. What are savers' options?