Peer to Peer Lending

Squirrel looking for more opportunities

Squirrel Money founder John Bolton says he probably would not have bothered with peer-to-peer lending if he had not been able to see opportunities beyond it.

Tuesday, September 20th 2016

The Squirrel platform is one of four operating in the market, matching investors with those looking for loans. It is an off-shoot from the successful Squirrel mortgage broking business.

Squirrel’s model is different in that it offers a reserve fund to cover any losses that are incurred, but lower interest rates in return.

But Bolton said Squirrel Money was part of a much broader strategy.

He said it was difficult to get economies of scale in the peer-to-peer market as it currently was.

“I don’t think we would have launched into peer-to-peer if it wasn’t part of a bigger play in fintech,” he said.

Squirrel would apply for a non-bank deposit taker’s licence by the end of next year, he said.

That would enable it to offer a broader product set.

“The peer-to-peer licence is quite restrictive. You can’t construct a new financial product within that licence and we would like to have a competitively priced on-call product on both sides, to lend to people who need short-term loans, whether that's renovating before they sell, and could offer an on-call savings product that would be incredibly well-priced. But that’s too difficult to deliver under the peer-to-peer licensing regime.”

It would also become an agency under the new Financial Advisers Act (FAA).

“That’s reflective of where we are taking the business, we want to take it to compete across the whole financial services spectrum.”

He said Squirrel’s team had also been looking overseas at what digital banks were doing. “That’s always been our view. Nothing has really changed except we are putting a line in the sand.”

Bolton said Squirrel was also looking at the opportunities in roboadvice, which the new version of the FAA will make possible.

Comments

No comments yet

Unity First Home Buyer special 3.99
ICBC 4.25
SBS FirstHome Combo 4.29
Co-operative Bank - First Home Special 4.39
TSB Special 4.49
ANZ Special 4.49
ASB Bank 4.49
SBS Bank Special 4.49
Unity Special 4.49
Westpac Special 4.49
Kiwibank Special 4.49
TSB Special 4.49
ANZ Special 4.49
Westpac Special 4.49
Wairarapa Building Society 4.59
ICBC 4.59
BNZ - Std 4.65
AIA - Go Home Loans 4.65
Unity Special 4.65
ASB Bank 4.65
SBS Bank Special 4.65
Nelson Building Society 4.69
SBS Bank Special 4.99
Westpac Special 4.99
ICBC 4.99
TSB Special 5.39
BNZ - Std 5.39
ANZ 5.39
AIA - Go Home Loans 5.39
ASB Bank 5.39
Co-operative Bank - Owner Occ 5.49
Kainga Ora 5.49
SBS Bank 5.59
SBS Construction lending for FHB 3.74
CFML 321 Loans 4.25
AIA - Back My Build 4.44
ICBC 5.39
Heartland Bank - Online 5.45
Co-operative Bank - Owner Occ 5.70
Co-operative Bank - Standard 5.70
ANZ 5.89
TSB Special 5.94
ASB Bank 5.99
Pepper Money Prime 5.99

More Stories

Capital gains tax almost irrelevant – English

Monday, October 20th 2025

Capital gains tax almost irrelevant – English

Former Finance Minster Bill English says the days of guaranteed capital gains in the housing market are over,

Thursday, October 09th 2025

New rules for meth contaminated houses

REINZ welcomes regulation of methamphetamine contamination in rental housing.

Spending confidence low and likely to fall further

Thursday, September 18th 2025

Spending confidence low and likely to fall further

More than 40% of households who took part in the latest Westpac McDermott Miller Consumer Confidence say their financial position has deteriorated over the past year.

Four decades of 6-7% yearly house price growth ending

Friday, March 21st 2025

Four decades of 6-7% yearly house price growth ending

New Zealander’s reliance on property capital gains in the mid-single digits is at an end.