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Showing posts from August, 2019

Fellow Finance

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I started investing in FellowFinance   two years ago and I thought this should be a good time to write a report about my experience so far, even if I still have more questions than answers. So, if anyone of you is also using it, please share with me your experience. FF is the fifth platform in Europe+UK in terms of monthly new loans origination but despite this fact I do not see a lot of investor talking about it. The main reason I decided to test FF is that it offers exposure to new markets and sectors that I was not capable to invest in with other sites. Business and invoice financing in Finland represent two great diversification opportunities: the risk profile is lower than consumer financing but prospected returns are still high, especially if you compare it with what you can achieve outside the p2p world.  Invoice funding is best described as a short term business loan in which a company receives funding against its trade receivable; the advantage for the company is that

Bitcoin

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It has been a while since I am studying Bitcoin and crypto; my assumption for this post is that you know the basic stuff and if you do not, go and inform yourself because in a way or another this will have an impact on you in the future. I am very optimistic regarding the technology behind Bitcoin, the blockchain, I am not so sure what to think about Bitcoin and the rest of cryptocurrencies from an investment point of view. The first analogy that came to my mind is with Magic cards. Magic the Gathering  is a game I used to play while I was at university; due to two random events, I am old enough and I started to play in the infancy of the game, I had a lot of old cards in my collection. Bitcoin is limited in supply by design, as old Magic cards are in a finite number and cannot be reprinted. Due to the game growth in popularity, old cards became scarce and as per Econ 101, their value grew with their demand. When I stopped playing the game, I sold all the valuable cards (at the ti

Real Estate

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I am investing in three p2p real estate platform, EstateGuru in EUR and LandlordInvest , Kuflink in GBP; I am also looking for a silver lining in this Brexit joke, a.k.a. to buy an apartment in London now that prices are soft , so I keep more than an eye on the RE market and here are some considerations. In Switzerland and Denmark  you can have a negative rate mortgage; sadly is not (yet) an interest rate only mortgage, where you live in your property AND get paid every month for it...but I think today this scenario is more probable than seeing rates at 6% in Europe. Only time will tell but few years ago I would have called crazy anyone who would have told me negative rate mortgages would be a reality. Fascinating. Property search websites in UK sometimes display the price history of a house/apartment. Few days ago I found this apartment that is priced 10 times more than its selling price in 1999. 10x in twenty years sounds like a hedge fund guru return, innit? Real Estate

The Mintos Bond

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Last week I received an email from Mintos saying that IuteCredit, a loan originator on the platform, announced the issuance of a four year senior unsecured corporate bond (ISIN XS2033386603) worth EUR 40 million, with an annual interest rate of 13%. So yes, this is not technically a Mintos bond...but who knows IuteCredit otherwise? This is not the company first bond, I see that in the past they issued EUR and USD bonds but in amounts substantially lower, one and two million. My thoughts in random order: - I do not have Bloomberg in front of me (so nice to have Anywhere and then leave the token systematically at the office) to check how far in ratings you have to go today to get a 13% yield in EUR but I suspect something quite 'toxic', so this bond has a potential market - for the evolution and acceptance of the industry, this is a step forward: institutional investors have formal mandates and a senior bond is one of the few ways they have to get exposure to this ty