P2P Lending / NFT Lending Forum

Lending Club Discussion => Foliofn - LC => Topic started by: mikedev10 on January 10, 2019, 11:00:00 PM

Title: ytm vs. remaining payments
Post by: mikedev10 on January 10, 2019, 11:00:00 PM
sorry for all the peppering of questions in here guys but i'm new so i have plenty.  :)

do you take a loan just looking at absolute ytm or do you try to attempt some annualized rate calculation to decide if you want it?  ie. 10% with 6 months remaining is great, 10% with 59 months remaining is not so great.  i assume ytm / months_remaining is maybe a little too simple and naive a way to calculate something, nonetheless it would factor in those months better - is this advised?

for now i'm doing something more like the ytm can't drift too much from the original rate, ie. a 12% loan i'm looking for a 10% ytm.  maybe that is simpler and easier and does enough of the same thing?
Title: ytm vs. remaining payments
Post by: lctz on December 31, 1969, 06:00:00 PM
remaining payments affect ytm in many ways:
1. liquidity risk, longer remaining payments means your investment is locked longer.  You demand higher yield for compensation (e.g: 1yr CD rate is usually lower than 3yr CD).
2. interest rate risk. usually ignored for consumer credit product because of dominance of credit risk.
3. Default risk.  The biggest part.  A unit default risk (academic name: hazard rate, default risk per month) is different at each age (e.g. higher rate of default in middle age than earlier age.). Using survival analysis, you can compute an empirical survival curve and use this curve to calculate YTM that depends on remaining payments.

Title: ytm vs. remaining payments
Post by: Fred93 on December 31, 1969, 06:00:00 PM
from: mikedev10 on January 11, 2019, 03:43:00 PM
Title: ytm vs. remaining payments
Post by: Rob L on December 31, 1969, 06:00:00 PM
I think this old thread has some relevance here:

Topic: Interest Rate, Yield to Maturty (YTM) and Service Fees
https://forum.lendacademy.com/index.php/topic,3979.0.html

I also posted this in the "Picking up Pennies" thread as well.