Income Marketplace is the only P2P investment platform with a Cashflow Buffer, an exclusive mechanism that is designed to protect your investment even if a loan originator goes bankrupt.
THE SECURITY FRAMEWORK
Investors on P2P platforms face two distinct risks: borrower default and loan originator default. Most P2P platforms stop at one layer of protection. When it comes to P2P investment security, Income is the only platform that addresses both major investor risks with dedicated mechanisms.
If a borrower falls more than 60 days behind on repayments, the loan originator is contractually required to buy the loan back from you, returning your full principal and accrued interest. This addresses borrower default risk.
An exclusive Income Marketplace mechanism. If a loan originator itself defaults or goes bankrupt, the Cashflow Buffer activates, designed to ensure investors are repaid first from recovered funds before the originator receives anything. This addresses LO default risk.
Each originator holds a portion of every loan (the Junior Share) that is subordinated to investor claims. In a default scenario, this share absorbs losses first, meaning investors are structurally first in the repayment queue, not just by promise.
PLATFORM COMPARISON
Most P2P platforms stop at one layer of protection. Income is the only platform that addresses both major investor risks with dedicated mechanisms.
| Security feature | Income Marketplace | Typical P2P platform |
|---|---|---|
| Buyback Obligation (60-day) | Yes, on all loans | Common |
| Protection against LO default | Yes, via Cashflow Buffer | Not on most platforms |
| Cashflow Buffer (structural) | Exclusive to Income | Not available |
| Junior Share (investors repaid first) | Contractually subordinated | "Skin in the game" only (equal loss) |
| Independent financial due diligence per LO | Rigorous, sets buffer level | Varies by platform |
| Bank proof required for LO loan data | Required ("Sanity Check") | Rarely required |
Loan originator must repurchase loan
Regardless of borrower recovery
Layer 1 — Standard on all loans
The Buyback Obligation is a contractual obligation that comes with every loan on Income Marketplace. If a borrower fails to repay for more than 60 days, the loan originator is contractually required to repurchase that loan from you.
When the buyback triggers, you receive your full invested principal plus all interest accrued up to that point, regardless of whether the originator has successfully recovered funds from the borrower themselves.
Most modern P2P platforms offer a buyback guarantee as standard. Where Income Marketplace goes further is in the additional two layers that protect against the more serious risk: the originator itself defaulting.
Layer 2 — Exclusive to Income Marketplace
Loan originator default (Risk b) is not covered on most platforms by any additional security measures. This means that if an originator cannot honour its buyback promise or goes bankrupt, investors have no buffer designed to ensure they get their money back.
Income Marketplace is the only platform with a Cashflow Buffer to protect investors against this risk.
If an originator defaults and Income takes over its portfolio, all profit from that portfolio, together with the originator’s Junior Share, is directed exclusively to repaying investor principal and interest first. Only after investors are fully repaid are any remaining funds transferred to the originator.
Regardless of borrower recovery
Only paid after investors are whole
Loan profitability + Risk adjustments + Junior Share
Income takes over the portfolio. 100% of profit and Junior Share is directed to repay investors first.
10% held by LO, equal likelihood of loss. In default, both 10% and 90% share losses proportionally.
10% is junior to investor’s 90%. In default, the 90% is repaid first. The 10% absorbs losses.
Junior Share = alignment and security.
Skin in the game = alignment only.
Layer 3 — Alignment and Security
Many P2P platforms use “skin in the game”, where a loan originator holds a percentage of each loan alongside investors. This aligns incentives, but in a default scenario, both the originator’s share and the investor’s share have equal likelihood of loss.
Income Marketplace uses the Junior Share instead. The name comes from debt finance: junior debt has lower priority for repayment than senior debt claims. In a default, junior holders are only paid after senior holders are fully repaid.
Importantly, the Junior Share is not a fixed indicator of risk level. Income Marketplace sets it after thorough financial analysis. If loan quality is high enough, the Junior Share can be 0% and investors are still structurally prioritised in repayment.
Real Worked Example
Using Income Marketplace’s own published example: 1,000 loans, an originator defaults. Here’s exactly how the Cashflow Buffer aims to protect you.
Income Marketplace invokes its existing agreements with local collection companies and takes over the entire 1,000-loan portfolio on behalf of investors.
The 800 loans where borrowers are repaying on time continue as normal and those borrower repayments flow directly to investors on schedule.
The 200 non-performing loans are covered using the Cashflow Buffer: the originator’s Junior Share plus excess earnings from all 1,000 loans are directed to repay these on the original schedule.
This is how the Cashflow Buffer works in practice. The key insight: you don't need 100% of loans to perform. The buffer is designed to cover a realistic level of non-performance. Income Marketplace calculates the required Junior Share level so that full investor repayment is is the target even in stressed scenarios, before the originator is approved to list loans.
The security of the Cashflow Buffer is only as strong as the due diligence behind it. Here’s what happens before a loan originator is approved to list on Income Marketplace.
Income’s team discusses the originator’s product and goes through the two most critical lending processes: underwriting and collection methodology.
Each loan originator and its shareholders undergo full Know Your Customer and Anti-Money Laundering due diligence, including sanctions screening, PEP checks, and ultimate beneficial owner verification. We maintain this standard to stay on par with both current and anticipated regulatory requirements.
A deep analysis of the historical loan book, focusing on the “historical repayment coefficient”, which measures how much cash the portfolio actually generates. Multiple rounds of follow-up questions typically follow.
Full financial analysis with particular focus on liquidity and solvency ratios, identifying any signs of inflated assets, poor equity, or insolvency risk.
The originator must provide bank proof for all money disbursed and received, verifying that the loan book data is actual and reliable, not fabricated.
Based on the Repayment Coefficient × all identified risks. The Junior Share level is unique to each originator and is set so that full investor repayment is the target even in stressed scenarios.
Income Marketplace Financial Analysis
Generally speaking, the LO is required to have at least a sufficient Repayment Coefficient to provide our investors with the promised interest on invested money.
Our due diligence team declined only one at the final stage, due to insufficient repayment coefficient and an improper banking reconciliation system, and a couple of others at earlier stages. The bar is high by design.
No. The process of setting the Junior Share is unique to each LO as we need to consider market-specific and originator-specific issues. If loan quality is strong enough, the Junior Share can be 0% and investors are still structurally prioritised in repayment.
COMMON QUESTIONS
Everything investors ask about P2P investment security at Income Marketplace.
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