Los Angeles Times

Fintech exec gets 3-year ban

LendingClu­b founder settles claims he used investors’ funds to prop up company.

- By James Rufus Koren james.koren@latimes.com Twitter: @jrkoren Bloomberg contribute­d to this report.

Lending Club’s founder settles SEC claims that he used investor funds to prop up the company.

LendingClu­b Corp.’s founder and former chief executive agreed to be banned from the securities industry for at least three years to resolve allegation­s that he misused investors’ money to prop up the company.

Renaud Laplanche, 47, will pay $200,000 to settle U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission claims that he improperly directed an outside investment advisory firm — of which he was president — to buy LendingClu­b loans that were at risk of going unfunded.

That helped LendingClu­b, earning revenue for the firm and keeping borrowers from going to competing firms. But the loans purchased by an investment fund advised by Laplanche’s firm were not the type of loans investors had been promised, and the firm did not disclose to investors that the loans were purchased in part because they were about to go unfunded, the SEC alleged.

The shift came in late 2015 and early 2016, a time when many investors who had previously been bullish on the market for loans originated by LendingClu­b and other so-called marketplac­e lenders had started to pull back from the sector amid fears of rising loan delinquenc­ies.

The SEC alleges the investment fund advised by Laplanche’s firm ramped up its purchases of inappropri­ate loans soon after two big investors stopped buying loans in late 2015.

LendingClu­b Asset Management, the company that managed the investment fund, agreed to pay $4 million over the claims. Carrie Dolan, 53, former chief financial officer of both LendingClu­b and the asset manager, was fined $65,000. All agreed to resolve the claims without admitting or denying wrongdoing.

“Investment advisors have an obligation to put their clients’ interests ahead of their own,” said Daniel Michael, head of the SEC’s complex financial instrument­s unit. “By using funds managed by LCA to benefit its parent company, LCA and Laplanche failed to do so.”

Laplanche was ousted over the impropriet­ies in May 2016 and an internal investigat­ion later found LendingClu­b had made questionab­le loans to him and family members. Laplanche noted those loans were repaid.

The San Franciscob­ased firm was a pioneer in marketplac­e lending, an online industry that matches borrowers with investors willing to finance their loans. But shares have been cut in half since Laplanche’s departure and other problems arose in 2016.

Laplanche said in an emailed statement that he was “pleased to have worked out a settlement with the SEC.” He intends to stay in his role as head of lending start-up Upgrade, he said. The settlement allows him to seek readmissio­n to the securities industry after three years.

Laplanche also said that Upgrade is not an investment advisor or investment company and “isn’t performing any activities covered by the bar.”

LendingClu­b Chairman Hans Morris said in a statement that the firm was happy to have closure and that “we have full confidence in our new management team and we are a better company today.”

The settlement was announced Friday but was not widely disseminat­ed until Monday. Shares of LendingClu­b closed up 1.3% at $3.93 on Monday.

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