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- 2 June 2011
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Fellow ASFers i encourage you to visit https://www.upstart.com/ be prepared to spend a half hour looking around and actually look at a few of the profiles, many with prestigious US university degrees, many that have jobs, many wanting to or are already involved with start ups...on the whole these people are not idiots lining up for hand outs.
I stand corrected, the whole thing seems completely tilted toward the "upstarts".
“It’s total freedom to change your mind,” says Nathan Sharp, 26, a pilot round student who worked in public health before attending business school. “One of the risks on [the investors’] part is if I choose to go back to public health and earn less than $30,000 a year, then they lose everything.”
...
Upstart estimates that typical students will raise around $30,000 in exchange for 2 to 6% of their 10-year income, designed to give investors a 6% annual return. If they make less than $30,000 in any year, they’ll owe nothing, but the agreement will extend up to another five years, and the return for investors maxes out at 15%. Girouard describes it as risk capital. “It’s a little like a loan, but it also has elements of equity,” he says.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/alisong...unding-your-education-and-career-really-work/
So you basically are taking on highly speculative equity risk with returns that range from losing all your money to making a maximum of 15%. I agree with you, the Upstarts are indeed not idiots. What a great way to get someone else to pay for your education. What's the upside here?