Many people are protesting big banks fees by simply taking their business elsewhere. The growing movement to leave big banks, fueled by charges for formally free services and high interest rates, has started a growing trend in alternative finance firms that range from small banks and online pawn lenders to peer-to-peer lending services.
As the Occupy Wall Street protesters are quick to point out – not many are feeling very trusting towards big banking institutions. But the changes in big banks are largely consequences of the 2008 credit crisis and subsequent regulations that are choking revenue sources. Banks have been quick to charge consumers for the difference in various forms.
As a result, credit unions and pawn lenders are emerging as an alternative and cheaper source of banking services. “Credit unions, which are effectively not-for-profit co-operatives, are stepping up to offer cheaper alternatives to the short-term, high-interest loans provided by payday lenders.” reports Reuters .
Data from the National Credit Union Administration shows demand for short-term, small-dollar loans from credit unions rose 52% in the second quarter and more aggressive selling will be seen in the third quarter. “The credit unions are also lobbying to have their business lending cap more than doubled to 27.5 percent of assets so they can better target small businesses unable to access bank funding.”
Credit union popularity has extended to several online financing companies that provide loans to individuals and small businesses at significantly lower interest rates than big banks.
Reuters provides these examples:
* Online lender BillFloat, backed by Ebay’s PayPal, offers a 30-day loan of up to $225 to consumers looking to pay their bills. The service, started two years ago, has an annualized interest rate of 36 percent, making it far cheaper than payday loans, where rates can be as high as 500 percent.
* Peer-to-peer lending site Prosper.com, which has raised more than $70 million in venture funding, connects people who want to borrow money with those who want to invest. It has more than $262 million in funded loans since it launched in 2006.
As often happens with these big deals, a lot of early PayPal employees got a nice payday. But in a rare turn of events, a surprising number of these folks went on to even greater success. Only a handful of other companies have spawned so many powerful
Online lender BillFloat, backed by Ebay's PayPal, offers a 30-day loan of up to $225 to consumers looking to pay their bills. The service, started two years ago, has an annualized interest rate of 36 percent, making it far cheaper than payday loans,

Online lender BillFloat, backed by Ebay's PayPal, offers a 30-day loan of up to $225 to consumers looking to pay their bills. The service, started two years ago, has an annualized interest rate of 36 percent, making it far cheaper than payday loans,
BillFloat offers the first bill payment platform with a "more time to pay" option, helping consumers pay bills on time and avoid late fees, overdraft charges, service termination and high cost payday loans. Billers including utility providers,
Online lender BillFloat, backed by Ebay's PayPal, offers a 30-day loan of up to $225 to consumers looking to pay their bills. The service, started two years ago, has an annualized interest rate of 36 percent, making it far cheaper than payday loans,
Since our blog is dedicated to ordinary people who want to save their money and reduce the chance to put themselves in situation to apply for payday loans , we decided to write more about new saving ideas. Today’s saving ideas will be connected to PayPal and the people who use it will benefit the most. Even those who don’t use PayPal after reading this article might convince themselves to get PayPal account!