Originally posted by observer
Banks give credit cards to people (even students, not knowing how succesful they will be in future), to new businesses (where only experience with similar projects from the past can tell them what kind of profit to expect), to house owners (always quite stable), even for a new car, which can end on the next tree, leaving nothing than costs. They take a risk all the time, and they loose values - as long they make a proft in total, they are fine.
What I mean is they have a quality risk assesment, so if they start now to come into the domain business, this should create a clearer picture of domain values. They probably base it (like real estate) on the price similar objects have been sold for in the past, mixed with general market predictions. This would be useful for everyone. I wouldn't be afraid of underestimation - if the competition is high enough, some will take a higher risk to find a niche.
Banks also minimize their risk as much as they can. Yes, they take risk, butthey force you to paythemto take the risk.
Student Credit Cards: Credit Limit of $500
Home Owners: Use house as collateral - (in USA): The make you get PMI insurance unless youput a 20% downpayment or more (you pay the extra insurance for them to take the risk).
Vehicles: Banks MAKE you buy full coverage on your auto (youpay more for their risk) so if it does end up in a tree, you have covered their investment.
(I have a lot more stuff to say about banks, mostly derogatry, but I will not get into that as this is a domain name forum).
I doubt any serious bank would give you a loan based upon a domain name. As somebody else said, they want tangible assets.
I once went to a bank to try to get a consolidation loan. They asked what kind of collateral I had. I asked if I could use my baseball card collection. My collection was worth about $110,000. If you are not familiar with baseball cards, there is an established PRICE GUIDE for every card. The loan that I wanted was a mere $15,000. They would not do it. They bank said that they would not accept that as collateral. I asked why and they said that the only accept card and homes, so in case the person did defualt, they would be sure to get their money back.
The other end of the spectrum - the tax man - is an interesting situation. He would obvioulsy want to maximize the domain name value so he could get the most in taxes. . . Not sure how that would work.
-Bob