THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
BUSINESS
DECEMBER 30, 2008, 9:43 A.M. ET
People Pulling Up to Pawnshops Today
Are Driving Cadillacs and BMWs
Well-to-Do Turn to Last-Resort
Lenders; Putting Up Diamonds,
Dumpsters as Collateral
PHILADELPHIA --
At Society Hill Loan, a pawnshop in
a middle-class neighborhood here, a
steady rain fell outside as a
fashionably dressed young man parked
his Cadillac Escalade outside.
Looking around warily, he came in to
speak with Nat Leonard, co-owner of
the store.
Nat Leonard
The visitor was
a 29-year-old engineer who was laid
off earlier this year from one of
the local chemical companies. Since
then, he's been cleaning planes at
the airport for less than half the
salary he was earning a year ago.
Now he needs a
$2,500 loan on his watch -- a Movado
Fiero with a diamond bezel -- to pay
his mortgage note.
"I want to
help," said Mr. Leonard. But unlike
Rolex and a few other brands,
"there's no market" for Movado in
his pawn universe.
The young man, who didn't wish to
give his name, left the store
disappointed. "I'm not sure what I'm
going to do," he said.
Typically, pawnshop customers have a
household income of about $29,000,
according to Dave Adelman, president
of the 2,400-member National
Pawnbrokers Association. But
operators around the country say
they are seeing a surge in new
activity fueled in part by a
different clientele: middle- and
upper-middle-class customers facing
ravaged stock portfolios, tightened
bank credit and unexpected layoffs.
In areas dogged by high unemployment
and foreclosure rates, the pawn
business is especially robust.
Rick
LaChappelle, owner of four pawnshops
in Maine, calculates he has lent
about 33% more money this year than
last. "The banking industry is not
giving out any money right now," he
said. "So people are relying on
second-tier lending institutions."
While some pawnshops -- like Beverly
Loan Co. in Beverly Hills -- have
discreetly served the wealthy for
decades, more stores, such as
Society Hill, are newly awash with
furs, diamonds and other baubles
from the bubble. At places like
Society Hill, transactions are up by
as much as 40% in recent months.
Even Beverly Loan has seen a shift
in customer patterns. "We have had
so many $50,000-plus loans and more
businesses [as clients] than ever
before," said Chief Executive
Officer Jordan Tabach-Bank. Many
business clients, he said, are
"getting loans to meet payroll or
other obligations because their
lines of credit are frozen."
Pawnshops are
lending companies that take
collateralized or pawned merchandise
in exchange for money. If a customer
defaults, or fails to pick up their
belongings, then the shop can sell
the goods. Though fees vary from
state to state and are set by law,
the cost of a typical $75 loan is
about $15 a month. While total fees
can pile up over a period of several
months, the industry argues that its
rates can be lower than some
high-interest credit cards and bank
fees.
Lee Amberg,
owner of AA Classic Windy City
Jewelry & Loan in affluent Evanston,
Ill., said he's been seeing Cartier
watches, two-carat diamonds, David
Yurman jewelry and pieces from
Tiffany's. One client, he said,
brought in a fur coat from Saks
Fifth Avenue that retailed at
$9,000. She told him she needed a
loan to help buy private-school
uniforms for her child.
Diamond
Exchange USA is more of a hybrid
store. In addition to selling its
own pieces, it makes loans against
customers' goods and purchases used
jewelry too. Located on a major
thoroughfare in Bethesda, Md., it
has a constant stream of
Mercedes-Benzes, BMWs and other
luxury cars pulling into the lot.
Virtually all of the clientele are
women. Many come to sell their gold
or diamond jewelry.
A potential new customer recently
strolled in to speak with co-owner
Justin Carmody. A resident of
Potomac, Md., she owns a small
wholesale company and was looking to
obtain a $6,000 loan on a 1.91-carat
diamond ring given to her by her
husband. With a 10% fee, she
learned, it would cost her $6,600 to
get the ring back. If she failed to
resolve her cash issues in a month,
she'd be responsible for an
additional payment -- $600, or 10%
of the principal -- each month until
satisfying the debt.
"I've never
done anything like this. I'm looking
at my options," she said. "I'm
trying to separate my emotions. I
just want to get through the next
week." Ultimately, however, she
decided against the loan.
This year, the
number of first-time pawnshop users
is up 10%, according to Mr. Adelman
of the pawnbroker trade group.
Owners say the rate at which people
are coming back to retrieve property
and pay off loans has fallen about
10%. That leaves the store on the
hook to sell the goods.
Though some pawnbrokers now have
more items to sell -- the result of
higher loan defaults -- their
general prospects remain healthy.
Richard Shane, managing director at
Jefferies & Co., who covers the
pawnshop industry, said publicly
traded companies, such as Cash
America International Inc., are
doing well in this difficult
economy. (Pawn balances at the
company rose by 16% in the quarter
ended Sept. 30.) Banks, moreover,
continue to make funds available to
them "because the businesses are
strong and cash flow is strong,"
said Mr. Shane.
On a recent
weekday morning, a line stretched
from the front counter at Lewiston
Pawn Shop. Mr. LaChappelle and his
Lewiston, Maine, staff turned away
many customers with
less-than-desirable goods.
Computers, because they become
obsolete so quickly, are among the
items that are hard to use as
collateral. Other things such as
porcelain figurines and collectibles
have negligible loan value since
there's a limited market to resell
them if necessary.
"I try to take
all I can but I also have to be
aware of the market," explained Mr.
LaChappelle. "We have to evolve with
the economy or I get stuck with
merchandise that doesn't sell."
At the 10-floor
gallery, an out-of-work contractor
named Albert Langlois walked the
aisles pointing to construction
equipment he has pawned as
collateral for loans.
Included in the
stash: industrial-size nail guns,
drills, air compressors for running
power tools and several saws. The
scaffolding he uses to work on
multi-story buildings is stacked in
a storage room. "Pretty much
everything I own is in here," Mr.
Langlois said.
So far this
year, Mr. Langlois, 40, has laid off
the eight members of his contracting
crew and lost a house through
foreclosure. In addition to his
equipment he has pawned two
motorcycles, valued at $20,000
between them. Mr. LaChappelle has
become one of the primary lenders
around, Mr. Langlois said. "You
can't go to a bank and get small
loans to make ends meet, so you come
to Rick."
Derek Arthur,
27, owner of Ground Up Construction,
was returning to the store to
recover his equipment after
satisfying a loan. A year ago, he
said, he had 20 people working for
him, including subcontractors. Now
he has four employees and just one
job. He had needed a $3,000 loan to
get the business through a rough
period while awaiting payment from a
customer.
Mr. Arthur
figured no bank would lend him such
a small amount for a month or two.
So he pawned a dump trailer as well
as other equipment and a smattering
of jewelry. The money, he said, paid
his work crew, insurance and other
expenses.
"You have to have a Plan B," he
said. "If you don't have one, you'd
better find one fast."