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The Journal Gazette, 600 W. Main St., Fort Wayne IN

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Dunbar takes inventory of his gold coins as a customer browses. More and more people seem to be taking to pawnshops and coin and jewelry exchanges to see their way through rough economic seas.

Hard times keep pawnshops busy

Climbing gold prices also bring spike in transactions

Bill Dunbar looks over some recent items customers brought into his store in Carmichael, Calif., including this gold Rolex watch.

When the economy sours and gold soars, there’s one business segment that actually sees more traffic coming in the door. Welcome to the world of pawnbrokers.

Amid the economic queasiness surrounding housing, jobs and credit, local pawnshop owners are seeing evidence that more money-strapped customers are dropping off their valuables to get fast loans or unloading their gold for a quick windfall.

“The demand for loans is way up, because the economy stinks,” said John Appelbaum of Sacramento Loan and Jewelry Inc. in Sacramento.

“We’re the grass-roots economic indicator. We see it right off the street,” said the veteran pawnbroker, standing amid glass cases containing dozens of customers’ musical instruments and loads of their silver and gold jewelry.

“The myth is that people who come here are down and out, but it’s also the person with money,” said Appelbaum, who has been in business 36 years. “We get people needing to borrow $15 to (needing) thousands,” he said, noting that the number of loans on his books last year was up more than 10 percent from 2006.

Given their ability to offer quick cash loans with no credit check and little paperwork required, pawnbrokers are often closest to the worries of everyday life.

For years, pawnbrokers have been the go-to lender for small, quick-turn loans by those who are turned away by conventional banks, said Richard Cohn, spokesman for the Collateral Loan and Second Hand Dealers Association, which represents about half of the 499 licensed pawnbrokers in California. Tough times have reinforced that relationship, he said.

On a typical loan, a pawnbroker accepts an item as collateral and pays out cash up to 50 percent of the item’s estimated value, if it were to be sold. Most loans are for 120 days. Regulated by state laws, pawnbrokers charge set rates for interest and service fees. If the pawned item isn’t reclaimed and the fees and original loan paid, it becomes the pawnbroker’s property and put up for sale. According to national pawnbroker statistics, about 80 percent to 85 percent of pawned merchandise is reclaimed by its owners.

The economy’s downturn appears to have speeded up loan activity statewide, Cohn said, though precise numbers are not available.

Out in suburban Sacramento pawnshops, the flood of pawned construction tools bears evidence of the area’s protracted housing slump.

“You can usually tell (how) the economy (is doing) by how many tools we get in,” said “KC” Carvalho, of Carvalho’s Loan. “We now have more tools than we’ve ever had. Ever.”

Carvalho has devoted an entire section of his store to tools brought in by idled construction workers.

Nationally, “we’re seeing more loans – three to four-month loans are on the rise,” said David Adelman, president of the Texas-based National Pawnbrokers Association, which represents a portion of the 13,000 pawnshops nationwide. But he said he was uncertain what had caused this. Many pawnshop customers are regulars for whom such loans are “a way of life,” he said.

According to the national association, pawnshop business typically picks up with spikes in gas and energy prices but settles down after customers adjust to higher rates.

The demand for loans can put financial pressure on pawnbrokers. In tough times, they need lending cash, too, but banks often are reluctant to extend them capital, Cohn said.

Pawnshop owners aren’t the only ones who are seeing an uptick in customer walk-ins. The recent spike in gold prices coupled with fears of inflation have brought gold traders into stores like Bill Dunbar’s, a retail gold and jewelry business.

Dunbar, owner of Marconi Coin and Jewelry Exchange in Carmichael, Calif., is seeing more hedge-seeking investors buying gold bullion coins as protection against inflationary times.

But he’s also seeing more troubled homeowners coming in to unload their gold jewelry while bullion’s price is skyrocketing.

“They’re trying to cover their houses. They’re trying to cover their kids in college. You’ve got this credit card thing. People are in trouble,” Dunbar said.

“Gold tells,” he said. When its price starts climbing, “there’s a good chance a (financial) storm’s on the way.”

– Kimberly Peterson, The Journal Gazette Source: National Pawnbrokers Association
Locally
At the Kendallville Pawn Shop in downtown Kendallville, manager Kenny Gohn said he has seen increased business as more people who need money come in. And with it being tax season, Gohn said many people are coming in to spend their refunds.
“I have hardly any TVs here right now,” Gohn said Thursday.
Victor Amato, district manager for Lev’s Pawn Shop, with two locations in Fort Wayne, said business is growing, but it has grown steadily the past three to five years. But Amato said the slowing economy is not the only factor in the pawnshop’s growth. With the rapid increase in the value of gold, Lev’s is seeing a large increase in pawned jewelry, especially gold.
Amato also said customers are coming to Lev’s to buy high-definition TVs and video-game systems with their tax refunds.
About 75 percent of people who pawn items at Lev’s get their items back, Amati said. Gohn said only about half the people who pawn goods at the Kendallville Pawn Shop get theirs back.
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Q&A
Q. How does a pawnshop loan work?
A. Pawnbrokers lend money on everything from gold jewelry to musical instruments, TVs, tools and household items. If you bring in a saxophone, for instance, you’ll receive a cash amount equal to a percentage – usually up to 50 percent – of what the pawnbroker believes the sax would bring if sold. A typical loan is small, averaging $75 to $100.
Q. What are the fees?
A. Pawnbrokers charge varying interest and service fees based on the loan amount and how long it’s held. In California, for example, a $100 loan due in 120 days would be charged a $5 processing fee and $15 in interest charges. Note: The annual percentage rate on a 120-day loan, which is the typical length, is 61 percent.
Q. Why go to a pawnbroker for a loan?
A. Pawnbrokers are a fast, convenient, confidential way to borrow money. Unlike a bank loan, a short-term cash loan can be given with no credit check or legal consequences if the loan is not repaid. If you don’t repay, the item you pawned becomes property of the pawnbroker.
Q. How often do people lose their merchandise?
A. On average, about 15 percent to 20 percent of all pawnshop loans are not repaid.
Q. How can I be sure goods aren’t stolen?
A. Less than half of 1 percent of goods are identified as stolen. Pawnbrokers are trained to look for stolen property and work closely with local law enforcement to prosecute perpetrators. A customer must provide personal identification and a complete description of the merchandise. The description is transmitted to law enforcement, decreasing the likelihood that a thief would bring in stolen merchandise.
Q. Is pawnbroking a “bad times” industry?
A. Pawnbrokers do far better in good times. In hard times, customers move away to find employment, have less ability to repay their loans, and the value of all merchandise goes down.
Q. Who is the typical pawnshop customer?
A. The typical loan customer is employed, lives within one mile of the store and needs short-term cash for unexpected bills. The typical retail customer is a bargain hunter.

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