DailyWealth Investment Newsletter  

About DailyWealth Premium Content DailyWealth Archive
DailyWealth Investment Newsletter DailyWealth Contributors DailyWealth Resources DailyWealth Market Window
 
DailyWealth Print Edition Print Edition | Sponsored Link:
True Wealth Login

How to Earn a 240% Annual
Interest Rate

By Tom Dyson
March 31 , 2008

Last week, I visited a dozen pawnshops in Texas. I pretended to be a customer. I looked at a few watches and even bought some DVDs.

Texas legislation allows pawnshops to charge 240% annual interest on loans. There are also many illegal immigrants here who don't have bank accounts. In the industry, they call them "the unbanked." This is why Texas has more pawnshops than any other state in the nation...

In general, I found the pawnshops I visited had a steady flow of business, with several attendants behind the counters and half a dozen customers at a time.

Dallas is a wasteland of retail malls and freeways. Everything is neat and tidy... and totally lacking in charm. Compared to the other businesses around here, the pawnshops definitely had the best vibe. Loud music welcomed people in from the street. They were clean, well lit, and not the dingy establishments I had expected.
 
I got my best insight from the parking lots. When I'd finished looking around inside the stores, I'd time my exit to follow a customer out. Then I'd ask them what they pawned. At first, I was scared to pry. I need not have been. The five people I approached were all happy to tell me their stories...

I met Bart. He pawned a bag of tools for $65. I met Chester. He pawned a cell phone and a TomTom device for $40. A woman and her daughter redeemed a ring. The interest rate is 20% per month. If Bart doesn't bring $91 back to the pawnshop in two months, he loses his tools.

I asked Bart why he needed the money so badly. "Gas money to get to work," he said, as he unlocked a Ford F-150 pickup truck...

The pawnshop business does well when gas prices are high. Two other people told me they used pawnshop loans for gas money. And as I explained in my last column, the pawnshop business does well when gold and silver prices are high. Gold is half a pawnshop's inventory. Plus, rising gold prices lets the pawnshops make bigger loans and earn more interest.

Finally, pawnshops do well when credit is tight. That's the case right now. The collapse in real estate values has caused millions of Americans to default on their mortgage loans, auto loans, and credit-card loans. The banks won't lend to people with bad credit reports. You don't need a high FICO score to borrow money from a pawnshop.

Related Articles

How to Buy Gold Bullion at a 41% Discount

Why the Recession Is Good for Us

I think now is a great time to invest in pawnshops. EZCORP plans to open 100 new locations in 2008. And the CEO said he expects earnings to increase by 28% this year. Last week, Cash America – the largest pawnshop operator in America – also raised its guidance for first-quarter earnings.

Here's the thing: Investors put pawnshops in the same bracket as "financial" stocks. The stock prices of these two pawnshop operators have fallen 25% and 15% from their 52-week highs. With business so strong, and stock prices off their highs, pawnshops look like a great deal right now...

Good investing,
 
Tom

Editor's note: Tom Dyson is a regular contributor to DailyWealth, a free investment newsletter focused on the world's best contrarian opportunities. We write with a simple belief in mind: You don't have to take big risks to make big money with your investments.

Sign up today to read more investment ideas from Tom Dyson.

Email a Friend

Delicious
Reddit

Digg

RSS

NEW HIGHS OF NOTE LAST WEEK

Chiquita Brands (CQB)... bananas
Cal-Maine Foods (CALM)... eggs
Tupperware (TUP)... containers
Comstock Resources (CRK)... oil & gas
Apache (APA)... oil & gas
CSX (CSX)... railroads
Genesee & Wyoming (GWR)... railroads
J.B. Hunt Transport (JBHT)... trucking
MasterCard (MA)... credit cards
Urban Outfitters (URBN)... hipster clothes
Buckle (BKE)... teenybopper clothes
Nike (NKE)... jock clothes
The TJX Companies... discount clothes
Wal-Mart (WMT)... discount everything
Netflix (NFLX)... mail-order movies
Universal (UVV)... tobacco
Chunghwa Telecom (CHT)... Taiwan telecom

Swedish Krona, Euro, Yen, Franc, Barley, Oil

NEW LOWS OF NOTE LAST WEEK

AMR (AMR)... airline
Delta (DAL)... airline
Pinnacle Airlines (PNCL)... airline
Borders Group (BGP)... books
Meredith (MDP)... publishing
Media General (MEG)... publishing
Triple Crown Media (TCMI)... publishing
International Paper (IP)... paper for publishers
PokerTek (PTEK)... still not the way to gamble
Winnebago (WGO)... RVs
Amgen (AMGN)... biotech
King Pharmaceuticals (KG)... pharma
Redhook (HOOK)... beer
Luxottica (LUX)... goggles
Motorola (MOT)... cell phones
SanDisk (SNDK)... flash memory
Sinopec Shanghai (SHI)... synthetics
CIT Group (CIT)... credit services
Orange Juice

China's stock index fell to the lowest in more than eight months [on Thursday], led by Baoshan Iron & Steel Co. after its profit dropped because of higher raw-material costs.

The CSI 300 Index, which tracks yuan-denominated A shares listed on China's two exchanges, fell 165.45, or 4.2 percent, to 3,748.92 in Shanghai, the lowest close since July 16, 2007.

China's stocks may extend their more than 30 percent decline from last year's record as the world's fastest-growing economy slows and publicly traded companies report lower earnings, according to Goldman, Sachs & Co.

– Bloomberg

Rice prices jumped 30 per cent to an all-time high on Thursday, raising fears of fresh outbreaks of social unrest across Asia where the grain is a staple food for more than 2.5bn people.

The increase came after Egypt, a leading exporter, imposed a formal ban on selling rice abroad to keep local prices down, and the Philippines announced plans for a major purchase of the grain in the international market to boost supplies. Global rice stocks are at their lowest since 1976.

Thai rice, a global benchmark, was quoted on Thursday at $760 a tonne, up about 30 per cent from the previous daily quote of about $580 a tonne, according to Reuters data. Some traders, however, said the daily jump was not as steep, adding that Thai rice had already traded at about $700 a tonne this week.

Rice prices have doubled since January, when the grain traded at about $380 a tonne, boosted by strong Asian, Middle Eastern and African demand.
– Financial Times

You Would Make 250% Gains... So Why Won't You Do It?
March 28, 2008

World Governments Are Pouring Trillions into This Industry
March 27, 2008

How to Buy Gold Bullion at a 41% Discount
March 26, 2008

Home | About DailyWealth | Premium Content | DailyWealth Archive | Contributors
DailyWealth Resources | Research Reports | Privacy Policy

Customer Service: 1-888-261-2693 – Copyright 2008 Stansberry & Associates Investment Research. All Rights Reserved. Protected by copyright laws of the United States and international treaties. This e-letter may only be used pursuant to the subscription agreement and any reproduction, copying, or redistribution (electronic or otherwise, including on the world wide web), in whole or in part, is strictly prohibited without the express written permission of Stansberry & Associates Investment Research, LLC. 1217 Saint Paul Street, Baltimore MD 21202