Posts Tagged ‘United Kingdom’
Thursday, January 12th, 2012
From The Star Dot Co Dot UK
It’s the age of the pawnbroker, says Sheffield store’s parent firm
Published on Thursday 12 January 2012
Pawnbroker Albemarle and Bond Holdings has unveiled plans to open 25 new stores and create 300 jobs.
The company, which owns the Herbert Brown store on Sheffield’s Pinstone Street, predicts 2012 will herald the ‘age of the pawnbroker,’ when the industry finally shakes off the misconceptions that surround it.
Chief executive Barry Stevenson says: “With fewer people able to get credit through the banks, pawnbroking has an opportunity to play an increasingly important role in many people’s finances, whether they need some quick cash to get the car through its MOT, or run a business and need some cash to tide them over until a customer pays.
“Unlike overdrafts and credit cards, our customers know exactly what they are paying back and when, which helps them manage their day-to-day cash flow without any hidden charges.
“The pawnbroking industry has worked hard to change its image over recent years and people outside of our existing customer base are now starting to understand how we work and recognise the value of the services we offer – it truly is the age of the pawnbroker. Since the recession, retail rates for high street locations have finally returned to a sensible level which allows us to be where our services are needed.
“However, compared to places like the US, the pawnbroking market here is still drastically under-served.
“We intend to address that through our expansion into new locations and by developing new channels to help people access our services more easily.”
Albemarle and Bond Holdings says the latest expansion will bring the number of stores operating under the Albemarle Bond and Herbert Brown brands to more than 175, in addition to 42 Herbert Brown gold buying sites.
Tags: consumer credit, Pawn Loans, pawnbroker, pawnshop, United Kingdom Posted in Pawn Ecomomics | No Comments »
Monday, October 31st, 2011
From Money-Market UK Dot Com
London’s oldest pawnbroker Suttons and Robertsons reports brisk business.
With Banks closing their doors to many customers wishing to borrow money, a growing number is turning to pawnbrokers for help with cash flow needs. And as operators report a huge upsurge in business, customers find that borrowing against valuables is quick and cost-effective short-term when compared to other forms of lending, particularly unauthorised overdrafts.
Suttons and Robertsons, London’s oldest pawnbroker reports brisk, repeat business with many of its customers returning and borrowing cash of around £2,000 on average against gold jewellery, diamonds, antiques and even works of art.
In its South Kensington store, the average loan is £6,000 and the largest amount the group has loaned to date is £250,000 but, has the funds to lend up to £1m should the need arise. It has just opened a branch in Fleet Street offering quick and discreet service to the City – so there is every chance a £1m-pound customer may walk through the door!
Director of Suttons and Robertsons Jim Tannahill has worked for the firm for near 30 years: “In the early 80’s pawnbroking saw a resurgence in popularity; but it was the start of the credit crunch around six years ago when business really started to boom. We suddenly started to see lots more Rolex and other luxury watches, large diamonds and items that were directly the trappings of wealth from years of prosperity. A typical customer was not someone to be regarded as being in financial difficulty”.
Most were simply used to a certain lifestyle and using our services to cover holidays, school fees, and even business deals, because it was becoming much easier to borrow from us than from the more traditional high street lenders.”
And growth in the industry shows no sign of slowing. But using a Pawnbroker does come with some caveats: “We are a short-term lending option” says Tannahill.
“Anyone looking for a loan term of over six months really should explore other options before using a pawnbroker. They should also be sure they will have the means to repay the loan or they will lose their goods” he adds.
To borrow from a pawnbroker you need two forms of ID. If happy with the offer, you can usually walk away with your money in 15 minutes. All pawnbrokers are required to observe the Consumer Credit Act, and there is a legal obligation for the Pawnbroker to write to anyone who defaults on their loan of their intention to sell the goods, giving them 14 days’ notice. “At Suttons and Robertsons we have a much greater than average redemption rate with only around 10-15% of customers defaulting on their loans,” says Tannahill. “People who do redeem their valued items, quite often bring the same things back in the next time they need to borrow money. We are seeing a lot of repeat customers making us more like a bank than ever before…I guess it’s just a sign of the times and we are glad to be able to offer a valued service to our customers during periods of financial difficulty,” added Tannahill.
Suttons and Robertsons has branches in four London locations – Victoria Street, Edgware Road, South Kensington’s Brompton Road, and Fleet Street. For further information visit www.suttonsandrobertsons.com
Tags: consumer credit, Pawn Loans, pawnbroker, pawnshop, Suttons and Robertsons, United Kingdom Posted in Pawn Shop Stories | No Comments »
Thursday, February 3rd, 2011
From Men Media Dot CO Dot UK
Pawnbrokers in the north west have seen a rise in demand post-Christmas as company owners look for a short-term cash injection to settle quarterly VAT and other tax bills or to meet credit card payments.
Jonathan Caplan, a partner at Manchester-based online pawnbroking service Sparkle Money, said: “A lot of our customers are business owners who want a quick fix to cash flow problems.
“We recently got a very rare viola worth £200,000 and one customer came in with a Rolex and personalised number plates. Because the banks aren’t willing to help out, people are cashing on on their high value goods.
“Last month was certainly busy, a combination of people paying off their credit card bills, meeting tax deadlines or just simply seeking cash flow.
“Many of our customers have cited not receiving enough help from banks as one of the reasons they are using services like ours.”
Sparkle Money, which targets clients who do not want to be spotted at a traditional pawnbrokers, arranges loans of between £500 and £100,000 within 48 hours, secured on valuables such as jewellery, watches, antiques, works of art and even cars.
James Bowes, a jeweller and pawnbroker in Stockport, said it had seen an increase in business during January following overspending at Christmas as well as small business owners looking for a cash injection.
The family-run business, which has also seen an increase in middle-class customers, said its pawnbroking services grew 25 per cent last month compared with January 2010 .
Paul Bowes, whose great-grandfather founded the business in 1880, said: “January is traditionally the busiest time of the year for pawnbrokers. Customers have overspent at Christmas and need that extra helping hand until pay day whereas others are facing annual tax bills.
“We have seen an increase in clients who are small business owners or are self-employed. They need a short-term cash flow boost, particularly when hit with large bills such as their quarterly VAT payments.”
Tags: consumer credit, James Bowes, Pawn Loans, pawnbroker, pawnshop, Sparkle Money, United Kingdom Posted in Pawn Ecomomics | 1 Comment »
Thursday, September 9th, 2010
From Guardian Dot Co Dot UK
By Deborah Orr
The pawnshop has been rehabilitated, and apparently this is not even such a Bad Thing. The decline of these seedy outlets was once measured in inverse proportion to the advance of the welfare state, until such businesses achieved vivid attention only when one was reading the novels of Dickens, Lawrence or Dostoevsky, or perhaps the early writings of Orwell, when he was down and out in Paris and London, or on the road to Wigan Pier.
Like the poor, naturally, pawnshops have always been with us, even if for decades now they have been thin on the ground, their unappealing window displays of little-loved jewellery sending a siren call to few. These days, they look different. The window displays are more sumptuous, for obvious reasons. But beyond the padded velvet display panels, pawnshops now resemble banks, with neatly barricaded counters looking more like the product of professional efficiency than of careful security. In recent weeks, even the gentle reader of the Telegraph has been advised to consider the pawnshop as a decent option when cash-flow problems occur, handy for securing one-off payments for school uniforms or, on occasion, school fees, and considerably cheaper than risking bank charges on unsecured overdrafts.
How crazy is that? In theory, bank loans have never been cheaper, with interest rates as close to zero as one could wish. Except that the banks are not lending and people are still borrowing. Since 2003, the number of pawnshops in the country has increased from 500 to 1,300, holding a loan book of around £192m. Britain’s biggest chain of pawnbrokers, H&T, last week announced a 71% leap in half-year profits, up to £14.5m from £8.5m in the first half of 2009. While the majority of customers are seeking loans of less than £100, and more than two-thirds live on a household income of less than £300 a week, industry insiders also report an increase in custom from businesspeople.
And the ghastly truth is that the Telegraph is right. Pawnbrokers are these days a comparatively solid option. If you go to a pawnbroker, then monthly interest payments range from five per cent to 12%, with a loan of £100 over six months attracting an APR of 70% to 200%. If you have nothing to pawn, though, and you instead go to a pay-day loan company – otherwise known as a “legal loan shark” – you could find yourself faced quickly with an APR approaching a stratospheric 3,000%. The appalling truth is that these companies too have proliferated in recent years, offering loans over the internet or via the mobile phone, and filling the gap left as bank loans became harder to secure.
The Consumer Finance Association, which represents most short-term loans firms, told the Metro newspaper this week that: “People want to borrow a smaller amount of money for their immediate needs and desires and pay it back quickly. If this is not a product people really like, then why is there the growth? We really don’t want to lend to people who can’t pay back and we don’t lend to people who aren’t in work.”
The Consumer Credit Counselling Service has another tale to tell though, as the Metro pointed out. Somebody is lending to people who aren’t in work, because the charity says that one in eight people contacting them in the first half of 2010 were claiming Jobseeker’s Allowance, owing an average of £15,412 in unsecured debt each. Poor, poor buggers. Credit crunch? We ain’t seen nothing yet.
Remarkably, however, there are strong arguments suggesting that little can be done. The government is already committed to taking action on the high interest rates that have for years been attached to credit cards, store cards and overdrafts, while plans to discuss capping the cost of credit more generally have been tabled at both the Labour and Lib Dem conferences this autumn. Yet a recent report from the Office of Fair Trading has already rejected the suggestion of price controls because suppliers might recover lost income by introducing or increasing charges for late payment or default. A further worry is that if the legal market is attacked, then truly unscrupulous lenders could flourish illegally, leaving the vulnerable open to intimidation and violence. The thought of such a scenario chills the blood.
The left-of-centre pressure group Compass is already running a campaign anyway, supporting price controls and arguing that they are already in place in Germany, France and Poland. Compass is also asking for the establishment of a People’s Bank, administered via the Post Office, or a National Credit Union. It wants all banks to commit to providing universal and affordable banking services, like the Cooperative Bank’s Cashminder account as well.
Such ideas have long been resisted by most high-street banks, which benefit from the fact that more or less every citizen is obliged to have a bank account if he or she is to exist in the real economy, but remain happy to cut people adrift if, for a time, their custom becomes unattractive.
The great irony, of course, is that it was the development of financial instruments which allowed loans to be made to people with little concern as to whether they could be paid back, that caused the credit crunch in the first place. Yet while politicians are fond of saying that the credit crunch was a worldwide phenomenon, the truth is that no nation embraced consumer borrowing more enthusiastically than Britain. It’s a way of life now, and it is out of control. People have been urged to believe that there is no shame in debt. On the contrary, people have been urged to believe that only the naive and pathologically careful lived any other way.
This present situation is terrible – legitimate operators are allowed to behave like cowboys, for fear first that if they are reined in at one point in the operation they will move their excesses to another part of their operation, and second that if they are bludgeoned into respectability, then criminals will step into the breach.
But beyond such specifics, there is a further problem – the worry that curbs on any commercial activity will “slow the recovery”. The hard-up must be allowed to get the cash to purchase what they need, whatever it costs them. So commerce of this kind flourishes. Pawnbrokers really are more straightforward and civilised than the unsecured loan guys, which is in part why they have quickly become quite respectable. Britain may well become a nation of shopkeepers again. But the shops will have three golden orbs dangling outside them, and will sell to their customers the stuff they own already. Here comes that private sector expansion. Grim.
guardian.co.uk © Guardian News and Media Limited 2010
Tags: consumer credit, Credit Crunch, Pawn Loans, pawnbroker, pawnshop, United Kingdom Posted in Pawn Ecomomics | 1 Comment »
Saturday, August 28th, 2010
From News Dot Sky Dot Com
2:32am UK, Saturday August 28, 2010
Darren Little, Midlands correspondent
Pawnbrokers are experiencing a resurgence in business with the number of shops in the UK more than doubling since 2003.
The National Association of Pawnbrokers is predicting that the trend will carry on as banks continue to deny people easy credit.
It is a huge turnaround for an industry which was thought to be dying out 20 years ago but now seems to have attracted a new generation of customers.
Paul Cockell, who set up Regency Jewellers and Pawnbrokers in Leamington Spa 10 years ago, says he has seen a 10 fold increase in business.
“The kind of things that are coming in are more expensive items, the Rolex watches, Breitlings, diamond rings as opposed to smaller bits of gold and jewellery,” he said.
Major chains of pawnbrokers are now commonplace on high streets and they are making a lot of money from their easy cash business.
H&T for example reported profits up more than 70% in the last six months.
Unsurprisingly 60% of those using pawnbrokers are unemployed, mainly pawning jewellery and watches, taking advantage of what is a straightforward service.
However, Nathan Finch, of the National Pawnbrokers Association, said there had been a gradual shift in the type of clientele now using the service as bank loans dry up.
“We haven’t seen a ridiculous rise in business but we seen a steady increase in a new type of customer looking to pawnbrokers to raise cash,” Mr Finch said.
“I think certainly as mainstream credit is harder to come by people are looking to alternatives and pawnbrokers are seen as a fast and speedy alternative.
“People historically assumed it was just working class people who came to pawnbrokers but that’s changed and it its changing more.
“It’s just really everyday day people who have bank accounts and they prefer the speed and convenience of coming to a pawnbroker.”
He added: “I think the main difference between us and mainstream finance at the moment is that we look for reasons to lend while they look for reasons not to lend.”
It is likely pawnbroking will continue to be a booming industry for the immediate future.
Many of the major brokers are already planning to open more stores.
The test of the industry will be whether its success continues when the economy picks up.
Tags: consumer credit, Credit Crunch, economic crisis, National Pawnbrokers Association, Pawn Loans, pawnbroker, pawnshop, United Kingdom Posted in Pawn Ecomomics | No Comments »
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