I
imagine there is as much denial in Australia as here in NZ. For those
not directly affected it's “I'm alright, Jack!”
Pawnbrokers
Thrive as Poorest Aussies Bear Brunt of Slowdown
On
a sidewalk in Sydney’s Bankstown neighborhood, where unemployment
is more than double Australia’s average, Dave Cox pulls the starter
cord of an edge trimmer to prove it works as he tries to sell it to
pawnbroker Cash Converters International Ltd. (CCV)
1
July 2013
“The
economy is pretty crap right now,” 38-year-old truck driver Cox,
who’s between jobs, said after he offloaded the snipper for A$30
($28). In the past month, he sold an iPhone and got a loan at Cash
Converters, whose sales last year grew faster than any other
Australian retailer that didn’t make a major acquisition. “It
just feels bad out there.”
While
a mining-investment boom has sustained Australia’s growth and
employment, many like Cox have missed out and instead seen finances
stretched by high housing costs, driving them into the arms of
pawnbrokers. Central bank efforts to plug the gap with record-low
interest rates are bypassing lower-income households, which account
for just 6 percent of the nation’s home buyers, while government
and opposition pledges to return the budget to surplus mean support
for the most marginalized has declined as welfare payments stagnate.
“I’m
not surprised,” Bernie Fraser, whose tenure as Reserve Bank of
Australia governor from 1989 to 1996 included the last recession in
1991, said of the increasing use of pawnbrokers. “I think that’s
pretty heavily correlated with a lot of people doing things tough,
and that’s going to continue I believe.”
Gillard
Ousted
The
economy switched from a strength to a liability for the ruling Labor
Party, which last week dumped Julia Gillard as leader in favor of
Kevin Rudd. The new prime minister, who reclaimed the post after he
was ousted by Gillard three years ago, signaled economic management
will be central to his bid to reel in an almost two-year lead in
polls for the opposition.
Cash
Converters -- which offers pawnbroking, payday loans, goods sales and
installment loans -- recorded the fastest growth of any Australian
retailer with more than $100 million in sales last year that didn’t
see revenue boosted by a major purchase, data compiled by Bloomberg
show. Revenue jumped 26 percent in 2012. In contrast, sales at the
country’s largest electrical-goods retailer, Harvey Norman Holdings
Ltd. (HVN), fell 7.6 percent.
“Part
of why we’ve got that growth could well be the economy,” said
Peter Cumins, managing director at Perth-based Cash Converters, who
added that store locations are chosen for proximity to households
with stretched finances. “Certainly, we are recession proof in that
regard.”
Outlook
Sours
Australia
has posted the developed world’s quickest growth rates as demand
from China fueled a once-in-a-century mining-investment boom. That’s
souring as China’s outlook deteriorates and the Aussie dollar’s
strength forces companies including Ford Motor Co. to cut workers and
close plants.
Economists
at Macquarie Group Ltd., Australia’s largest investment bank, see a
40 percent chance of recession in the next 12 months -- defined
locally as two consecutive quarters of contraction -- even after the
central bank cut rates to a record-low 2.75 percent. Saul Eslake,
chief Australia economist for Bank of America Merrill Lynch in
Melbourne, projects a 25 percent chance for 2015.
“We
expect the RBA to cut further -- to as low as 1 percent in the event
of a recession -- and it may need to undertake a ‘Down Under QE,’”
Eslake wrote in a June 14 note to clients, referring to a local
version of the Federal Reserve’s quantitative-easing policy to
support economic growth.
New
Customers
South
of Melbourne, Victoria’s state capital, some of pawnbroker Joe
Yammouni’s customers are coming to his store, Cash Deal, on the
Mornington Peninsula for the first time since he opened in 2001.
“I’m
talking your average family members who you wouldn’t have seen
before, who come in and say ‘I’m so embarrassed for being here,’”
he said. “Things are tight at the moment; they just get unexpected
bills or payments come through and they have to use our services.”
A
decline in new electronic product prices is compounding difficulties
for people selling goods for cash, said Yammouni, 41, who has worked
in the industry since 1994. A A$3,000 TV that could be resold for
A$1,000 five years ago now retails for about A$400, and as a reseller
today, “you’d take whatever you could get,” he said.
One
in eight Australians and one in six children live below the poverty
line, according to a report last year by the Australian Council of
Social Service. The group defines the level as 50 percent of median
disposable income, a standard measure of financial hardship in
wealthy countries, it says.
Jobless
Payments
That
was A$358 per week for a single adult in 2010 and A$752 for a couple
with two children, the October 2012 Acoss report showed. Australia’s
unemployed receive A$248.50 a week for as long as they demonstrate an
active search for work, a payment that’s been indexed to inflation
for more than 30 years.
An
increase beyond consumer-price growth is unlikely as Australia’s
slowdown curbs tax revenue and both major political parties vow to
return the budget to balance.
“The
existing government, and even more so the incoming government, are
making it clear they’re not going to use that fiscal-policy
instrument, which is crazy really,” said Fraser, 72, who was also
secretary to the Treasury from 1984 to 1989. “Monetary policy
doesn’t have any distributional consequences.”
Investors
are pricing in a 23 percent chance the RBA will lower the benchmark
rate by a quarter percentage point to 2.5 percent at tomorrow’s
policy meeting in Brisbane.
Uneven
Benefits
While
a home owner with a A$300,000 mortgage is about A$300 a month better
off since the RBA started cutting rates in November 2011, few
lower-income households are benefiting. The proportion of Australian
homebuyers in the bottom 40 percent of incomes is just 6 percent,
according to the Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute.
Fiona
Guthrie, executive director of Financial Counselling Australia in
Brisbane, Queensland’s state capital, said the use of short-term
loans is spreading. While industry rates vary, interest charges and
fees can equate to as much as 912.5 percent annualized, according to
the Melbourne-based Consumer Action Law Centre. That compares with
about 15 percent for an unsecured personal loan from one of the
nation’s biggest banks.
“Payday
loans just defer an inevitable financial crisis,” Guthrie said.
“They trap people in debt” and aren’t “a benefit to them.”
The
Australian government, responding to criticism of the payday-loan
industry, introduced a cap beginning today that prevents lenders from
charging more than 20 percent upfront and 4 percent a month in fees
for the life of the loan.
More
Loans
Cash
Converters also has outlets in the U.K., Spain and Dubai, where it
targets arriving and departing expatriates trading second-hand goods.
Its personal-loan book in Australia increased by 25 percent in the
six months through December to A$84.2 million. Its cash-advance
business rose 7.1 percent to A$126.5 million loaned, while the number
of active customers climbed 16 percent. Store sales grew 6.5 percent.
Cash
Converters shares jumped 6.1 percent to A$1.13 at 1:23 p.m. in Sydney
and have surged 73 percent in the past 12 months, versus about a 40
percent gain for the S&P/ASX 200 Retailing Index.
Australia’s
economy grew 2.5 percent in the first quarter from a year earlier,
the slowest pace in almost two years. While unemployment was 5.5
percent in May, it was 10 percent or higher in 9.6 percent of the
nation’s 1,402 regions during the fourth quarter, according to
government data. The level was 14 percent for Bankstown in Sydney’s
west.
Businesses
Squeezed
Mortgage
arrears rose in March -- indicating lower borrowing costs aren’t
sufficient for some households -- and a record number of the nation’s
companies went bust in April.
Grant
Russell has had “quite a lot of business people who are literally
financing their staff” by pawning personal possessions such as
family jewelry during the past 12 months at his Cash Centre store in
the outer Melbourne town of Frankston.
Russell,
who also heads the Victorian Independent Pawnbrokers Association and
is a 24-year industry veteran, said the value of items is “dropping
quite rapidly,” and stores are becoming more selective in what
they’ll accept. Many are so full of power tools from tradesmen
waiting on delayed payments that they will no longer offer credit on
the equipment, he said.
The
practice of hocking goods shot to prominence in the past five years
with the advent of television programs such as “Pawn Stars,”
which first aired in 2009 as the U.S. economy struggled to emerge
from the deepest recession since the 1930s. It was followed a year
later by “Hardcore Pawn,” set in Detroit, a city that’s
battling potential bankruptcy.
‘Weird
and Wonderful’
Russell
said the American programs fueled misconceptions in Australia that
people offered “weird and wonderful things” to hock. “It’s
bread and butter items that people bring in: video games, flat-panel
TVs, laptop computers, always there’s a few power tools,” he
said.
Outside
Cash Converters in Bankstown, Cox said he wasn’t surprised to learn
the pawnbroker is Australia’s best-performing retailer. A staff
member told him during the sale of the edge trimmer that the iPhone
he brought in the prior week had been sold for almost double what he
was paid.
“That’s
business and they do it well,” Cox said.
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