Published June 27, 2009 06:38 pm -
Pawn shop business remains hot regardless of economic climate
Roni Toldanes
THOMASVILLE — Quick: What's the most bizarre item ever pawned in Thomasville? David Hufstetler, laughing, wondered if it was that horse he accepted five or six years ago. Or, well, perhaps the set of dentures pawned by an elderly man who pulled it out, quickly accepted $300 and still left the store smiling, toothless.
Whatever it is, Hufstetler, owner of American Pawn on Jackson Street, mentioned the horse to emphasize that, once upon a time, the business that he started in 1992 used to offer quick cash for almost anything of value.
Hufstetler chuckled, shook his head and recalled loaning only a few hundred bucks for a horse any buckaroo would surely love. He figured it was a great deal – until he realized he forgot to consider the expensive boarding costs to keep the animal alive.
These days, he said, his business rule is quite simple: He will accept anything of value “as long as it doesn’t have to be fed.”
Good economy, bad economy, dour economy, everything is all the same for Hufstetler. But he prefers a climate where people are not imprisoned by temporary cash-flow problems. It’s a profitable business when customers do not default on their loans.
Hufstetler, during a lengthy interview at his office, sought to debunk the public’s misconception about pawn shops. His customers are all over the economic ladder, he said. He offers loans from as little as $10 to as much as tens of thousands of dollars.
There’s a degree of confidentiality, he said, but one would be surprised about the financial wherewithal of some of his customers in Thomasville. Some residents have brought in Harley-Davidsons, expensive boats and there was even one who dangled his Rolls Royce for a quick loan. “We’ve got customers that are considered to be very wealthy,” Hufstetler said.
In general, Hufstetler said, most of the pawned items were the traditional jewelries and the usual playthings that are discarded by their owners during a recession. Visit the store and you’ll see golf clubs, guitars, iPods, electronic keyboards, large-screen televisions, fishing rods, boxes of tools. There's a Rolex Yacht Master, a diamond solitaire valued at $5,000, digital cameras … and the list goes on.
There are no accurate figures on the number of pawn shops operating in the Georgia since they are licensed by local municipalities, not by a state agency. But officials of pawn associations estimate there are more than 800 in the Peach State. In Thomasville alone, there are at least three “traditional” pawn shops.
At American Pawn, guns and jewelry are the hottest sellers nowadays. Hufstetler said his Thomasville store is the biggest retailer of firearms in Thomas County, selling 400 to 500 annually. The store displays about 800 to 1,000 firearms, including more than 400 rifles and shotguns. Their typical customers are hunters, sports shooters and folks interested in home defense.
The store sells almost every brand, every size. They have many "Saturday Night Specials" — pocket-size pistols that make others wonder if they are sufficient to make rats tremble in fear. But they also have a Barrett M82A1 .50-caliber that would surely scare off even scarecrows. It's a rifle that easily defeats all levels of body armors and cuts through steel plates. The price tag: $11,500.
Rifle is too much for you? Check out their small-caliber handguns on display. A customer, for example, pointed at the compact-size Taurus 9mm at the display shelf. It was selling for $379. It’s pink. The customer, a local martial arts expert, giggled as he imagined a would-be robber's reaction after seeing the brightly colored gun. He said he would tell the bad guy; “Yeah, it’s a pink gun. Now, do you feel lucky? Well, do ya, punk?”
Bad guys beware. Hufstetler said that pawn shops are not dumping grounds for stolen items. Despite their somewhat shady reputations in decades past, which Hefstetler describes as “just slightly higher than that of criminal attorneys,” today’s pawn shops cooperate with law enforcement, often sending out weekly reports of pawned items.
Hustetler estimates that only less than one percent of items taken to pawnshops turn out to be stolen. Customers are required to provide a government-issued ID. They also have to sign paperwork. It’s a virtual confession for thieves, he said.
Hufstetler said majority of the American public have a preconceived notion about pawn shops. “We’ve been known as the second oldest profession,” Hufstetler said, “and you know what the first one is.” He didn’t mention the culturally ubiquitous job practiced by women who played the piano in a house of ill repute.