Cash-strapped young South Koreans turn to pawn shops, using tech gadgets as collateral

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Pawn shops enjoying a boom is a worrying sign of a deteriorating economic conditions or the growth of credit-poor consumers, experts say.

Pawn shops enjoying a boom is a worrying sign of deteriorating economic conditions or the growth of credit-poor consumers, experts say.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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- Pawn shops are often seen as relics of the past, from a time when instant cash loans were not so readily available with just a few clicks. But though many perished, a new breed of shops has emerged, catering to clients who possess expensive gadgets or luxury goods but are temporarily cash-strapped.

Mr Lee Yong-seok’s shop in Seoul’s bustling Hongdae specialises in loans secured against tech gadgets. In contrast to the traditional image of pawn shops with iron bars and stringent security, his shop resembles an ordinary store, featuring boutique-style showroom cases displaying luxury wallets, smartphones and tablet PCs. Clients are mostly in their 20s and 30s.

“They usually borrow a small amount of money, between 200,000 won (S$215) and 300,000 won, leaving behind their laptops or digital cameras as collateral. More university students and jobseekers in their 20s have visited in recent years,” he said.

Mr Han Jung-woo, a 35-year-old who runs a small online marketing business in Seoul, recently took out a loan of 2 million won from a pawn shop, using computer monitors and laptops as collateral. “Clients don’t pay upfront after signing a contract, which creates a cash crunch,” he said, adding that the loans are to cover staff costs.

For photographers or video producers, a visit to a pawn shop can be a way to unlock their investment in equipment – high-function cameras and other filming equipment that cost millions of won – to ride out a temporary cash shortage.

Mr Cho, a 31-year-old photographer who has a small studio in Seongsu-dong, eastern Seoul, said: “I received small loans at several pawn shops by offering some old cameras to cope with additional expenses needed to operate the shop.”

As at 2022, there were about 1,150 pawn shops nationwide, and around 200 of them are known to accept electronic devices from borrowers, according to a consumer loan finance association.

The balance of outstanding collateral loans at 8,775 lending institutions nationwide, including pawn shops, surged 12.3 per cent to 8.54 trillion won in 2022 from 7.61 trillion won in 2021, government data showed.

Pawn shops serve as a last resort for underserved and marginalised consumers who are unable to access credit from first- or second-tier lending institutions, particularly due to poor credit records.

This includes foreigners who have just settled down in South Korea and have yet to establish a favourable credit rating.

Pawn shops do not look at a client’s credit score, they check only the client’s identity card and the authenticity and market value of the item being offered as collateral or to be pawned.

Foreigners who present their passports or foreign residence cards can receive small loans secured on their collateral, according to Mr Lee.

A fast-track lending process that leaves no trace on one’s credit history is another plus.

However, pawn shop loans could carry substantially higher interest rates above the legal cap of 20 per cent a year. Some pawn shops were found to charge around 3 per cent interest per month, or 36 per cent per annum.

It is significantly higher than the average interest rate of 5.23 per cent to 5.78 per cent per annum charged by the top five lenders in South Korea – KB Kookmin, Shinhan, Woori, Hana and NongHyup – in April, according to data from the Korea Federation of Banks.

That pawn shops are enjoying a boom is a worrying sign of deteriorating economic conditions in the country or the growth of credit-poor consumers, experts say.

Professor Kang Kyung-hoon, a business administration expert from Dongguk University, said: “The so-called ‘pawn shop’ finance usually thrives in a poor economy where there is no sufficient financial support from first-tier and secondary lenders. Its prevalence is not an ideal situation, as it signifies the limited role of institutional finance.”
THE KOREA HERALD/ASIA NEWS NETWORK

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