Dictionary Definition
pawnbroker n : a person who lends money at
interest in exchange for personal property that is deposited as
security
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
Translations
person who makes monetary loans at interest,
taking personal property as security
- Dutch: pandjesbaas
- Finnish: panttilainaamon pitäjä
- French: prêteur sur gages , prêteuse sur gages
Extensive Definition
A pawnbroker offers monetary loans in exchange
for an item of value to the given pawn broker. The word pawn is
derived from the Latin pignus, for
pledge, and the items having been pawned to the broker are
themselves called pledges or pawns, or simply the collateral.
How the pawning process works
Within a certain contractual period of time, the pawner of an item may purchase it back for the amount of the loan plus some agreed upon fee. If the time elapses without payment, the pawnbroker is allowed to sell the pledged item to recoup the amount of the loan, which may have only been a fraction of its actual market value. Pawnbrokers often have a large number of formerly pawned objects for sale at their place of business, called a pawnshop, whereby they may recoup money that had been loaned out on an item subsequently forfeited by a pawn customer.Pawnbrokers can also purchase an item outright
for cash with no repayment
expected; these sometimes need to be held for up to 30 days by law
before they can be offered for sale. Because of the risk to the
pawnbroker of receiving stolen property, and the interests of the
community in not allowing a legitimate businessman to act as a
fence,
laws to protect both these parties exist in some jurisdictions in
the United
States through the means of a hold placed on an item purchased
by a pawnbroker. If a hold law is in effect, it will last up to
approximately 30 days, depending on location. Such regulation is
necessarily imperfect. Unscrupulous pawnbrokers buy goods from
strangers with few questions, or turn a blind eye to certain
customers, despite state laws in the United States that require a
state issued ID card, Social Security number and physical
description of a customer. Some local governments in the United
States require a picture or thumbprint to be taken of the pawn
customer. Though many people believe that pawn shops are filled
with stolen items studies have shown that it is less than 1% and
though some claim that the nature of the business necessitates that
some of the items will be stolen goods--many stolen items are just
too common or too difficult for the authorities or even theft
victims to identify and prove former ownership.
Items of value
Pawnbrokers are often willing to take in many types of items including jewelry, electronics, musical instruments, firearms, vehicles and tools. Gold is considered an item that is never to be turned away, because even if the item is of relatively low value it can still be sold in bulk to a smelter as scrap gold.When an item is pawned the pawn broker will
typically loan out however much money the customer needs, though
considerably less than the resale value of the collateral. Of
course no pawnbroker is going to loan more than the value of an
item being pledged and in most all cases it will be a fraction of
the value. This is so the pawnbroker can make money on the item in
the event the customer doesn't come back for the item and the
pawnbroker must resell it.
The required time between forfeiture and sale of
an item is usually 30 days plus a grace period that may be as long
as three months. For some items, such as electronics that drop in
value as new and improved models come out, pawnbrokers must offer a
lower loan to be certain that they can recover the costs associated
with the loan while making a profit. Other items, such as gold,
must be valued in keeping with the daily fluctuations in market
value.
History
Ancient world
In the west, pawnbroking existed in the ancient Greek and Roman Empires. Most contemporary Western law on the subject is derived from the Roman jurisprudence. As the empire spread its culture, pawnbroking went with it.Likewise, in the East, the business model existed
in China 3000 years ago no different than today, through the ages
strictly regulated by Imperial or other authorities.
Middle Ages
In spite of early Roman Catholic Church prohibitions against charging interest on loans, there is some evidence that the Franciscans were permitted to begin the practice as an aid to the poor.In England the pawnshop came in with William
the Conqueror, with an Italian name, Lombard. In 1338 Edward III pawned
his jewels to the Lombards to raise money for his war with France.
King Henry V did much the same in 1415.
The Lombards were not a popular class and
Henry
VII Tudor harried them a good deal. In the very first year of
James I
Stuart an Act against Brokers was passed and remained on the
statute-book until Queen
Victoria had been on the throne thirty-five years. It was aimed
at the many counterfeit brokers in London. This type of broker was
evidently regarded as a fence. It is also known the queen Isabel of
Spain pawned her jewelry in order to send Christopher Columbus out
to what he believed was going to be western India.
Modern time
The Chinese conditions are decidedly favorable to a borrower. He may, as a rule, take three years to redeem his property, and he cannot be charged a higher rate than 3% per annum. In the United Kingdom typical high street pawn interest rates vary between 5% to 12% gross per month and the average annual equivalent rate is 85%.The pawnbroker in the United
States is generally subject to considerable legal restriction.
Each state has its own regulations regarding pawnbrokers, generally
regulating the amount of interest that is allowed to be charged on
a collateral loan. In Massachusetts,
a 2007 Boston Globe
investigation suggested 10% monthly interest was not uncommon. In
the state of New
York, interest at pawnshops is limited to 4% per month.
Symbol
The pawnbroker's symbol is three spheres suspended from a bar. The three sphere symbol is attributed to the Medici Family of Florence, Italy, owing to its symbolic meaning of Lombard. This refers to the Italian province of Lombardy, where pawn shop banking originated under the name of Lombard banking. The three golden spheres were originally the symbol which medieval Lombard merchants hung in front of their houses, and not the arms of the Medici family. It has been conjectured that the golden spheres were originally three flat yellow effigies of byzants, or gold coins, laid heraldically upon a sable field, but that they were converted into spheres to better attract attention.Most European towns called the pawn shop the
"Lombard". The House of Lombard
was a banking family in medieval London, England. According
to legend, a Medici employed by Charles
the Great slew a giant using three bags of rocks. The three
ball symbol became the family crest. Since the Medicis were so
successful in the financial, banking, and moneylending industries,
other families also adopted the symbol. Throughout the Middle Ages,
coats of arms bore
three balls, orbs, plates, discs, coins and more as symbols of
monetary success. Pawnbrokers (and their detractors) joke that the
three balls mean "Two to one, you won't get your stuff back".
Saint Nicholas is the patron saint
of pawnbrokers. The symbol has also been attributed to the story of
Nicholas and the three bags of gold.
Pawn shops in Asia
In Hong Kong it
follows the Chinese tradition, and the counter of the shop is
typically higher than the average person for security. A customer
can only hold up his hand to offer belongings and there is a wooden
screen between the door and the counter for customers' privacy. The
symbol of a pawn shop in Hong Kong is a bat (the animal) holding a coin (Cantonese: fuk shu tiu kam
chin; in Chinese letters: 蝠鼠吊金錢). The bat signifies fortune and the
coin signifies benefits.
In Japan, the usual
symbol for a pawn shop is a circled digit seven, as "shichi", the
Japanese word for seven, sounds similar to the word for "pawn"
(質).
In India, the Marwari
Jain community
pioneered the pawnbroking business but today this phenmena will be
changed this worked dne by many agent who calling my a
saudagar.they play role as a freely not in shop style. they reached
needy people's home & motivate them to invovling in system . It
is a general practice to run a pawn shop as part of jewelry store.
Gold, silver, and diamonds are especially accepted as
collateral.
Pawnbroking is also a traditional trade in
Thailand.
See also
Sources and external links
References
pawnbroker in German: Pfandhaus
pawnbroker in French: Prêt sur gage
pawnbroker in Korean: 전당포
pawnbroker in Italian: Monte di pietà
pawnbroker in Dutch: Lommerd
pawnbroker in Japanese: 質屋
pawnbroker in Norwegian: Pantelåner
pawnbroker in Finnish: Panttilainaamo
pawnbroker in Swedish: Pantbank
pawnbroker in Vietnamese: Cầm đồ
pawnbroker in Chinese: 典當業
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Realtor, Shylock, bank, banker, bill broker, broker, cambist, cotton broker, credit
union, diamond broker, discount broker, estate agent, finance
company, finance corporation, furniture broker, grain broker, hock
shop, hotel broker, insurance broker, land broker, lender, lending institution, loan
officer, loan shark, loaner, money broker, money
changer, moneylender, moneymonger, mortgage
broker, mortgage company, mortgage holder, mortgagee, note broker,
pawnbrokery,
pawnshop, real estate
agent, real estate broker, ship broker, stockbroker, usurer