SACRAMENTO, CALIF. - In a sputtering economy, cash-strapped consumers are flocking to a new way of getting quick, short-term loans: online pawn stores.
It's yet another instance of online retailers pouncing on the turf of a brick-and-mortar industry.
For consumers, it means that instead of plopping a castoff wedding ring, camera or china platter onto the counter of a local pawnshop, you do the entire transaction online and by mail.
The appeal: Online pawning is relatively quick, completely private, and there's no stigma of walking into a public place with your personal possessions to hock. And if you default on your loan, nothing gets reported to a credit bureau.
With names like PawnGo and ePawnMarket, these online competitors are changing the way pawnshops meet their customers.
"It's the convenience," said Ramon Carder, a Citrus Heights, Calif., resident who recently tried PawnGo.com for the first time when he pawned $2,400 in silver coins. "You don't have to lug all that stuff to a pawnshop that's not always in the nicest neighborhood."
Carder, a former U.S. Army soldier who uses his pawn proceeds to play the stock market, said he typically gets roughly half the value -- $1,200 -- for his coins from a local pawnshop. PawnGo paid $1,800, and the loan amount was deposited in Carder's bank account the day after he FedExed the coins to the company's Colorado headquarters.
He's paying $108 a month in interest for six months; when he pays off the loan and interest, his coins will be shipped back at no charge.