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Bring in your gold Grandma ... LMAO Sears & Kmart now a pawn shop

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  • Bring in your gold Grandma ... LMAO Sears & Kmart now a pawn shop

    I didn't think their customer demographic held much gold in the first place. The retail chain once a powerhouse in the US Economy is now getting into to the pawn shop business.



    CHICAGO (Reuters) – Sears Holdings Corp (SHLD.O), which expanded its layaway program to help cash-strapped consumers pay for purchases during the recession, is now helping its customers exchange their jewelry for cash as gold prices soar.
    The new service, available at the jewelry departments of Sears and Kmart stores, allows customers to send their gold and silver items to Pro Gold Network, a company that buys precious metals from consumers.
    Pro Gold makes an offer on the gold or silver and the consumer can choose to accept the offer or have the items returned, free of charge, Sears said.
    Sears provides the shipping envelop and also helps consumers track the items via websites or a toll-free customer service number.
    Sears has seen sales pressured over the past two years by the weak economy and has also lost sales to discounters like Wal-Mart Stores Inc (WMT.N) and electronics retailers like Best Buy Co Inc (BBY.N). The company did say, however, that sales improved in the first quarter.
    In 2008, it expanded its layaway program as a way to help cash-strapped consumers pay for goods.
    Advertising from companies offering gold recycling services had reached a fever pitch in late 2008 due to a global economic crisis, as the price of gold climbed above $1,000 an ounce in a flight to safety.
    Last week, gold has soared to record highs at just below $1,250 an ounce as jittery investors fretted over sovereign risks and inflation.
    Bullion is still far away from its inflation-adjusted record at over $2,200, analysts said. In 2001, gold was trading at just $250 an ounce.
    (Reporting by Brad Dorfman and Frank Tang, editing by Dave Zimmerman)


    http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20100517/bs_nm/us_sears

  • #2
    Re: Bring in your gold Grandma ... LMAO Sears & Kmart now a pawn shop

    What's interesting about this, at least to me, is that here you have a couple of retailers accepting gold as an indirect means of purchasing goods. Sure, they are converting it to fiat (likely at a high premium), but they're doing it real-time on premises. What next? Will car dealerships someday exchange gold bricks for fiat for cars?

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    • #3
      Re: Bring in your gold Grandma ... LMAO Sears & Kmart now a pawn shop

      The gold bubble is just beginning. This is on my list of indicators of a bubble forming. When my barber and cab driver tell me to invest in gold, I will be selling gold.

      Isn't that part of everyone's general plan who lurks here?

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      • #4
        Re: Bring in your gold Grandma ... LMAO Sears & Kmart now a pawn shop

        I wouldn't say its a sign of a bubble. Its just a large retailer jumping on the "Cash4Gold" bandwagon, which is actually the opposite of what you'd think you'd see during a bubble (avg. J6P's are supposed to be buying the stuff en masse, not selling it en masse in order for a bubble or boom to occur, actually I think EJ touched on this a year or so ago when the "Cash4Gold" peeps started to show up...).

        Using your barber or cab driver as a "alarm" is still a pretty good idea IMO. I know my barber looked at me like I was an idiot when I happened to bring up buying precious metals...

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        • #5
          Re: Bring in your gold Grandma ... LMAO Sears & Kmart now a pawn shop

          The confluence of failing retail meeting the pawning 'middleclass'.

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          • #6
            Re: Bring in your gold Grandma ... LMAO Sears & Kmart now a pawn shop

            They are not doing it real-time, if you read the article. They are sending it off to a third party who then makes an offer to purchase. Sears gets a percentage and the consumer gets the cash while they're standing in the store with all the tempting merchandise around.

            This cash-for-gold thing can't last too much longer. At some point all the broke sellers will have pawned all their jewelry. We should see the prices rise as this portion of the supply dries up.

            I'm surprised that the competition between all these gold buying outlets isn't tightening margins. Maybe it is, but I still get the feeling these places pay pennies on the dollar. Seems like someone would want to be the Wal-Mart of gold jewelry purchasing (Wal-Mart, perhaps?), cutting margins to the bone and running most or all of the others out of business. "Bring us your offer from any other gold buyer and we'll beat it by 10%, cash on the spot..." Something like that.

            -Jimmy

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            • #7
              Re: Bring in your gold Grandma ... LMAO Sears & Kmart now a pawn shop

              Originally posted by Beavus View Post
              When my barber and cab driver tell me to invest in gold, I will be selling gold.

              Isn't that part of everyone's general plan who lurks here?
              It would depend on how smart your barber and cab driver were. Perhaps they were buying gold before you.

              Gold Pot.gif

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              • #8
                Re: Bring in your gold Grandma ... LMAO Sears & Kmart now a pawn shop


                Ed.

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                • #9
                  Re: Bring in your gold Grandma ... LMAO Sears & Kmart now a pawn shop

                  Originally posted by don View Post
                  The confluence of failing retail meeting the pawning 'middleclass'.
                  Brilliance in brevity my friend. Well said!

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                  • #10
                    Re: Bring in your gold Grandma ... LMAO Sears & Kmart now a pawn shop

                    Originally posted by Beavus View Post
                    The gold bubble is just beginning. This is on my list of indicators of a bubble forming. When my barber and cab driver tell me to invest in gold, I will be selling gold.

                    Isn't that part of everyone's general plan who lurks here?
                    You forgot the cover of Time magazine but by then it's probably way too late.

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                    • #11
                      Re: Bring in your gold Grandma ... LMAO Sears & Kmart now a pawn shop

                      Originally posted by FRED View Post



                      Unless it's remonetized and the price is set at a high valuation. Then it's no longer a commodity subject to bubble cycyles. I'm not saying this will definitely happen, but the more I think about it, the more I believe it can be a strong possibility.

                      Think about it. Other than debt and enormous unfunded liabilities, what else does the West possess?

                      Gold.

                      US: 8K tons, EU: 10K tons. BRIC? They have less than 2.5K combined.

                      The irony is that one day, the Western Governments may have to resort to the same actions as those Sears retail customers: i.e. "pawn" their gold. Yet they will make sure the value skyrockets, and holds, until the last blood sucking baby boomer* is in the grave.

                      Just a crazy theory.... but I just don't see any viable productive (taxable) economic growth on the horizon that could tame these debt imbalances the West possess.

                      *(No offense baby boomers)
                      Last edited by gnk; May 17, 2010, 07:45 PM.

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                      • #12
                        Re: Bring in your gold Grandma ... LMAO Sears & Kmart now a pawn shop

                        Originally posted by Beavus View Post
                        The gold bubble is just beginning. This is on my list of indicators of a bubble forming. When my barber and cab driver tell me to invest in gold, I will be selling gold.

                        Isn't that part of everyone's general plan who lurks here?

                        You've got it backwards. It's a bubble when people are lining up to buy gold, not to sell it!

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                        • #13
                          Re: Bring in your gold Grandma ... LMAO Sears & Kmart now a pawn shop

                          FYI, I have family in Portugal and this weekend I had some relatives who were recently shocked by the crazy ammount of 'Cash4Gold' like advertizements on TV recently, and also pawn shops opening up all over the place in Lisbon in particular for buying gold. Apparently, this is something never before seen in Portugal.

                          Portugal is a country whose population has historically valued gold and understands that gold is money (and not the other way around), but these are desperate times, and people have to eat and buy medicine.

                          Portugal is one of the few countries in Europe with a very high percentage (90.9%) of its reserves in gold . They never fell for the ol' USD printing press fraud. Unfortunately, all that gold (some ~14 Billion worth) is still nowhere near enough to address its massive ~134 Billion debts.

                          On another note, ironically, the citizens can NOT buy gold bars from any financial institution like they can in Canada and other countries. They are limited to buying what they can get from jewlery stores or coin shops in relatively small denominations and subject to substantial mark-ups as a result.

                          Adeptus
                          Warning: Network Engineer talking economics!

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                          • #14
                            Re: Bring in your gold Grandma ... LMAO Sears & Kmart now a pawn shop

                            Originally posted by Adeptus View Post
                            FYI, I have family in Portugal and this weekend I had some relatives who were recently shocked by the crazy ammount of 'Cash4Gold' like advertizements on TV recently, and also pawn shops opening up all over the place in Lisbon in particular for buying gold. Apparently, this is something never before seen in Portugal.

                            Portugal is a country whose population has historically valued gold and understands that gold is money (and not the other way around), but these are desperate times, and people have to eat and buy medicine.

                            Portugal is one of the few countries in Europe with a very high percentage (90.9%) of its reserves in gold . They never fell for the ol' USD printing press fraud. Unfortunately, all that gold (some ~14 Billion worth) is still nowhere near enough to address its massive ~134 Billion debts.

                            On another note, ironically, the citizens can NOT buy gold bars from any financial institution like they can in Canada and other countries. They are limited to buying what they can get from jewlery stores or coin shops in relatively small denominations and subject to substantial mark-ups as a result.

                            Adeptus
                            Portugal's gold holdings are very impressive. Over 300 tons - much more per capita than the UK.

                            You should be able to buy gold at Portugal's Central Bank. I believe it is by EU directive that Central Banks buy and sell gold retail. I could be wrong, but I know the Central Bank of Greece does this.

                            Portugal's gold as a percentage of FX reserves are the highest in the world. Greece is #2, and the US is #3. see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gold_reserve

                            As for your concern that the gold value today may not be enough. At much higher valuations, 10K plus, even 20K... the story changes.

                            I find it hard to believe that the EU and US will not eventually resort to extreme gold valuations to mitigate their debt issues. There is no other viable solution. Watch the BRIC nations - they are scrambling to increase their gold reserves just for this reason (IMHO.)

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                            • #15
                              Re: Bring in your gold Grandma ... LMAO Sears & Kmart now a pawn shop

                              Originally posted by FRED View Post




                              Ah. Just so happens I've been thinking of this particular little graphic.


                              A lighthouse is a tower, building, or framework designed to emit light from a system of lamps and lenses or, in older times, from a fire and used as an aid to navigation and to pilots at sea or on inland waterways.
                              Lighthouses are used to mark dangerous coastlines, hazardous shoals and reefs, and safe entries to harbors and can also assist in aerial navigation. Once widely used, the number of operational lighthouses has declined due to the expense of maintenance and replacement by modern electronic navigational aids.
                              I'll thank you to blink the light every now and again, as the weather and the waves can tend to distort even the well prepared on occasion.

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