AP Biz Writer on Good Stocks to Buy: 'One Good Bet: The Jobless Aren't Likely to Find Work Anytime Soon'
While Associated Press Economics writers like Christopher Rugaber and Paul Wiseman, as seen in a post this morning (at NewBusters; at BizzyBlog), talk of "baffled economists" and a job market that is "defying history," one AP writer, in discussing stocks which have done well in this economy, has revealed what employment prospects really are with quite un-baffling certainty from the point of view of those who have to put their money where their expectations are, i.e., investors.
The wire service's Bernard Condon cited a pawn shop operator, a payday lender, a debt-collection firm, and a rent-to-own outfit as companies which have outperformed the market and are expected to continue doing so. The reason for the expectation is found in the title of this post, which is also seen in the following excerpt from Condon's composition:
How bad is it? Pawn shops, payday lenders are hot
As the jobless rate inches up and the economic recovery sputters, investors looking for a few good stocks may want to follow the money - or rather the TV, the beloved Fender guitar, the baubles from grandma, the wedding ring.
Profits at pawn shop operator Ezcorp Inc. have jumped by an average 46 percent annually for five years. The stock has doubled from a year ago, to about $38.
... In investing, it's often better to focus on what you can safely predict, even if that safety is found in companies that thrive on hard times. One good bet: The jobless aren't likely to find work anytime soon. And companies profiting from their bad fortune will continue to do so.
B-B-B-But I thought the president told us three months ago that "We are turning the corner." And of course, there's been no shortage of Associated Press and other wire service reports telling us that the economy is on the "rebound" and that the joblessness problem is a result of "temporary factors," blah-blah-blah-blech.
Not so, as Condon explains, because when it comes to putting one's money where the greatest expected returns are, the companies whose prospects are bright are those which work with the financially at risk or cater to the growing number of Americans who have become misers by necessity:
- Stock in payday lender Advance America Cash Advance Centers (AEA) has doubled from a year ago, to just under $8. Rival Cash America International Inc. (CSH) is up 64 percent, to $58. ...
- Profits at Encore Capital Group, a debt collector that targets people with unpaid credit cards bills and other debts, rose nearly 50 percent last year. Encore has faced class action suits in several states, including California, over its collection practices. The Minnesota attorney general filed a suit in March. No matter. The stock (ECPG) is up 59 percent from a year ago, to more than $30.
- Stock in Rent-A-Center (RCII), which leases televisions, couches, computers and more, is up 57 percent from a year ago to nearly $32. Nine of the 11 analysts covering the company say it will rise further and that investors should buy it.
The idea of investing in companies catering to the hard-up might not be palatable to some people. But it is profitable.
Memo to Chris Rugaber and Paul Wiseman: It's also not baffling and certainly doesn't defy history.
Cross-posted at BizzyBlog.com.
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Comments
Hey, like Michelle said,
Submitted by ant on Sat, 07/09/2011 - 11:35pm.
Hey, like Michelle said, "..careers are fluid now..", so get some skin in the game and sell that beautiful guitar for Ramen and eggs. How's that 'hope and change' workin' out for ya?
Can you imagine
Submitted by bkeyser on Sun, 07/10/2011 - 8:26am.
what the media coverage for the last two+ years would have been with all things being equal and John McCain in office? If Sarah Palin had been traveling to points unknown with her kids while stocks in pawn shops were raking in money? If John McCain had opened a new war in Libya and held a captured terrorist suspect on board a Navy ship for two months before bringing him to US shores? If unemployment had just risen to 9.2%? If the TSA had the current procedures? If "assault" weapons had been allowed to leave American gun shops for Mexico, Honduras, and other points south of the border and returned in crime scenes in Arizona, Texas and Florida?
Hard time with this
Submitted by jon_torlin on Sun, 07/10/2011 - 9:46am.
I have a hard time attributing the same kinds of ideals that the Dems have to the Republicans. Don't get me wrong, McCain's a RINO, through and through, but he's still an American, way more so than this bogus potus we have now. Those things you mentioned that occurred in the last 2-3 years, those were the acts of Anti-Americans with the intention of causing harm to this country.
Again, don't get me wrong, I can see McCain doing some of the liberal things that would be harmless compared to the more heinous acts of this administration, but that's about it. I know I used the word "harmless" but that's just in comparison. Otherwise, I wouldn't want ANY of that liberal agenda.
Things would be a LOT different around here if McCain had been president. Whether it would be good or bad, I don't know, but it wouldn't be at the cost of the country like it is now.
-Jon
I get that Jon
Submitted by bkeyser on Sun, 07/10/2011 - 9:58am.
I was speaking more to media coverage than that McCain would've made the same policy decisions. Though if he had, the media would likely have championed them -certainly the Recovery Act and Health Care (though I don't think JMac would have signed the Health Care bill.)
A Valid Point
Submitted by Kingfish17 on Sun, 07/10/2011 - 12:05pm.
If a Republican was in the White House, the current economic malaise would be referred to as The Second Great Depression, and the news media would be touting the implied unemployment rate of 18% or what ever it is. Hell, they would probably be saying the true unemployment rate is closer to 25% and figure out a way to get there.
Yes, we would not have Obama Care, but McCain would have cut a deal for some sort of health care, light, that would also be ruinous to the economy.
"You can’t go take a trip to Las Vegas...on the taxpayer’s dime." Barack Obama