Whether it is a diamond ring, a designer watch or a first edition of a Tintin cartoon, every one of the rising number of lots to go under the hammer in an auction room of Belgium’s oldest financial institution tells a poignant tale.
Even the auctioneer said he feels the pain of the reluctant seller, who has parted with a prized possession to pay a medical bill, finance a school trip or, in extreme cases, to buy food.
Etienne Lambert, head of the centuries-old state-backed micro credit institution Le Mont de Piete — literally the Mount of Piety — said it troubles him that business is good.
“The poorer the city, the richer the Mont de Piete, and we are uncomfortable with that,” Lambert said.
Set up nearly 400 years ago in 1618 to combat usury and lend at the lowest rates to the indigent, Brussels’s Mont de Piete, a state-regulated pawnbroker run on a charitable basis, used to be one of many.
Now, it is the sole survivor in Belgium and has the monopoly on what is known as “le pret sur gage” (pledge-backed loan). No other pawnbrokers are legal in the nation.
PAWN WARS
It said the monopoly allows it to avoid commercial interests and loan at below the market rate.
To protect its status, the Mont de Piete has begun legal action against Cash Converters, an Australian firm with outlets in Belgium that buys second-hand goods and gives clients an option to buy them back within a month.
In an e-mailed statement, Cash Converters said the buy-back option was an extra service that responded to client needs and is in no way a pledge-backed loan.
It is unclear when the case is to be resolved.
Lambert said Brussel’s Mont de Piete has rarely been needed more as the financial crisis of 2007-2008 made it harder for people to get credit.
“I come here when I have worries,” said one woman, who asked not to be identified because her husband did not know she was there.
Her pledge was a gold necklace.
Loans from Mont de Piete rose to more than 7 million euros (US$7.8 million) in 2007 for the first time and to more than 9 million euros in 2011, although they fell back to more than 8 million last year.
At the same time, the amount paid back declined from about 7.3 million in 2011 to 6.4 million last year, and the number of lots for sale crept higher.
To cope with the demand and allow a wider variety of property to act as guarantees, the Mont de Piete is enlarging its building in the Marolles, a working class district in central Brussels.
Work should be completed for its 400th anniversary in 2018.
OBSESSION
The 3 million euros of expenditure, which includes increasing storage, creating a museum and installing solar panels, is as carefully calculated as the philosophy of the Mont de Piete is to give its clients as large a loan as it can based on the value of their pledge at the lowest interest rate.
“We are obsessed with the idea of not getting people into too much debt,” Lambert said.
Loans are for six months and the average value is 350 euros. The minimum is 30 euros and the maximum is between 50 percent and 70 percent of the estimated value of the pledge.
The current rate is 6.5 percent annualized.
The only conditions are the object and an identity check. Anonymous loans, once permitted, are no longer allowed.
The auctions are a last resort when the customer cannot pay and are used to cancel the debt and return any profits to the often reluctant seller.
Adding to the drama of the auction room, the seller remains the owner until the hammer goes down, meaning that if a debtor manages to pay the interest, at the last minute the lot is suddenly withdrawn.
The US dollar was trading at NT$29.7 at 10am today on the Taipei Foreign Exchange, as the New Taiwan dollar gained NT$1.364 from the previous close last week. The NT dollar continued to rise today, after surging 3.07 percent on Friday. After opening at NT$30.91, the NT dollar gained more than NT$1 in just 15 minutes, briefly passing the NT$30 mark. Before the US Department of the Treasury's semi-annual currency report came out, expectations that the NT dollar would keep rising were already building. The NT dollar on Friday closed at NT$31.064, up by NT$0.953 — a 3.07 percent single-day gain. Today,
‘SHORT TERM’: The local currency would likely remain strong in the near term, driven by anticipated US trade pressure, capital inflows and expectations of a US Fed rate cut The US dollar is expected to fall below NT$30 in the near term, as traders anticipate increased pressure from Washington for Taiwan to allow the New Taiwan dollar to appreciate, Cathay United Bank (國泰世華銀行) chief economist Lin Chi-chao (林啟超) said. Following a sharp drop in the greenback against the NT dollar on Friday, Lin told the Central News Agency that the local currency is likely to remain strong in the short term, driven in part by market psychology surrounding anticipated US policy pressure. On Friday, the US dollar fell NT$0.953, or 3.07 percent, closing at NT$31.064 — its lowest level since Jan.
The New Taiwan dollar and Taiwanese stocks surged on signs that trade tensions between the world’s top two economies might start easing and as US tech earnings boosted the outlook of the nation’s semiconductor exports. The NT dollar strengthened as much as 3.8 percent versus the US dollar to 30.815, the biggest intraday gain since January 2011, closing at NT$31.064. The benchmark TAIEX jumped 2.73 percent to outperform the region’s equity gauges. Outlook for global trade improved after China said it is assessing possible trade talks with the US, providing a boost for the nation’s currency and shares. As the NT dollar
PRESSURE EXPECTED: The appreciation of the NT dollar reflected expectations that Washington would press Taiwan to boost its currency against the US dollar, dealers said Taiwan’s export-oriented semiconductor and auto part manufacturers are expecting their margins to be affected by large foreign exchange losses as the New Taiwan dollar continued to appreciate sharply against the US dollar yesterday. Among major semiconductor manufacturers, ASE Technology Holding Co (日月光), the world’s largest integrated circuit (IC) packaging and testing services provider, said that whenever the NT dollar rises NT$1 against the greenback, its gross margin is cut by about 1.5 percent. The NT dollar traded as strong as NT$29.59 per US dollar before trimming gains to close NT$0.919, or 2.96 percent, higher at NT$30.145 yesterday in Taipei trading