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Some financial stocks thrive amid credit crisis



By DAN SEYMOUR, AP
25 April 2008 @ 04:03 pm EST

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Quotes
SCHW 20.4 -2.09
DFS 10.55 -0.52
MA 155.62 -4.58
BAC 31.05 -3.43
WM 0.16 0
AGO 11.93 -3.01
MBI 9.26 -1.09
ABK 2.82 -0.45
CSH 34.77 -1.23
EZPW 15.14 -1.8
HCBK 18.76 0.31

SYMBOL LOOKUP

Many bond insurers have been crippled by a foray into guaranteeing so-called "structured" deals, or investments splicing payments from a number of sources including risky mortgage debt. Assured Guaranty didn't expand as deeply into structured finance as most of its competitors. Its stock is up more than 10 percent in the last six months, while Ambac's shares are down about 91 percent in the last six months and MBIA's have sunk 79 percent.

Credit card companies Discover and MasterCard are also holding up well amid the credit crisis.

Discover's conservative approach to credit risk has insulated it somewhat. Its shares are up 21 percent in 2008. Shares of Mastercard, which provides a network for lenders to issue loans to consumers and charges fees, have risen 11 percent so far this year.

And Charles Schwab is down so far in 2008, but has risen 11 percent in the last year as clients used the brokerage to shuttle money out of risky stocks and into safer investments, like money-market accounts.

Some of the lenders best-positioned to survive the credit debacle are the ones at the bottom of the credit ladder: pawnshop operators.

Pawnshop operators issue loans in exchange for collateral like a piece of jewelry. While pawn shops' customers are as likely as anyone else to default on loans, pawn shops have enjoyed an unexpected boon: gold, which skyrocketed this year, at one point to more than $1,030 an ounce. Because many clients pawn gold, pawn shops are reaping hefty profits when they sell the collateral.

Shares of pawn shop operator Cash America International Inc. are up 40 percent this year, while Ezcorp Inc. stock is up 30 percent.

George Feiger, chief executive of Contango Capital Advisors, which manages about $1.4 billion for clients, said no matter how well-managed financial companies are, few aren't vulnerable to credit cycles. He cautions against assuming companies that have fared well so far will continue to excel. Many capably managed companies were torpedoed in the crisis, and the same could happen to any company if another domino falls, he said.

"There is no pure play," Feiger said.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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