FirstCash Holdings FCFS Non-cash transactions in connection with pawn loans settled through forfeitures of collateral transferred to inventories
Non-cash transactions in connection with pawn loans settled through forfeitures of collateral transferred to inventories at other companies
Other financials
Where this comes from
Reported directly by FirstCash Holdings in its filing.
Tagged under the XBRL concept fcfs:PawnLoansForfeitedAndTransferredToInventories.
The official record: FirstCash Holdings’s 10-K, filed February 9, 2026, on SEC EDGAR. View the filing →
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Questions, answered.
- What is FirstCash Holdings's non-cash transactions in connection with pawn loans settled through forfeitures of collateral transferred to inventories?
- FirstCash Holdings (FCFS) reported non-cash transactions in connection with pawn loans settled through forfeitures of collateral transferred to inventories of $197.37M in Q4 2025.
- How has FirstCash Holdings's non-cash transactions in connection with pawn loans settled through forfeitures of collateral transferred to inventories changed year-over-year?
- FirstCash Holdings's non-cash transactions in connection with pawn loans settled through forfeitures of collateral transferred to inventories increased by 31.6% year-over-year, from $149.99M to $197.37M.
- What is the long-term trend for FirstCash Holdings's non-cash transactions in connection with pawn loans settled through forfeitures of collateral transferred to inventories?
- Over 4 years (2021 to 2025), FirstCash Holdings's non-cash transactions in connection with pawn loans settled through forfeitures of collateral transferred to inventories has grown at a 16.4% compound annual growth rate (CAGR), from $430.31M to $789.49M.
- What does non-cash transactions in connection with pawn loans settled through forfeitures of collateral transferred to inventories mean?
- The value of pawned items that were not redeemed and were moved into inventory for sale.
- How do you interpret non-cash transactions in connection with pawn loans settled through forfeitures of collateral transferred to inventories?
- Higher levels indicate increased collateral forfeiture, which may signal either higher retail inventory supply or potential weakness in the borrower base.
- How does non-cash transactions in connection with pawn loans settled through forfeitures of collateral transferred to inventories compare across companies?
- Specific to pawn and specialty lending industries; reflects the conversion efficiency of the loan portfolio into retail assets.