When it comes to buying charged-off debts and then trying to collect them, surprises are seldom ever a good thing. So it's probably just as well that Portfolio Recovery Associates (PRAA) offered few surprises this quarter. This company is always going to be controversial - the accounting is confusing for those unaccustomed to it, the IRS is investigating the company's tax calculation policies, there's more regulation and oversight coming, and it's an inherently difficult thing to collect on debt.
All of that said, PRAA is one of the best at what it does and there's more than enough room for the company to continue growing.
To read the full piece, click here:
Steady As She Goes At Portfolio Recovery Associates
Showing posts with label Asta Funding. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Asta Funding. Show all posts
Friday, February 17, 2012
Seeking Alpha: Steady As She Goes At Portfolio Recovery Associates
Wednesday, January 4, 2012
Seeking Alpha: Unsavory Business And Murky Accounting Undervalue Portfolio Recovery
At the risk of climbing on a soapbox, isn't it interesting how people generally expect others to honor their obligations to them, but they get quite resentful when they are held to account on their own obligations? Portfolio Recovery Associates (Nasdaq: PRAA) is the largest publicly traded pure-play in a very unsavory business – debt collection. Not only does PRA have to contend with trying to get money from people who either cannot or do not want to pay, but the company is further burdened with an ever-shifting legal, legislative, and accounting environment. Perhaps it's little wonder then that these shares look quite cheap.
A Vital, But Disliked, Link In The Credit Chain
The availability of capital is predicated on the idea that lenders get their money back and/or can avail themselves of legal remedies to secure repayment. If borrowers are allowed to default and walk away too easily, the price of money shoots up and the availability drops. To that end, Portfolio Recovery occupies an important niche in the credit chain – PRAA buys up receivables that creditors could not not collect, takes the risk upon itself, and profits if it can be more successful in securing repayment.
Please read more here:
Unsavory Business And Murky Accounting Undervalue Portfolio Recovery
A Vital, But Disliked, Link In The Credit Chain
The availability of capital is predicated on the idea that lenders get their money back and/or can avail themselves of legal remedies to secure repayment. If borrowers are allowed to default and walk away too easily, the price of money shoots up and the availability drops. To that end, Portfolio Recovery occupies an important niche in the credit chain – PRAA buys up receivables that creditors could not not collect, takes the risk upon itself, and profits if it can be more successful in securing repayment.
Please read more here:
Unsavory Business And Murky Accounting Undervalue Portfolio Recovery
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