As the S&P 500 continues to print new highs and the market digests the latest AI IPO debut, it may be overlooking two corners of the economy flashing warning signs — pawnshops and fast food.

Together, these segments suggest the U.S. may already be in a recession at the bottom of the income ladder. Yet, it is one largely invisible to the markets, still anchored to the top-line corporate growth.

A clear late-cycle signal is showing up in pawn loan portfolios. Operators like EZCORP, Inc. (NASDAQ:EZPW) and FirstCash Holdings, Inc. (NASDAQ:FCFS) effectively serve as liquidity providers for unbanked and underbanked consumers. Their latest earnings look less like cyclical growth and more like distress indicators.

FirstCash posted record consolidated receivables of $851 million. The domestic same-store pawn loan growth surged 19%. Meanwhile, EZCORP marked a 93% jump in net income, alongside 46% revenue growth. Its average U.S. pawn loan rose to $240, up 16% year over year.

The Next Step

Given jewelry’s role in the pawn ecosystem, bulls can point to soaring gold prices as a convenient explanation. Higher collateral translates into higher loans and stronger resale margins, but that take misses the broader point.

The rise in pawn loan balances is occurring alongside worsening credit card delinquency rates — evidence that many consumers are exhausting their unsecured borrowing capacity and turning to physical assets for survival liquidity.

All the data points to the next step in the cycle ladder. The lowest income brackets have moved beyond the buy-now-pay-later phase and into collateralized survival finance.

When gasoline prices remain above $4 per gallon and food inflation continues to pressure household budgets, a $200 pawn loan is no longer financing discretionary spending. It is financing rent, fuel, and groceries.

K-Shaped Fast Food

The stress evident in pawn data is now bleeding into the broader service economy, as evidenced by McDonald’s Corporation’s (NYSE:MCD) latest earnings.

Despite beating expectations, Chief Executive Chris Kempczinski took a cautious tone.

“Elevated gas prices are the core issue we’re seeing right now,” he said on the company’s earnings call. “The macro environment is certainly not improving, and it may be getting a little bit worse.”

That statement matters because McDonald’s occupies a unique position in the American economy. It sits directly where value spending and discretionary consumption intersect.

Interestingly, the latest results revealed a deeply fractured, K-shaped consumer landscape.

Higher-income customers remain resilient, supporting premium menu offerings like the Big Arch burger, which can cost up to $13 depending on location. But lower-income diners are increasingly trading down — not just from restaurants to fast food, but from full meals to single-item purchases.

The Invisible Reality

Inflation explains the squeeze. U.S. consumer prices accelerated to 3.8% in April, as energy costs tied to Middle East supply disruptions jumped by 17.9%. Food prices rose 3.2% over the same period. 

Inflation is a prime explanation for the squeeze. The latest CPI showed a 3.8% rise in April, with energy costs jumping by 17.9% and food prices moving up by 3.2%.

McDonald’s responded by expanding its McValue platform with sub-$3 items and discounted breakfast deals. Despite those measures, CFO Ian Borden still warned that April sales turned slightly negative.

That divergence is the trap markets continue to ignore.

The top of the income spectrum continues to spend, keeping headline earnings and equity indices afloat. But the foundation of the consumer economy — pawnshops and value dining — is deteriorating rapidly.

The revelation arrives when consumers move from pawning possessions to having nothing left to pawn. Until then, the recession remains largely invisible, except to the businesses serving Americans already living inside it.

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