UNITED STATES
                      SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                            Washington, D.C. 20549
                                  FORM 10-K

(Mark One)
  [ x ]      ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE
             SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

             For the year ended December 31, 2005,2006, or

  [   ]      TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE
             SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

             For the transition period from __________ to ___________

             Commission file number 0-19133

                       FIRST CASH FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC.
            ------------------------------------------------------
            (Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

              Delaware                                75-2237318
   -------------------------------         ---------------------------------
   (state or other jurisdiction of         (IRS Employer Identification No.)
   incorporation or organization)


     690 East Lamar Blvd., Suite 400
             Arlington, Texas                            76011
 ----------------------------------------              ----------
 (Address of principal executive offices)              (Zip Code)


     Registrant's telephone number, including area code:  (817) 460-3947

      Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:  None

         Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(g)12(b) of the Act:
                    Common Stock, par value $.01 per share

     Indicate  by  check mark  if the  registrant  is a  well-known  seasoned
 issuer, as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act.  Yes [   ]  No [ X ]

     Indicate by check mark if the registrant is not required to file reports
 pursuant to Section 13 or Section 15(d) of the Act.    Yes [   ]  No [ X ]

     Indicate by check mark whether the registrant  (1) has filed all reports
 required to be filed by Section 13  or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange  Act
 of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that  the
 registrant was required to file such  reports), and (2) has been subject  to
 such filing requirements for the past 90 days.  Yes [ X ]  No [   ]

     Indicate by check mark  if  disclosure of delinquent filers pursuant  to
 Item 405  of  Regulation  S-K is  not  contained  herein, and  will  not  be
 contained, to the  best of registrant's  knowledge, in  definitive proxy  or
 information statements incorporated by  reference in Part  III of this  Form
 10-K or any amendment to this Form 10-K.  [ X ]

     Indicate by check mark  whether the registrant  is  a large  accelerated
 filer, an accelerated filer, or a non-accelerated filer.  Large  accelerated
 filer [   ]     Accelerated filer [ X ]     Non-accelerated filer [   ]

      Indicate by check mark  whether the registrant is  a shell company  (as
 defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Act).
 Yes [   ]        No [ X ]

      The aggregate market value of the  voting stock held by  non-affiliates
 of the registrant, based  upon the last reported  sales price on the  Nasdaq
 National Market on June 30, 2005,2006, the last trading date of registrant's most
 recently completed second fiscal quarter is $269,500,000.$530,815,000.

      As of March 13, 2006,14, 2007,  there  were 32,007,67232,187,504, shares  of common  stock
 outstanding.

                     DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE

      The Company's Proxy Statement in connection with its Annual Meeting  of
 Stockholders to be held  on June 7, 2006,12, 2007,  is incorporated by reference  in
 Part III, Items 10, 11, 12 and 13.



                     FIRST CASH FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC.
                                  FORM 10-K
                     For the Year Ended December 31, 20052006



                              TABLE OF CONTENTS
                              -----------------
 PART I

 Item 1.    Business
 Item 1a1a.   Risk Factors
 Item 1b.   Unresolved Staff Comments
 Item 2.    Properties
 Item 3.    Legal Proceedings
 Item 4.    Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders


 PART II

 Item 5.    Market for Registrant's Common Equity and Related
              Stockholder Matters
 Item 6.    Selected Financial Data
 Item 7.    Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial
              Condition and Results of Operations
 Item 7a.   Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About
              Market Risk
 Item 8.    Financial Statements and Supplementary Data
 Item 9.    Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on
              Accounting and Financial Disclosure
 Item 9a.   Controls and Procedures
 Item 9b.   Other Information


 PART III

 Item 10.   Directors, and Executive Officers of the Registrantand Corporate Governance
 Item 11.   Executive Compensation
 Item 12.   Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and
              Management and Related Stockholder Matters
 Item 13.   Certain Relationships and Related Transactions, and
              Director Independence
 Item 14.   Principal Accounting Fees and Services


 PART IV

 Item 15.   Exhibits and Financial Statement Schedules


 SIGNATURES



                         FORWARD-LOOKING INFORMATION
                         ---------------------------

      This annual  report may  contain forward-looking  statements about  the
 business,  financial  condition  and  prospects  of  First  Cash   Financial
 Services, Inc. ("First Cash" or the "Company").  Forward-looking statements,
 as that term is defined in  the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act  of
 1995, can be identified  by the use of  forward-looking terminology such  as
 "believes," "projects,"  "expects," "may,"  "estimates," "should,"  "plans,"
 "intends," "could,"  or "anticipates,"  or the  negative thereof,  or  other
 variations  thereon,  or  comparable  terminology,  or  by  discussions   of
 strategy.  Forward-looking  statements can also  be identified  by the  fact
 that these  statements  do not  relate  strictly to  historical  or  current
 matters.   Rather,  forward-looking  statements  relate  to  anticipated  or
 expected events,  activities, trends  or  results.  Because  forward-looking
 statements relate to matters  that have not  yet occurred, these  statements
 are  inherently  subject  to  risks   and   uncertainties.   Forward-looking
 statements in this annual report include, without limitation, the  Company's
 expectations of earnings per  share, earnings growth, expansion  strategy,strategies,
 earnings accretion from acquisitions, store and dealership openings, loss
 provisions,  future
 liquidity, equity compensation expensecash flows,  debt levels, assessment  of risk  factors and  cash  flows.other
 performance results.  These statements are  made to provide the public  with
 management's current assessment  of the  Company's business.   Although  the
 Company  believes  that  the   expectations  reflected  in   forward-looking
 statements are reasonable, there can be no assurances that such expectations
 will prove  to  be accurate.   Security  holders  are  cautioned  that  such
 forward-looking statements involve  risks and uncertainties.   The  forward-lookingforward-
 looking statements contained in this annual report speak only as of the date
 of this statement,  and the Company  expressly disclaims  any obligation  or
 undertaking to report  any updates  or revisions  to any  such statement  to
 reflect any change in  the Company's expectations or  any change in  events,
 conditions or circumstances on which any  such statement is based.   Certain
 factors may cause  results to differ  materially from  those anticipated  by
 some of  the  statements made  in  this annual  report.   Such  factors  are
 difficult to predict and many are beyond the control of the Company and  may
 include changes in regional, national or international economic  conditions,
 changes in consumer  borrowing and  repayment behaviors,  changes in  credit
 markets, credit losses, changes or increases in competition, the ability  to
 locate, open  and integratestaff  new stores  and  dealerships, the  availability  or
 access  to  sources  of  inventory,   inclement  weather,  the  ability   to
 successfully integrate acquisitions,  the ability to  retain key  management
 personnel, the  ability  to operate  with  limited regulation  as  a  credit
 services organization in Texas, the  ability to  successfully refer  credit
 services customers to an independent lender who can provide credit to  these
 customers, new legislative initiatives or  governmental
 regulations or(or changes  to existing  regulations,laws and  regulations) affecting  paydaycash
 advance businesses, credit services organizations, pawn businesses and  pawnbuy-
 here/pay-here automotive businesses in both the U.S. and Mexico,  unforeseen
 litigation, changes in  interest rates, changes  in tax  rates or  policies,
 changes in gold prices,  changes in energy  prices, changes in  used-vehicle
 prices, cost of funds,  changes in foreign  currency exchange rates,  future
 business decisions,  and  other  uncertainties.  These  and  other risks and
 uncertainties  are  further and more completely described in "Item 1a. -  Risk
 Factors."

                                 STOCK SPLIT
                                 -----------

      In January 2006, the Company's Board  of Directors approved a  two-for-
 one stock split in the form of a stock dividend to shareholders of record on
 February 6, 2006.   The additional shares were  distributed on February  20,
 2006.  AllCommon stock and all  share and per share amounts (except  authorized
 shares and par value) have been retroactively adjusted to reflect the split.

                                    PART I
                                    ------
 Item 1.  Business
 -----------------

 General

      The CompanyFirst Cash is  a leading provider  of consumer  financial services  and
 related specialty consumer  financeretail products.   The Company has  over 330420 locations  in
 eleventhirteen U.S. states and sevennine states in Mexico as of March 13, 2006.   For the year ended  December
 31, 2005, the Company's  revenues were derived as  follows:  49% from  pawn-
 related merchandise sales, 20% from pawn  service fees, 29% from  short-term
 advance and credit services fees, and 2% from other sources, primarily check
 cashing fees.14, 2007.

      The Company's pawn stores  engage in both  consumer finance and  retail
 sales activities,  andactivities.  They  are a convenient source  for small consumer  loans,
 advancing money against pledged tangible personal property such as  jewelry,
 electronic equipment, tools, sporting goods and musical equipment.  The pawn
 stores also retail previously ownedpreviously-owned merchandise acquired through  collateral
 forfeitures and  over-the-counter purchases  from customers.   In  addition,
 many of the Company's pawn stores  offer short-term paydaycash advances or a credit  services
 product.

      TheIn addition, the  Company also operates stand-alone  paydaycash advance stores  in
 severalsix U.S. states.  These stores provide a broad  range of  consumer financial services  products
 including paydaycash advances, credit services, check cashing, money orders, money
 transfers and  prepaid card  products in selected
 markets.products.   The  exact  product mix  varies  by
 location.  In addition, the Company is a 50%  partner in Cash & Go, Ltd.,  a
 Texas limited partnership, which currently owns and operates 40  kiosks  located
 inside convenience stores that offer the  credit services program and  check
 cashing.

      Through an  acquisition  completed in  August  2006, the  Company  also
 operates automobile dealerships focused on the buy-here/pay-here segment  of
 the used-vehicle sales and financing industry.  These automotive dealerships
 sell used  vehicles  and  earn finance  charges  from  the  related  vehicle
 financing contracts.

      The Company was formed as a Texas corporation in July 1988 and in April
 1991  the  Company  reincorporated as  a  Delaware  corporation.  Except  as
 otherwise  indicated,   the  term   "Company"  includes   its   wholly-owned
 subsidiaries, American  Loan  &  Jewelry, Inc.;  WR  Financial, Inc.; Famous
 Pawn, Inc.;  JB Pawn,  Inc.; Cash  & Go,  Inc.; Capital  Pawnbrokers,  Inc.;
 Silver Hill Pawn, Inc.; Elegant Floors, Inc.; One Iron Ventures, Inc.; First
 Cash, S.A. de  C.V.; American Loan  Employee Services, S.A.  de C.V.;  First
 Cash, Ltd.; First Cash Corp.; First Cash Management, LLC;  First Cash, Inc.;
 First Cash Credit, Ltd.; First Cash  Credit Management, LLC;  FCFS MO, Inc.;
 FCFS OK, Inc.; FCFS SC, Inc.; and  FCFS MI, Inc.which are detailed in Exhibit 21.1.

      The Company's principal executive offices are located at 690 East Lamar
 Blvd., Suite 400, Arlington, Texas 76011, and its telephone number is  (817)
 460-3947.

 Industry

      Specialty consumer finance representscontinues to represent a rapidly growing segment  of
 the overall financial services industry.  This segment focuses on  providing
 a quick and convenient source of short-term credit to unbanked,  underbanked
 and   credit-challenged  customers.   These  consumers  are  typically   not
 effectively or  efficiently  served by traditional  lenders such  as  banks,
 credit unions or credit-cardcredit card providers.  First Cash competes directly in the
 specialty consumer finance  industry with its  pawn, paydaycash  advance and  credit
 services products.buy-
 here/pay-here automotive products and services.

      The pawnshop industry in the United States is an established  industry,
 with the  highest concentration  of pawnshops  being  in the  Southeast  and
 Southwest regions of the  country.  The operation  of pawnshops is  governed
 primarily by state  laws, and accordingly,  states that  maintain pawn  laws
 most conducive to profitable operations have historically seen the  greatest
 concentration of pawnshops.  Management believes the U.S. pawnshop  industry
 is fragmented, with approximately 15,000 stores  in the country.  The  three
 major  publicly  traded  pawnshop  companies,  which  includesinclude  First   Cash,
 currently operate approximately 1,000 of the pawnshops in the United States.
 The Company believes that individuals operating  one to three locations  own
 the majority  of pawnshops.   Management  further believes  that the  highly
 fragmented nature of the industry  is due in part  to the lack of  qualified
 management  personnel,  the  difficulty  of  developing  adequate  financial
 controls and reporting systems, and the lack of financial resources.

      The pawnshop industry  in Mexico  is substantially  less developed,  as
 compared to the U.S.,  with fewer than 5,000  stores in the entire  country.
 Management believes the Mexican pawnshop industry  is fragmented, as in  the
 U.S.also fragmented.   The
 Company currently operates  over 130165  pawnshops in  Mexico and  is the  only
 major publicly traded U.S. company  doing business there.with significant pawnshop operations  in
 Mexico.  A  large percentage  of the population  in Mexico  are unbanked  or
 underbanked and have limited  access to consumer credit.   The Company  sees
 significant opportunity  for future  expansion in  Mexico due  to the  large
 potential consumer base and limited competition in Mexico.that country.

      The paydaycash advance industry is also  a  less developed  industry  and
 continues to experience rapidhas  experienced significant growth over  the
 past decade in the U.S.  A leading industry analyst estimates that there are
 over 23,000 payday24,000 cash advance locations throughout the United States and  expects
 the number of locations to doublereach approximately 40,000 over the next  decade.
 There  are  several  privately  held  chains   that  operate  from  100   up to
 approximately 1,5001,400 stores each.  The eightsix largest publicly held operators of
 paydaycash advance  stores, which  include First  Cash Financial  Services,  Inc.,
 operate a combined total of over 6,4004,000 stores.

      ThereThe market  for used  car sales  and related  financing in  the  United
 States  is  currentlysignificant as  well.  Used  car  retail sales  typically  occur
 through franchised new car  dealerships that sell  used cars or  independent
 used car dealerships.  The Company operates in the buy-here/pay-here segment
 of the independent  used car sales  and  finance  market.  Buy-here/pay-here
 dealers sell and  finance used cars  to individuals who  are unbanked,  have
 limited credit histories or past credit problems.  Buy-here/pay-here dealers
 typically offer  their customers  certain advantages  over more  traditional
 financing  sources,  such   as  broader  and   more  flexible   underwriting
 guidelines, flexible  payment  terms  (including scheduling  payments  on  a
 weekly or bi-weekly  basis to coincide  with a customer's  payday), and  the
 ability to make payments in person, an important feature to individuals  who
 may not have a similar  short-termchecking account.

      The used automobile financing industry is served by traditional lending
 sources such as banks, savings and  loans, and captive finance  subsidiaries
 of automobile manufacturers, as well as by independent finance companies and
 buy-here/pay-here dealers.  Despite  significant opportunities, many of  the
 traditional  lending  sources  do  not  consistently  provide  financing  to
 individuals  with  limited  credit   histories  or  payday advance industry in Mexico due to  relatively
 few Mexican consumers  that utilize checking  accounts in a  manner that  is
 conducive to payday advance lending.past  credit   problems.
 Management believes traditional  lenders avoid  this market  because of  the
 credit risk and the associated collection efforts.

 Business Strategy

      The Company's  primary business  plan is  to significantly  expand  its
 operations by opening new pawnshops, cash advance stores, and  payday advance stores.buy-here/pay-
 here automotive  dealerships.   In  addition,  it will  continue  to  remain
 focused on increasing  the revenues and  operating profits  in its  existing
 stores.stores and dealerships.

 New Store Openings

      The Company has opened  153or acquired 162 new  pawn stores, and 81113 new  paydaycash
 advance stores since its  inceptionand 10 buy-here/pay-here  automotive dealerships in the  last
 six years and currently intends to open both  additional pawn stores, and paydaycash advance
 stores and  buy-here/pay-here  automotive  dealerships  in  locations  where
 management believes appropriate demand and other favorable conditions exist.
 DuringThe following chart details store openings over the years
 ended December 31,past six years:

                            2006     2005     2004     and 2003     the Company opened2002     2001
                            ----     ----     ----     ----     ----     ----

 Pawn stores                  27       35       40       and 31       25        4
 Cash advance stores          43       15       12       16       13       14
 Buy-here/pay-here
   dealerships                10        -        -        -        -        -
                            ----     ----     ----     ----     ----     ----
   Total                      80       50       52       47       38       18
                            ====     ====     ====     ====     ====     ====

      The Company plans  to continue opening  new pawn  stores, respectively,primarily  in
 Mexico,  and  over the same three years, the Company opened
 15, 12 and 16 new  paydaycash  advance  stores  respectively.and  buy-here/pay-here  automotive
 dealerships in the U.S.   The Company continues  to evaluate new markets  in
 both  Mexico  and  the  U.S.  with  favorable  demographics  and  regulatory
 environment  for   expansion  opportunities   and  it   believes  that   its
 organizational structure is  capable of supporting  a larger,  multi-country
 and multi-state store base.

      Management  seeks   to  locate   new  stores   and  dealerships   where
 demographics are favorable and competition is limited.  It is the  Company's
 experience that after a  suitable location has been  identified and a  lease
 and licenses  are  obtained, a  new  store or  dealership  can be  open  for
 business within six to twelve weeks.  The investment required to open a  new
 pawn store includes  store operating  cash, inventory,  funds available  for
 pawn  loans,  leasehold  improvements,  store  fixtures,  security  systems,
 computer equipment  and  start-up  losses.  Although  the  total  investment
 varies and  is difficult  to predict  for  each location,  it has  been  the
 Company's experience that between $200,000  and
 $360,000approximately $295,000 is  required to fund a  new
 pawn store located in  Mexico for the  first six months  of operation.   The
 Company also estimates that between $200,000 and $360,000approximately $180,000 is required to fund a new paydaycash
 advance store  for  the  first  six  months  of  operation,  which  includes
 investments for  leasehold improvements,  security and  computer  equipment,
 funds available  for  short-termcash  advances, store  operating  cash,  and  start-up
 losses.  The Company currently  plansalso estimates  that approximately $3 to continue  expansion$4 million  is
 required to fund a new buy-here/pay-here dealership for the first six months
 of  both  pawn
 stores, primarily in  Mexico,operation,  which  includes  investments  for  leasehold   improvements,
 security and  payday advance stores  in the  U.S.   The
 Company continues to evaluate new markets  in both Mexicocomputer  equipment,  funds  available  for  inventory,  store
 operating cash, and the U.S.  with
 favorable demographics  and  regulatory  environments.  The Company  has  an
 organizational structure that it believes is capable of supporting a larger,
 multi-country and multi-state store base.start-up losses.

 Enhance Productivity of Existing and Newly Opened Stores

      The primary  factors  affecting  the  profitability  of  the  Company's
 existing store base are  the volume and gross  profit of retailmerchandise  sales,
 the gross profitvolume and  yield on retail sales, the level of pawn  loans outstanding, the level of  short-term
 advancescustomer  receivables outstanding,  the volume  ofand
 fees on credit services transactions,  check cashing transactions and  other
 consumer financial services transactions, and the control of store expenses,
 including the  loss  provision  expense related  to  short-termcash  advances,  credit
 services, and credit services.buy-here/pay-here receivables.  To increase customer  traffic,
 which management believes  is a key  determinant to  increasing its  stores'
 profitability,  the  Company  has  taken  several  steps  to distinguish its
 stores from traditional  pawn and check cashing/short-termcash  advance stores  and to
 make customers  feel  more comfortable.  In  addition  to  well-lit  parking
 facilities,  the  stores'   exteriors  typically   display  attractive   and
 distinctive  signage  similar  to  those  used  by  contemporary   specialty
 retailers.

      The Company  has  an  employee-training  program  for  both  store  and
 corporate-level personnel that stresses  customer service, productivity  and
 professionalism.  The  Company utilizes a  proprietary computer  information
 system that provides fully integrated functionality to support point-of-sale
 retail operations, inventory management and loan processing.  Each store  is
 connected on a real-time basis to a secured off-site data center located in Allen,  Texas,
 that houses
 the centralized databasedatabases  and operating system.systems.   The system
 providesinformation  systems
 provide management the  ability to continuously  monitor store  transactions
 and operating results.  The Company maintains a well-trained internal  audit
 staff that conducts regular store visits  to test compliance with  financial
 and operational controls.   Management believes  that the current  operating
 and financial controls and systems are  adequate for the Company's  existing
 store base and  can accommodate reasonably  foreseeable growth  in the  near
 term.

 Acquisitions

      Because of the highly fragmented nature  of both the pawn, industrycash advance  and
 the payday advance industry,buy-here/pay-here automotive  industries, as  well  as the  availability  of
 certain regional  chains, and "mom & pop"  sole proprietors willing  to sell their stores,  the  Company believes  that  certain  acquisition
 opportunities may  arise  from time  to  time.   The  timing of  any  future
 acquisitions is based on identifying suitable stores and purchasing them  on
 terms that  are  viewed as  favorable  to the  Company.   Before  making  an
 acquisition, management  typically studies  a  demographic analysis  of  the
 surrounding  area,  considers  the  number  and  size  of  competing stores,
 and researches state  and  local regulatory  issues.  Specific  pawn   store
 acquisition criteria  include an  evaluation of  the volume  of annual  pawn
 transactions, outstanding receivable balances, historical redemption  rates,
 the quality and quantity of inventory on hand, and location and condition of
 the facility, including  lease terms.   Factors involved  in evaluating  the
 acquisition  of  paydaycash   advance  stores   include  the   annual  volume   of
 transactions, locations  and conditions  of  facilities, and  a  demographic
 evaluation of  the  surrounding area  to  determine the  potential  for  the
 Company's short-termcash advance and  credit services products.   Factors involved  in
 evaluating  the  acquisition  of  buy-here/pay-here  automotive  dealerships
 include the annual volume of transactions, outstanding receivables  balance,
 the quality and quantity of inventory  on hand, locations and conditions  of
 facilities,  and  a  demographic  evaluation  of  the  surrounding  area  to
 determine the  potential  for  the  Company's  retail  vehicle  and  related
 financing products.

 Pawn Lending Activities

      The Company's pawn stores advance money to their customers against  the
 security of pledged goods  provided by their customers.   The pledged  goods
 are tangible personal property such as jewelry, electronic equipment, tools,
 sporting goods and musical  equipment.  The pledged  goods provide the  only
 security to  the Company  for the  repayment of  the pawn,  as pawns  cannot
 result in personal liability to the borrower.  Accordingly, the Company does
 not investigate the creditworthiness of the borrower, relying instead on the
 marketability and salesales  value of pledged  goods as a  basis for its  credit
 decision.

      At the time a pawn transaction is entered into, an agreement,  commonly
 referred to as  a pawn ticket,  is delivered to  the borrower for  signature
 that sets forth, among  other items, the name  and address of the  pawnshop;
 borrower's name;  borrower's  identification number  from  his/her  driver's
 license or other identification; date; identification and description of the
 pledged goods, including  applicable serial numbers;  amount financed;  pawn
 service fee; maturity  date; total amount  that must be  paid to redeem  the
 pledged goods on the maturity date; and the annual percentage rate.

      Pledged property is held through the term of the pawn, which is 30 days
 in  Texas,  South  Carolina,  Missouri,  Virginia,  and  Oklahoma,  with  an
 automatic extension period of 15 to 60 days depending on state laws,  unless
 the pawn is  paid earlier paid or  renewed.  In  Maryland, Washington, D.C.,  and
 Mexico, pledged property is  held for 30  days.  In  the event the  borrower
 does not pay or renew a pawn within 90 days in South Carolina and  Missouri,
 60 days in Texas and Oklahoma, 45 days in Virginia, and Mexico, and 30 days in Maryland,
 and Washington, D.C., and Mexico, the unredeemed  collateral is forfeited to  the
 Company and becomes inventory available for  general liquidation or sale  in
 one  of  the  Company's  stores.  If a  pawn  is  not repaid  prior  to  the
 expiration of the automatic extension period, if applicable, the property is
 forfeited to the Company  and transferred to inventory  at a value equal  to
 the principal amount of the loan, exclusive of accrued interest.

      The amount the Company  is willing to finance  typically is based on  a
 percentage of the  estimated sale  value of the  collateral.   There are  no
 minimum or maximum pawn to fair market value restrictions in connection with
 the Company's lending activities.  The basis for the Company's determination
 of the sale  value includes such  sources as catalogs,  blue books,  on-line
 auction sites  and newspapers.   The  Company also  utilizes its  integrated
 computer information  system  to recall  recent  selling prices  of  similar
 merchandise in its own stores.  These sources, together with the  employees'
 experience in selling  similar items  of merchandise  in particular  stores,
 influence the determination of the estimated sale value of such items.   The
 Company does not utilize a standard or mandated percentage of estimated sale
 value in determining the  amount to be financed.   Rather, the employee  has
 the authority to set the percentage  for a particular item and to  determine
 the ratio of pawn amount to estimated sale value with the expectation  that,
 if the item is forfeited to the pawnshop, its subsequent sale should yield a
 gross profit margin consistent with the Company's historical experience.  It
 is the Company's  policy to  value merchandise  on a  conservative basis  to
 avoid  the  risks  associated  with  over-valuation.  The  recovery  of  the
 principal and realization of gross profit on sales of inventory is dependent
 on the Company's initial assessment of the property's estimated sale  value.
 Improper assessment  of the  sale value  of the  collateral in  the  lending
 function can result in reduced marketability of the property and sale of the
 property for an amount less than the principal amount pawned.

      The Company contracts for a pawn service charge in lieu of interest  to
 compensate it for the pawn loan.  The statutory service fees on pawns at its
 Texas stores range from 12% to 240% on an annualized basis depending on  the
 size of  the pawn,  and from  39% to  240%  on an  annualized basis  at  the
 Company's Oklahoma stores.  Pawns made  in the Maryland stores bear  service
 fees of 144% to  240% on an annualized  basis with a  $6 minimum charge  per
 month, while pawns in Virginia earn 120% to 144% annually with a $5  minimum
 charge per month.  In Washington, D.C.,  a flat $2 charge per month  applies
 to all pawns up to $40, and an 18% to 60% annualized service charge  applies
 to pawns of greater  than  $40.  In Missouri, pawns  bear a  total service  and
 storage charge of 180% to 240% on  an annualized basis with a $2.50  minimum
 charge per month,  and South Carolina  rates range from  100%  to  300%.  In
 Mexico, pawns bear an annualized rate of 240%.  As of December 31, 2005,2006, the
 Company's average pawn per pawn ticket was approximately $95.   For  the
 fiscal  years  ended  December  31,  2005,  2004  and  2003,  the  Company's
 annualized yields  on  average  pawn balances  were  158%,  156%  and  158%,
 respectively.

 Short-term$99.

 Cash Advance and Credit Services Activities

      The Company's short-term  (or payday)cash advance stores and selectedmany of its pawn stores generally
 make short-termcash advances,  also known  as payday  advances, for  a term  oftypically
 thirty-one days or less.  The typical  cash  advance is for amounts  ranging
 from $100 to $1,000 with an  average advance being $413.   To qualify for  a
 short-termcash advance,  a customer  generally must  have proof  of steady  income,  a
 checking account with a minimum of returned items within a specified period,
 and valid identification.   Upon  completing an  application and  subsequent
 approval, the  customer writes  a  check on  his  or her  personal  checking
 account for the amount of the  advance, plus applicable fees.  At  maturity,
 either  the customer  may returntypically returns  to the  store andto  pay off  the advance  and
 related fee with cash, in which case the check is returned to the  customer.
 If the  customer  orfails to  repay  the loan,  the  store can  depositthen  deposits  the
 customer's check into  its  checking  account.
 Short-termcheck.  Cash advance transactions  are subject to federal  truth-in-lendingtruth-
 in-lending regulations and  fair debt collection  practice regulations.   In
 addition, state and local regulations exist in certain markets, which, among
 other things, limit the number of  consecutive short-termcash advances a customer  can
 obtain, limit the total transactions over a specified time period, or  limit
 the number of outstanding advances a consumer may have.have with any  combination
 of lenders.

      The customer's  check  is  held through  the term of the short-term
 advance, which  rangescash advances  generally range from 7  to  31 days.  In
 California,  Washington,   Illinois,  Oregon,   South  Carolina,   Oklahoma,
 and Washington, D.C., and Michigan, the maximum loan term is 31, 45, 45, 60,  31,
 45, 31 and 31 days, respectively.  Only Illinois, Oklahoma and OklahomaMichigan have
 a minimum term which is 13, days.  If the loan  is
 not repaid prior  to the  expiration of  the term,  the customer's  personal
 check is forfeited to the Company.12 and  7 days, respectively.  Fees charged  for
 short-termcash advances are  generally regulated  by state  law.   In California,  and  South Carolina,  the
 service fee  is 15%  of the  check's  face  value.   Short-termCash advances  made  in
 Washington and Oregon bear service  fees of 15% on  loan amounts up to  $500
 and 10% on loan amounts exceeding $500; the maximum loan amount being  $700.
 Short-termCash advances made in Oklahoma bear service  fees of 15% on loan amounts  up
 to $300 and  10% on  loan amounts exceeding  $300; the  maximum loan  amount
 being $500.  In South Carolina, the service fee is 15% on loan amounts up to
 $300.  In Washington, D.C., the service fee is 10% plus a flat fee of $5  to
 $20 on loans up  to $1,000.   TheCash advances made  in Michigan  bear  service
 feefees ranging from 13% to 15% on loan amounts up to $600.  Cash advances made
 in  Illinois  isare limited  to 15.5%  on loans upper  $100  advanced.  In Illinois,  the
 Company also offers an installment loan product with terms of 14 to $1,000.180 days
 at fees which range from $16 to $35 per $100 advanced.

      The bank returns a significant number  of customer short-termcash advance  checks
 deposited by  the  Company  because there aredue to  insufficient  funds  in  the  customers'
 accounts.  However, the Company subsequently collects a large percentage  of
 these bad debts  by redepositing the  customers' checks  or subsequent  cash
 repayments by  the  customers.   The  profitability of  the  Company's  short-termcash
 advance operations is dependent upon  adequate collection of these  returned
 items.

      Effective July 1, 2005,In the Company's Texas  locations, First Cash  Credit, Ltd. ("FCC"),  a
 wholly-owned subsidiary of the Company,  began offeringoffers a fee-based credit  services
 organization ("CSO") program to assist consumers  in its  Texas markets in obtaining credit.  Under
 the CSO program, FCC assists customers  in applying for a short-term  loancash advance  from
 an  independent,  non-bank,  consumer  lending  company  (the   "Independent
 Lender") and issues the Independent Lender  a letter of credit to  guarantee
 the repayment of  the loan.   The loans made  by the  Independent Lender  to
 credit services customers of  FCC range in amount  from $100$50 to $1,000,  have
 terms of 7 to 3135 days and bear interest at  a rate of less than 10%9.9% on an  annualized
 basis.   FCC  typically  charges a  credit  services  fee of  $20  per  $100
 advanced.  If the loan is  not repaid prior to  the expiration of the  term,
 the customer's personal  check is  deposited into  the Independent  Lender's
 bank account.   The bank  returns a  significant number  of customer  checks
 deposited  into  the Independent Lender's  account because there  aredue to insufficient funds
 in the customers' accounts.  If the loan is unpaid  after  16 days from  its
 due  date,  FCC  reimburses the Independent Lender, under  the terms  of its
 letter of credit, for the outstanding principal  amount,  accrued  interest,
 applicable late fees  and returned check fees.  FCC  subsequently collects a
 large percentage of these bad debts by redepositing the customers' checks or
 subsequent  cash  repayments  by  the  customers.  The  profitability of the
 Company's credit services operations is dependent  upon adequate  collection
 of these returned items.

 Pawn Merchandise Sales

      The Company's pawn merchandise sales are primarily retail sales to  the
 general public in its  pawn stores.  The  items retailed are primarily  used
 jewelry, consumer  electronics,  tools, musical  instruments,  and  sporting
 goods.  The Company also melts down certain quantities of scrap gold jewelry
 and sells the gold at market commodity prices.

      Total  merchandise  sales
 during the  years ended  December 31,  2005, 2004  and 2003,  accounted  for
 approximately 49%,  48%,  and  48%, respectively,  of  the  Company's  total
 revenues in each of these periods.

      The Company  acquires  pawn  merchandise  inventory  primarily  through
 forfeited pawns and,  to a lesser  extent, through purchases  of used  goods
 directly from  the general  public.   Merchandise  acquired by  the  Company
 through defaulted pawns is carried in inventory at the amount of the related
 pawn loan, exclusive of any accrued service fees.

      The  Company   does  not  provide  financing   to  purchasers  of   its
 merchandise, but does  permit its customers  to purchase  merchandise on  aan
 interest-free "layaway" plan.  Should the  customer fail to make a  required
 payment, the  item  is  returned to  inventory  and  previous  payments  are
 forfeited to the Company.

 Buy-Here/Pay-Here Automotive Sales and Financing Activities

      The Company's buy-here/pay-here merchandise  sales are retail sales  of
 used vehicles to  the general  public at  its automotive  dealerships.   The
 Company purchases vehicles  primarily through wholesalers,  new car  dealers
 and from auctions. The  majority of vehicle purchasing  is performed by  the
 Company's buyers.  Senior  management monitors the  quantity and quality  of
 vehicles purchased and compares the cost of similar vehicles purchased among
 different buyers.  Vehicles acquired  by   the   Company  are   carried   in
 inventory at the amount  of the purchase  price plus vehicle  reconditioning
 costs.

      The Company provides  financing to substantially  all of its  customers
 who purchase a vehicle at one of its dealerships.  The Company only provides
 financing to its customers for the purchase of its vehicles, and the Company
 does not provide  any type  of financing  to non-customers.   The  Company's
 finance contracts typically include down payments and/or trade-in allowances
 ranging from 5%  to 10% of  the purchase price,  and an average  term of  30
 months.  Missouri,  Oklahoma and Arkansas  state regulations limit  interest
 rates to 22.99%, 21.99% and the Federal Reserve Discount Window Primary Rate
 (approx 6%) plus 5%,  respectively.  In Missouri  and Oklahoma, the  Company
 charges rates that are lower than those allowed by law and those charged  by
 many of its competitors.  Currently,  the Company charges 10.9% interest  on
 all new sales in Arkansas and 16.99% on all sales in Oklahoma and Missouri.

      The Company requires  payments be made  on a  weekly, bi-weekly,  semi-
 monthly or monthly basis to  coincide with the day  the customer is paid  by
 his  or  her  employer.  Upon  the  customer  and  the  Company  reaching  a
 preliminary agreement as to  financing terms, the  Company obtains a  credit
 application  from  the   customer  which   includes  information   regarding
 employment, residency and credit history, personal references and a detailed
 budget itemizing the customer's monthly income  and expenses, which is  then
 verified by the  Company's underwriting personnel.   After the  verification
 process, the store manager  makes the decision to  accept, reject or  modify
 (perhaps obtain a greater  down payment or  require an acceptable  co-buyer)
 the proposed transaction.   In general, the  store manager and  underwriters
 attempt to assess the stability and character of the applicant.

 Financial Information about Segments

      Additional financial information regarding  the Company's revenues  and
 assets by each  of its  two operating  segments is  provided in  Note 14  of
 "Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements."

 Financial Information about Geographic Areas

      Additional financial information regarding  the Company's revenues  and
 long-lived assets by geographic  areas is provided in  Note 15 of "Notes  to
 Consolidated Financial Statements."

 Locations and Operations

       The Company operates stores in eleven U.S. states and seven states  in
 Mexico.  It seeks to establish clusters of several stores in  specific
 geographic  areas  in  order  to achieve certain economies of scale relative
 to supervision,  purchasing  and  marketing.  Financial  information   about
 geographic areas is  provided in Results  of Operations and  Note 1315 of  the
 Notes"Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements."   Of the  Company's  252  pawn
 stores, 69  pawn stores  also  offer the  cash  advance or  credit  services
 product.  As of December 31, 2005,2006, the Company's stores were located in  the
 following states:

                                                    Buy-Here/
                                          Cash      Pay-Here
                                  Pawn   Payday Advance   Automotive     Total
                                 Stores  Stores   Stores
                                         ------------------------------Dealerships   Locations
                                 ------  ------   -----------   ---------
 United States:
   Texas                           (1)...................     58      60         118
           Maryland....................95           -          153
   Maryland                        21       -           -           21
   California..................California                       -      15           -           15
   Illinois....................Illinois                         -      10           -           10
   District of Columbia             (2)....      2       7           -            9
   South Carolina (2)..........Michigan                         -       8           -            8
   Oregon                           -       7           -            7
   Oregon......................Arkansas                         -       7           7
           Washington..................      -           6            6
   South Carolina                   6       -           -            6
   Missouri                         3       -           2            5
   Oklahoma                         3       Missouri....................-           2            5
   Washington                       -       3           -            3
   Oklahoma (2)................      3Virginia                         2       -           3
           Virginia....................      2           -            2
 Mexico:
   Tamaulipas..................     31Tamaulipas                      39       -           31
           Chihuahua...................-           39
   Chihuahua                       30       -           -           30
   Coahuila                        28       -           -           28
   Nuevo Leon                      27       -           -           27
   Coahuila....................Baja California                 26       -           26
           Nuevo Leon..................     26           -           26
   Baja California.............     16           -          16
           Durango.....................Jalisco                          3       -           -            3
   Sonora......................Durango                          3       -           -            3
   Sonora                           1       -           -            1
                                 ----        ----        ---------   -----       ------      -------
     Total                        ....................    226         102         328
                                          ====        ====        ====

           (1) All stores in this market offer the credit services product.
           (2) Pawn stores in these markets also offer the payday/short-term
               advance product.252     145          10          407
                                 =====   =====       ======      =======

      In addition,  at  December 31,  2005,2006,  the Company's  50%  owned  joint
 venture, Cash &  Go, Ltd.,  operated a total  of 40  staffed kiosks  located
 inside convenience stores in the state of Texas.  These kiosks offer  credit
 services and check cashing.  No kiosks were opened or closed during the year
 ended December 31, 2006, although  subsequent to December 31, 2006, one Cash
 & Go, Ltd. kiosk was closed.

 Pawn Store Operations

      The typical Company pawn store is a freestanding building or part of  a
 small  retail  strip  shopping  center  with  adequate,  well-lit   parking.
 Management has established a standard  store design intended to  distinguish
 the Company's stores from the competition.   The design consists of a  well-
 illuminated exterior  with distinctive  signage and  a layout  similar to  a
 contemporary specialty retailer.   The Company's  stores are typically  open
 six to seven days a week from 9:00 a.m. to between 6:00 p.m. and 9:00 p.m.

      The Company's  computer system  permits a  store  manager or  clerk  to
 rapidly recall the cost of an item  in inventory, the date it was  purchased
 as well as the prior transaction history of a particular customer.  It  also
 facilitates the  timely valuation  of goods  by showing  values assigned  to
 similar goods in the past.  The  Company has networked its stores to  permit
 the  Company's  headquarters  to  more  efficiently  monitor  each   store's
 operations, including  merchandise  sales, service  charge  revenues,  pawns
 written and redeemed, and changes in inventory.

      The Company attempts  to attract retail  shoppers seeking bargainvalue  prices
 through the  use  of  seasonal promotions,  special  discounts  for  regular
 customers, prominent  display of  impulse purchase  items such  as  jewelry,
 electronics and tools,  tent sales and sidewalk  sales, and  a layaway  purchasing
 plan.  The Company attempts to attract and retain pawn customers by  lending
 a competitive percentage of the estimated sale value of items presented  for
 pledge and by providing quick financing, renewal and redemption services  in
 an appealing atmosphere.

      Each pawnshop employs  a manager, one  or two  assistant managers,  and
 between one and eight sales personnel, depending upon the size, sales volume
 and location of the store.  The store manager is responsible for supervising
 personnel and assuring that the store is managed in accordance with  Company
 guidelines and established policies and procedures.  Each manager reports to
 an area  supervisor who  typically oversees  four to  seven store  managers.
 Area supervisors typically report to a regional market manager, who in  turn
 reports to one of the Company's two Vice-Presidents of Operations.

      The Company believes that profitability of its pawnshops is  dependent,
 among other factors, upon its employees' ability to make pawns that  achieve
 optimum redemption rates, to be effective sales people and to provide prompt
 and courteous service.  Therefore, the Company trains its employees  through
 direct instruction  and  on-the-job  pawn  and  sales  experience.  The  new
 employee is introduced to the business  through an orientation and  training
 program that includes  on-the-job training in  lending practices,  layaways,
 merchandise valuation,  and  general  administration  of  store  operations.
 Certain experienced employees  receive training and  an introduction to  the
 fundamentals of management to acquire the  skills necessary to advance  into
 management positions within the organization.  Management training typically
 involves exposure to income maximization, recruitment, inventory control and
 cost efficiency.   The  Company maintains  a performance-based  compensation
 plan for  all store  employees  based on  sales,  gross profit  and  special
 promotional contests.

 PaydayCash Advance and Credit Services Operations

      The Company's paydaycash  advance locations are  typically part  of a  retail
 strip shopping center  with adequate,  well-litgood  visibility from  a major  street and  easy
 access to  parking.   Management has  established  a standard  store  design
 intended to  distinguish the  Company's stores  from the  competition.   The
 design  consists of a  well-illuminated exterior with  lighted signage.  The
 interiors typically feature  an ample  lobby, separated  from employee  work
 areas by floor-to-ceilingglass teller windows.  The Company's stores are typically open  six
 to seven days a week from 9:00 a.m. to between 6:00 p.m. and 9:00 p.m.

      Computer operating systems in the Company's paydaycash advance stores allow a
 store manager or clerk to rapidly  recall customer check cashing  histories,
 short-termcash advance histories, and other vital  information.  The Company  attempts
 to attract customers primarily through the stores' visibility and television
 and yellow page advertisements.advertisements in certain markets.

      Each paydaycash advance store  employs a manager, and  between one and  eight
 tellers, depending upon the  size, sales volume and  location of the  store.
 The store manager is responsible for supervising personnel and assuring that
 the store is managed in accordance  with Company guidelines and  established
 policies and procedures.  Each store  manager reports to an area  supervisor
 who  typically  oversees  two  to five  store  managers.   Area  supervisors
 typically report to a regional market manager, who in turn reports to one of
 the Company's two Vice-Presidents of Operations.

      The kiosks operated by the Cash  & Go, Ltd., joint venture are  located
 inside convenience stores.  Each kiosk is a physically secured area with its
 own counter space  within the convenience  store.  Each  kiosk is  typically
 staffed by one or two employees at any point in time.

      The Company believes that profitability  of its paydaycash advance  locations
 is dependent upon  its employees' ability  to make loans  and extend  credit
 services that achieve optimum loan performance,  to manage bad debt  expense
 and to provide  excellent customer service.   Company employees are  trained
 through direct instruction and on-the-job lending, collections  and customer
 service experience.  The new employee is introduced to the business  through
 a training program that includes  on-the-job training in lending  practices,
 collections efforts and general administration of store operations.  Certain
 experienced  employees  receive   training  and  an   introduction  to   the
 fundamentals of  management, such  as income  maximization,  recruitment and
 cost efficiency, to acquire the skills necessary to advance into  management
 positions throughout the Company.  The Company maintains a performance-based
 compensation plan for all paydaycash advance  and credit services store  employees
 based on gross profit, net income and other seasonal contests.

 Buy-Here/Pay-Here Automotive Operations

      The  typical  Company  buy-here/pay-here  automotive  dealership  is  a
 freestanding  building  with  adequate,  well-lit  parking.  Management  has
 established a standard  store design intended  to distinguish the  Company's
 stores from  the competition.   The  design consists  of a  well-illuminated
 exterior with distinctive signage and a  layout similar to other  automobile
 retailers.  The  Company's dealerships are  typically open six  days a  week
 from 9:00 a.m. to between 6:00 p.m. and 8:00 p.m.  All stores are located on
 leased property between one and three acres in size.

      Computer  operating   systems   in  the   Company's   buy-here/pay-here
 dealerships allow a store manager or clerk  to rapidly recall the cost of  a
 vehicle in  inventory,  the date  it  was purchased  as  well as  the  prior
 transaction history of  a particular customer  and other vital  information.
 The Company  attempts to  attract customers  primarily through  its  stores'
 visibility,  television,  radio   and   Internet   advertisements.   Another
 significant source of  customers is  repeat  customers and referrals.  As  a
 result, the Company offers special promotions  to customers nearing the  end
 of their  current contract  or  to previous  customers  that have  paid  out
 contracts.   The  Company  also  actively  manages  a  website,  network  of
 billboards,  and  a  toll-free  hotline,  all  of  which  drive  traffic  to
 individual stores.

      Each dealership employs a  manager, a team  captain, and between  three
 and eight  sales  personnel,  depending upon  the  size,  sales  volume  and
 location  of  the   dealership.   The  store  manager  is  responsible   for
 supervising personnel and assuring that the  store is managed in  accordance
 with Company  guidelines  and established  policies  and  procedures.   Each
 manager reports to a regional sales manager who typically oversees three  to
 five store managers.  Regional sales managers report to Auto Master's  Vice-
 President of Operations.

      The  Company  believes  that  profitability  of  its  buy-here/pay-here
 dealerships is dependent upon  its employees' ability  to sell vehicles  and
 extend credit that  achieves optimum loan  performance, to  manage bad  debt
 expense and to  provide excellent customer  service.  Company employees  are
 trained  through  direct  instruction  and  on-the-job  sales,   collections
 and customer  service experience.   New  employees  are  introduced  to  the
 business through a training program that includes on-the-job sales  training
 in selling  and  financing practices  and  general administration  of  store
 operations.  The Company maintains a performance-based compensation plan for
 a substantial  portion of  all buy-here/pay-here  employees based  on  gross
 profit, net income and other types of programs related to the advancement of
 functional and organizational goals and objectives.

      The Company  utilizes   a  highly  centralized  operating  model.   Key
 functions   such    as   inventory    purchasing,   inventory    management,
 reconditioning, pricing, underwriting, marketing and collections are managed
 and executed at a corporate and/or regional level.  The Company believes  it
 gains certain economies of  scale and greater  consistency in operations  by
 centralizing its operations.

      The Company employs a full-time staff of buyers who purchase used  cars
 from vehicle auctions, wholesalers, and new  vehicle dealers in a ten  state
 area.  The ability to purchase vehicles from multiple regions of the country
 protects the Company from local and regional supply shortages while allowing
 it to showcase a much greater selection of quality vehicles.

      Vehicle quality is important  as it impacts  front end sales,  customer
 satisfaction and referrals, repeat business and loan quality; a customer  is
 more likely to make payments on a vehicle that is operational.  Each vehicle
 purchased by the Company  is sent to  a centralized reconditioning  facility
 for inspection, necessary repairs,  and detailing.  This  is in contrast  to
 many competitors, whose vehicles go directly from the auction or  wholesaler
 to the retail location.  Adjacent to the Auto Master headquarters, a  12,000
 square foot facility is equipped with  skilled technicians, 20 double  bays,
 and a parts  shop stocked with  most commonly needed  items.  Upon  arrival,
 each  vehicle   is  thoroughly   inspected  to   determine  the   level   of
 reconditioning  necessary  for  the  unit  to  meet  the  Company's   retail
 standards.   Approximately  10%  of vehicles  purchased  do  not  pass  this
 inspection,  and  are  therefore  wholesaled.   Each  remaining  vehicle  is
 assigned to a technician who completes the work mandated  by the inspection.
 The  most  common  modifications  are  tune-ups and the replacement of parts
 which routinely wear  down such as  brakes and tires; however, the Company's
 technicians are equipped  to  handle  most  major  repairs  as  well.   Upon
 completion  of  all  necessary  repairs,  each  vehicle is  then sent to the
 Company's  adjacent 10,000 square foot detail facility, where it is cleaned,
 inside and out, by the detail staff.

      Corporate  management  monitors  and  controls  inventory  by   working
 directly with the Company's buyers as  well as its retail location  managers
 to ensure  that each  retail location  has the  appropriate mix  of  vehicle
 models and price ranges.  Based on each location's needs, management assigns
 the newly reconditioned vehicles to an individual retail location.

      The  Company's  loan approval process begins  as soon  as the  customer
 arrives   at   the  retail   location.   Applications   which  meet  initial
 qualifications are  sent  to  underwriting.   The  Company  has a  staff  of
 full-time underwriters, all of which are based in the Auto Master  corporate
 office.  Upon receipt of a credit application, an underwriter verifies  that
 it  is  within  the  Company's  loan  underwriting  guidelines,  checks  the
 customer's  credit  and  contacts the customer's references.   The  Company
 has developed  standardized  loan  underwriting guidelines  which  make  the
 approval process objective rather than subjective.  Following approval  from
 underwriting, sales  management closes  the  transaction, and  the  customer
 takes delivery of the vehicle.

      Following a  sale, each  customer is  assigned an  account manager  who
 works with the customer to ensure payments are made on time, typically on  a
 weekly or bi-weekly basis when the customer gets paid.  The Company has over
 20 account  managers who  are spread  across  its four  regional  collection
 centers.

 Competition

      The Company encounters significant  competition in connection with  all
 aspects of  its  business  operations.   These  competitive  conditions  may
 adversely affect  the  Company's  revenues, profitability,  and  ability  to
 expand.

      The Company competes  primarily with other  pawn store operators,  cash
 advance operators  and payday advancebuy-here/pay-here  dealership operators.   There  are
 three publicly heldpublicly-held pawnshop operators, and five publicly held paydaysix publicly-held cash advance/check
 cashing operators and two publicly-held buy-here/pay-here operators, all  of
 which have more locations than the  Company.  There are severalmany privately  held
 operators of paydaycash advance stores and buy-here/pay-here dealerships, some  of
 which are significantly larger than the Company.  In addition, both  the pawnshop,
 cash advance and payday  advancebuy-here/pay-here industries  are characterized by a  large
 number of independent owner-
 operators,owner-operators, some of whom own and operate multiple
 locations.  The Company believes that the primary elements of competition in
 these businesses are store location, the ability to lend competitive amounts
 on pawns  and  short-
 termcash advances,  customer  service, and  management  of  store
 employees.  In addition, the  Company competes with financial  institutions,
 such as banks  and consumer finance  companies, which generally  lend on  an
 unsecured as well as a secured basis.   Other lenders may and do lend  money
 on terms more favorable than  those offered by the  Company.  Many of  these
 competitors have greater financial resources than the Company.

      In its retail  operations, the Company's  competitors include  numerous
 retail and  wholesale  stores,  including jewelry  stores,  discount  retail
 stores, consumer  electronics  stores, on-line  retailers,  on-line  auction
 sites and  other pawnshops.   Competitive  factors in  the Company's  retail
 operations include the  ability to provide  the customer with  a variety  of
 merchandise items at attractive prices.   Many retailers have  significantly
 greater financial resources than the Company.

      In  the  used   automotive  retail  industry,   the  Company   competes
 principally  with  other independent  buy-here/pay-here  dealers, and  to  a
 lesser degree with used vehicle  retail operations of franchised  automobile
 dealerships, national  or regional,  independent used  vehicle dealers,  and
 individuals who sell  used vehicles in  private transactions.   The  Company
 competes for both the purchase and resale of used vehicles.

 Governmental Regulation

 General

      The Company is subject  to extensive regulation  of its pawnshop,  short-
 term advance/payday lending,cash
 advance, credit  services, check  cashing and  check-cashingbuy-here/pay-here  automotive
 retailing operations  in most  jurisdictions in  which it  operates.   These
 regulations are provided  through numerous laws,  ordinances and  regulatory
 pronouncements from various federal,  state and local governmental  entities
 in the United States  and  Mexico.  In  many jurisdictions, the Company must
 obtain  and  maintain  regulatory  operating licenses.   In  addition,  many
 statutes  and  regulations  prescribe, among other things, the general terms
 of  the  Company's  loan  and   credit  services  agreements  and  the  maximum  service fees and/or
 interest rates that may be  charged.  These  regulatory agencies have  broad
 discretionary authority.  The  Company is also subject  to U.S. federal  and
 state regulations  relating  to  the  reporting  and  recording  of  certain
 currency transactions.   The Company's pawnshoppawn  operations in  Mexico are  also
 subject to, and must comply with  pawnshop and other general business,  tax,
 employment and consumer protection  regulations from various federal,  state
 and local governmental agencies in Mexico.

      Governmental action  to further  prohibit or  restrict, in  particular,
 cash or payday or short-term advances and credit services products has been advocated over
 the past few  years by  consumer advocacy groups  and by  media reports  and
 stories.  The consumer groups and media stories typically focus on the  cost
 to a consumer for paydaycash advances, which is higher than the interest generally
 charged  by  credit-cardcredit  card issuers  to  a  more creditworthy  consumer.   The
 consumer groups and media stories often characterize short-termcash advance activities
 as abusive toward  consumers.  During  the last few  years, legislation  has
 been introduced and/or  enacted in the  United States  Congress, in  certain
 state legislatures  and  in  various  local  jurisdictions  to  prohibit  or
 restrict payday advances.cash  advances  and the  related  service  charges.   In  addition,
 regulatory authorities  in various  levels of  government have  proposed  or
 publicly addressed, from time to time,  the possibility of proposing new  or
 expanded regulations that would prohibit or further restrict paydaycash advances.

      There can  be no  assurance that  additional  local, state  or  federal
 statutes or regulations in  either the United States  or Mexico will not  be
 enacted or that existing  laws and regulations will  not be amended at  some
 future date that  could inhibit  the ability of  the Company  to offer  pawn
 loans, short-termcash  advances,  and  credit  services  and  buy-here/pay-here  automotive
 retailing/financing, significantly  decrease the  service fees  for  lending
 money, or prohibit or more stringently  regulate the sale of certain  goods,
 any of which  could cause  a significant,  adverse effect  on the  Company's
 future results.   If  legislative or  regulatory actions  that had  negative
 effects on  the pawn,  paydaycash advance,  or  credit services  or  buy-here/pay-here
 automotive industries were taken at a federal level in the United States  or
 Mexico, or in U.S. or Mexican states or municipalities where the Company has
 a significant  number  of stores,  those  actions could  have  a  materially
 adverse  effect  on  the  Company's  lending,  credit  services  and  retail
 activities and revenues.  There can be no assurance that additional federal,
 state or local legislation  in the U.S.  or Mexico will  not be enacted,  or
 that existing laws and regulations will  not be amended, which would have  a
 materially  adverse  impact  on  the  Company's  operations  and   financial
 condition.

 U.S. State and Local Regulations

      The Company operates  pawn stores in  seven U.S. states,  all of  which
 have licensing and/or fee regulations on pawnshop operations, which includes
 Texas, Oklahoma, Maryland, Virginia,  South Carolina, Washington, D.C.,  and
 Missouri.  The Company is licensed in each of the states in which a  license
 is currently required for it to operate as a pawnbroker.  The Company's  fee
 structures are at or below the  applicable rate ceilings adopted by each  of
 these states.  In addition, the Company is in compliance with the net  asset
 requirements in states where  it is required to  maintain certain levels  of
 liquid assets for each pawn store it operates in the applicable state.

      Under some county  and municipal ordinances,  pawn stores must  provide
 local law  enforcement  agencies  with  copies  of  all  daily  transactions
 involving pawns  and over-the-counter  purchases.   These daily  transaction
 reports are designed to provide the  local law enforcement officials with  a
 detailed description of  the goods  involved, including  serial numbers,  if
 any,  and  the  name  and  address  of  the  owner  obtained  from  a  valid
 identification card. Goods held to secure pawns or goods purchased that  are
 determined to  belong to  an owner  other than  the borrower  or seller  are
 subject to recovery by the rightful  owners.  Historically, the Company  has
 not found these claims  to have a material,  adverse effect upon results  of
 operations.  The Company does not  maintain insurance to cover the costs  of
 returning merchandise to its rightful owners.

      The Company  currently provides  payday/short-termcash advances,  also known  as  payday
 advances, in seveneight U.S. states that have licensing and/or fee and  operating
 regulations  related  to  its  payday  (or  short-term)  advance and  check-cashing  operations,  which  includes
 California, Washington,  Oklahoma,  South  Carolina,  Oregon,  Illinois  and
 Washington, D.C.D.C and Michigan.  The Company is licensed in each of the states
 in which a  license is  currently required  for it  to operate  as a check casher  and/or  payday
 advance  provider.  The  Company's  fee  structures  are  at  or  below  the
 applicable rate ceilings adopted  by each of these  states.  Regulations  in
 certain states limit the maximum number of consecutive payday advances  that
 may be provided to a customer and/or limit the total advances a customer may
 have outstanding at any point  in time.  As  an example of such  restrictive
 regulation, states such as Illinois and Michigan have recently enacted cashpayday advance
 laws that require payday advance lenders  to report their customers'  cashpayday
 advance activities to a state-wide database.  PaydayCash advance lenders operating
 in conjunction  with a  state-wide database  are generally  restricted  from
 making cashpayday advance loans  to customers who may  have a certain amountnumber  of
 cashpayday advances outstanding with other lenders.  These database restrictions
 can have the effect of preventing customers from obtaining the cash advances
 they need and want.   The  Company currently operates  ten  payday  advance
 locations in the state of Illinois and expects that these restrictions  will
 negatively impact the revenues and  profitability of these locations  during
 2006.   However,  at this  time the Company  cannot reasonably quantify  the
 potential impact on its  projected revenues and  operating profits in  2006.
 It is possible  that legislators and regulators  could
 pursue database or  other restrictive legislation  in other states,  despite
 the increasing consumer  demand for cash,  or payday advance  products.   In
 2006,  the  state   of  Oregon   enacted  legislation   that  provides   for
 significantly more  restrictive regulation  of the  payday advance  industry
 beginning in  July  2007.   The  implementation of  these  more  restrictive
 regulations, as  currently  enacted,  is  expected  to  have  a  significant
 negative  effect  on  the  revenues  and  profitability  of  the   Company's
 operations in Oregon, beginning  in July 2007,  where the Company  currently
 has seven cash  advance locations.   Additional restrictive legislative  and
 regulatory activity in  other states surrounding  cash advance products,  if
 passed, could also adversely affect the Company's cash advance business.  In
 addition,  in  some   jurisdictions,  check  cashing   companies  or   money
 transmission  agents  are  required  to  meet  minimum  bonding  or  capital
 requirements and are subject to record-keeping requirements.

      The  laws  in  the  state  of  Texas  permit  licensed  payday  lendingadvance
 operations; however, restrictions on the maximum fees that can be charged do
 not permit the  Company to operate  profitably as a  payday advance  lender.
 Accordingly, in the state of Texas,  the Company provides a credit  services
 program to customers  seeking short-term advances as described below.

      In July 2005,cash  advances.   First Cash  Credit, Ltd.,  a
 wholly-owned  subsidiary  of  the  Company,  becameoperates  a  registered  credit
 services organization in the state of Texas as provided under Section 393 of
 the Texas  Finance Code.   As  a credit  services organization,  First  Cash
 Credit, Ltd. assists customers, for a fee, in obtaining a short-term loancash advance  from
 an independent  lender.   A credit  services organization  must provide  the
 consumer with a disclosure  statement and a  credit services agreement  that
 describe in detail,  among other things,  the services  the credit  services
 organization will provide  to the consumer,  the fees the  consumer will  be
 charged by the credit services organization for these services, the  details
 of the surety bond and the availability  of the surety bond if the  consumer
 believes  the  credit  services  organization  has  violated  the  law,  the
 consumer's right to review  his or her file,  the procedures a consumer  may
 follow to  dispute  information  contained  in his  or  her  file,  and  the
 availability of non-profit credit counseling services.  The credit  services
 organization must  also give  a  consumer the  right  to cancel  the  credit
 services agreement without penalty within three days after the agreement  is
 signed.  In addition, under the  provisions of the credit services  statute,
 each First Cash Credit, Ltd.'s credit  services location must be  registered
 as a credit services organization and pay a registration fee.  There can  be
 no assurance  that new  legislative or  regulatory initiatives  will not  be
 enacted which would eliminate or restrict  the Company's ability to  operate
 as a credit services organization in the state of Texas.

      The Company's buy-here/pay-here operations are subject to various state
 and local  laws,  ordinances and  regulations  pertaining to  the  sale  and
 financing of vehicles.  Under these  state laws,  the Company's  dealerships
 must  obtain  a  license  in  order  to  operate  or  relocate.  These  laws
 also regulate  advertising and sales  practices.  The  Company's   financing
 activities are  subject  to state  and  local motor  vehicle  finance  laws,
 installment finance laws, usury laws and other installment sales laws. Among
 other things, these laws require that  the Company limit or prescribe  terms
 of the contracts it originates, require specified disclosures to  customers,
 restrict collection practices,  limit the Company's  right to repossess  and
 sell collateral, and prohibit discrimination against customers on the  basis
 of certain characteristics including age, race, gender and marital status.

      The states  in which  the Company  operates impose  limits on  interest
 rates the Company can charge on its loans.  These limits are generally based
 on either (i) a specified margin above the federal primary credit rate, (ii)
 the age  of the  vehicle, or  (iii) a  fixed rate.  Management believes  the
 Company is  in  compliance in  all  material respects  with  all  applicable
 federal, state  and local  laws, ordinances  and regulations.  However,  the
 adoption of additional laws, changes in the interpretation of existing laws,
 or the Company's entrance into jurisdictions with more stringent  regulatory
 requirements could  have a  material adverse  effect on  the Company's  used
 vehicle sales and finance business.

 U.S. Federal Regulations

      There is currently no directDirect federal regulation  of either the pawn,  or
 short-term/paydaycash advance industries.and buy-here/pay-
 here automotive retailing/financing  industries is generally  limited.   The
 federal government does, however,
 regulateregulates, and generally prohibits, the ability of  state
 and nationally chartered banks to participate  in the short-term/paydaycash advance  industry. Theindustry
 through regulations established  by both the  U.S. Office of the Comptroller
 of the Currency has  significantly  restricted  the  ability  of   nationally
 chartered banks to establish or  maintain relationships with loan  servicers
 in order to make out-of-state payday advance  loans.  In 2003 and 2005, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation ("FDIC"), which regulates the  ability
 of state  chartered  banks to  enter  into relationships  with  out-of-state
 payday  loan  servicers,  issued  stringent  guidelines  under  which   such
 arrangements are  permitted.   Subsequently,  in  FebruaryCorporation.

      During 2006, the FDIC
 indicated through direct communications with certainUnited States  Congress enacted legislation that  caps
 the annual  percentage  rate  charged  on  loans  made  to  active  military
 personnel at 36%; this legislation becomes effective in October 2007.  As of
 these banks, that it
 will no  longer  permit  state-chartered  banksthe date of this report, the 36% annual percentage rate cap applies to  establish  or  maintain
 relationships withmost
 loan servicers in  order  to make  out-of-state  payday
 advanceproducts, including cash advances and pawn loans.

      The Company previously had a payday advance loan servicing relationship
 with County  Bank  of Rehoboth  Beach,  Delaware, a  state  chartered  bank,
 through which the Company offered payday advances to customers in its  Texas
 locations.   Effective  September  30,  2005,  the  Company  terminated  its
 relationship with County Bank and as  of December 31, 2005 had no  customers
 with active  payday advances  through  County Bank  or  any other  state  or
 nationally chartered bank.  The Company does not
 believehave any cash advance or pawn loan products bearing an interest rate of  36%
 per annum or less, nor does the Company intend to develop any such  product,
 as the  Company believes  the losses  and  servicing costs  associated  with
 lending to the Company's traditional customer base would exceed the  revenue
 produced at that under current
 federal banking regulations that it will  be ablerate. The Company  does not expect this new legislation  to
 establish future  loan-
 servicing relationships with statehave a  material adverse  effect on  the  Company's financial  condition  or
 nationally chartered banks.results of operations.

      In connection with  payday/short-termcash advance and  automobile finance  transactions,
 the Company must comply with the  various disclosure requirements under  the
 Federal Truth in Lending  Act (and Federal Reserve  Regulation Z under  that
 Act).  These disclosures include among other things, the total amount of the
 finance charges  and  annualized  percentage rate  of  the  finance  charges
 associated with each payday/short-termcash advance and vehicle financing transaction.

      Under the Bank Secrecy  Act regulations of the  U.S. Department of  the
 Treasury (the "Treasury Department"), transactions involving currency in  an
 amount greater than $10,000 or the purchase of monetary instruments for cash
 in amounts  from $3,000  to $10,000  must be  recorded.   In general,  every
 financial institution,  including the  Company,  must report  each  deposit,
 withdrawal, exchange of currency or other  payment or transfer, whether  by,
 through or to the financial institution, that involves currency in an amount
 greater than $10,000.  In addition, multiple  currency transactions must  be
 treated as single  transactions if the  financial institution has  knowledge
 that the transactions are by, or on behalf of, any one person and result  in
 either cash  in  or cash  out  totaling more  than  $10,000 during  any  one
 business day.

      The Money Laundering  Suppression Act of  1994 added a  section to  the
 Bank Secrecy Act requiring the registration of "money services  businesses,"
 like the Company,  that engage in  check cashing,  currency exchange,  money
 transmission, or  the issuance  or redemption  of money  orders,  traveler's
 checks, and similar  instruments.   The purpose  of the  registration is  to
 enable governmental  authorities to  better enforce  laws prohibiting  money
 laundering and  other illegal  activities.   The regulations  require  money
 services businesses to  register with the  Treasury Department  by filing  a
 form, adopted by the  Financial Crimes Enforcement  Network of the  Treasury
 Department  ("FinCEN"),  and  to  re-register  at  least  every  two   years
 thereafter.  The  regulations also require  that a  money services  business
 maintain a list of names and addresses of, and other information about,  its
 agents and that the list be made available to any requesting law enforcement
 agency (through FinCEN).  The agent list must be updated annually.

      In March 2000, FinCEN adopted additional regulations, implementing  the
 Bank Secrecy Act that is also addressed to money services businesses.  These
 regulations require  money  services businesses,  such  as the  Company,  to
 report suspicious transactions  involving at least  $2,000 to  FinCEN.   The
 regulations  generally  describe  three  classes  of  reportable  suspicious
 transactions  -  one or more related  transactions that  the money  services
 business knows, suspects, or has reason to suspect (1) involve funds derived
 from illegal activity or  are intended to hide  or disguise such funds,funds;  (2)
 are designed  to evade  the requirements  of the  Bank Secrecy  Act,Act; or  (3)
 appear to serve no business or lawful purpose.

      Under the USA  PATRIOT Act passed  by Congress in  2001 and revised  in
 2006,  the  Company  is  required  to  maintain  an  anti-money   laundering
 compliance  program.   The  program must  include  (1)  the  development  of
 internal policies,  procedures  and  controls;  (2)  the  designation  of  a
 compliance officer; (3)  an ongoing  employee-training program;  and (4)  an
 independent  audit function  to test  the  program.  The United  StatesTreasury Department of  Treasury
 is expected  to  issue regulations  specifying  the appropriate features and
 elements of the anti-money  laundering  compliance  programs  for  the  pawn
 brokering and short-termcash advance industries.

      The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act  requires the Company  to generally  protect
 the confidentiality of its customers' nonpublic personal information and  to
 disclose to its customers its privacy policy and practices, including  those
 regarding sharing the customers'  nonpublic personal information with  third
 parties.  Such disclosure must be made to customers at the time the customer
 relationship is established, at least annually thereafter, and if there is a
 change in the Company's privacy policy.

 With respect  to  firearms sales,  the  Company must  comply  with  the
 regulations promulgated by the Department of the Treasury-Bureau of Alcohol,
 Tobacco  and  Firearms,  which  requires  firearms  dealers  to  maintain  a
 permanent written record  of all firearms  that it receives  or sells.   The
 Company does not currently take firearms as pawn collateral nor does it sell
 firearms to the public.

 Mexico Regulations

      The pawnshop industry in Mexico is currently subject to various general  business
 regulations in the  areas of tax  compliance, customs, consumer  protections
 and employment matters, among  others, by various  federal, state and  local
 governmental agencies in Mexico.  In addition, there are currently
 two states  in  which  the  Company operates  that  have  certain  laws  and
 regulations specific to  the pawn industry.  In  general, these  regulations
 provide for the registration of pawnshops operating in the state and  impose
 certain consumer protection standards upon pawnshop operators.   Legislation
 to specifically regulate  the pawn  industry at  a federal  level and/or  in
 other states has  been, and  continues to be,  proposed from  time to  time.
 There is  currently  proposed  federal legislation in Mexico
 was recently enacted  which would
 provideprovides  for administrative  regulation of  the
 pawnshop industry throughby PROFECO, the federal consumer protection agency.  The  Company monitorsUnder
 these regulations, PROFECO  regulates the statusform  of any such proposed legislation  on a regular basis.  Ifpawn  loan contracts  and
 certain operating procedures of pawnshops.  PROFECO does not currently  have
 regulatory actions that had  negative effects onauthority  over  the interest  rates  and fees  charged  to  pawn
 industry,  such as limits on
 pawn service charges, were taken at a federal level in Mexico, or in Mexican
 states or  municipalities where  the Company  has  a significant  number  of
 stores, those  actions  could  have  a  materially  adverse  effect  on  the
 Company's lending  and retail  activities and  revenues.customers.  There  can  be  no assurance that  additional federal, state  or
 local statutes  or  regulations in  Mexico  will  not be  enacted,  or  that
 existing laws  and regulations  will  not be  amended,  which could  have  a
 materially  adverse  impact  on  the  Company's  operations  and   financial
 condition.

 Employees

      The Company had  approximately 2,1582,900 employees  as of  March 13, 2006,14,  2007,
 including approximately 156200  persons employed  in executive,  administrative
 and accounting functions.  In addition,  Cash & Go, Ltd., had  approximately
 8480 employees as  of March 13, 2006.14,  2007.  None  of the  Company's employees  are
 covered by  collective bargaining  agreements.   The Company  considers  its
 employee relations to be satisfactory.

 First Cash Website

      The Company's  primary  website  is  at  http://www.firstcash.com.  The
 Company makes available, free of charge, at its corporate website its annual
 report on Form 10-K, quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, current reports on Form
 8-K and amendments to those reports  filed or furnished pursuant to  Section
 13(a) or  15(d) of  the Securities  Exchange Act  of 1934,  as amended  (the
 "Exchange  Act"),  as  soon  as   reasonably  practicable  after  they   are
 electronically filed with the SEC.

 Insurance

      The Company maintains  fire,  casualty,  theftproperty risk coverage  and  public liability  insurance
 for each of  its  pawn stores  and  payday advance locations in  amounts management believes  to be  adequate.
 The Company maintains workers' compensation insurance in Maryland, Missouri,
 California,  Virginia,   Washington,  Oregon,   South  Carolina,   Illinois,
 Washington, D.C., Oklahoma, Michigan, Arkansas, as well as excess employer's
 indemnification insurance in Texas and equivalent  coverage in Mexico.   The
 Company is a non-subscriber under the Texas Workers' Compensation Act.


 Item 1a.  Risk Factors
 ----------------------

      Important risk factors  that could cause  results or  events to  differ
 from current  expectations  are  described  below.  These  factors  are  not
 intended to be an all-encompassing list of risks and uncertainties that  may
 affect the operations, performance, development and results of the Company's
 business.

      A decreased demand for the  Company's products and specialty  financial
 services and  failure  of  the  Company to  adapt  to  such  decrease  could
 adversely affect results.   Although the  Company's  products  and  services
 are a staple of its  customer base, the demand  for a particular product  or
 service may decrease due to a  variety of factors, such as the  availability
 of competing  products,  changes  in  customers'  financial  conditions,  or
 regulatory restrictions that reduce customer access to particular  products.
 Should the Company fail to adapt  to a significant change in its  customers'
 demand for,  or  access  to, its  products,  the  Company's  revenues  could
 decrease significantly. Even if the Company does make adaptations, customers
 may  resist  or  may  reject  products  whose  adaptations  make  them  less
 attractive or less available. In any event, the effect of any product change
 on the results  of the  Company's business  may not  be fully  ascertainable
 until the  change has  been in  effect  for some  time. In  particular,  the
 Company has changed,  and will continue  to change, some  of the  short-term
 advance products and services it offers due to the revised guidelines issued
 by the FDIC effective  July 1, 2005 and  supplemented in February 2006.  The
 long-term impact these changes  will have on the  Company's business is  not
 yet certain.

      Short-term consumer loan servicesproducts have come under increased  regulation
 and scrutiny. If changes in regulations  affecting the Company's short-termpawn,  cash
 advance, automotive finance and credit services businesses create  increased
 restrictions, or have the effect of  prohibiting loans in the countries  and
 states where the Company offers short-term consumer loans, such  regulations
 could materially reduce the Company's pawn, short-termcash advance, automotive finance
 and credit services  businesses and limit  its expansion  into new  markets.
 The Company's products and services are subject to extensive regulation  and
 supervision under  various federal,  state and  local laws,  ordinances  and
 regulations in both the United States and Mexico. The Company faces the risk
 that restrictions or limitations on loan  amounts, loan yields and  customer
 acceptance of  loan  products  resulting  from  the  enactment,  change,  or
 interpretation of laws and regulations in the United States or Mexico  could
 have a negative effect on the Company's business activities. In  particular,
 short-term consumer loans,  including cash  and payday  advances, have  come
 under increased scrutiny and  increasingly restrictive regulation in  recent
 years. Some regulatory activity may limit  the number of short-term  loanscash advances  that
 customers may receive or  have outstanding such as
 the limits prescribed by the FDIC in March 2005 and supplemented in February
 2006 and  regulations adopted by  some
 states requiring that all borrowers of certain short-termcash advance loan products be
 listed on a database, limiting the  yield on short term-loanscash advances and limiting  the
 number of such loans  they may have  outstanding. Certain consumer  advocacy
 groups and federal and  state legislators have also  asserted that laws  and
 regulations should be tightened so as  to severely limit, if not  eliminate,
 the availability  of  the  short-termcash advance  and  credit  services  products  to
 consumers, despite  the  significant demand  for  it.   In  Mexico,  similar
 restrictions and regulations affecting  the pawn industry, including  limits
 on loan yields,service fees,  have been proposed  from time to  time.  Adoption  of
 such federal, state or local regulation or legislation in the United  States
 and Mexico could restrict, or even eliminate, the availability of  specialty
 consumer finance products at some or  all of the Company's locations. Seelocations,  which
 would adversely affect the discussion of Regulation
 in "Item 1 - Business" for  more information about regulations affecting the
 Company.Company's operations and financial condition.

      The failure of third-parties who provide products, services or  support
 to the Company to maintain their products, services or support could disrupt
 Company operations or  result in a  loss of revenue.   The Company's  credit
 services revenues  depend in  part  on the  willingness  and ability  of  an
 unaffiliated third-party lender to make loans to its customers.  The loss of
 the relationship with this lender, and an inability to replace it with a new
 lender or lenders, or  the failure of the  lender to fund  new loans and  to
 maintain quality  and consistency  in its  loan  programs, could  cause  the
 Company to  lose  customers  and substantially  decrease  the  revenues  and
 earnings of the Company's credit services business.

      The  Company also  uses third  parties to  supportMedia reports and maintain certainpublic perception of its communication systems and computerized point-of-sale
 and information systems. The  failure ofshort-term consumer loans,  such
 a  third party to fulfill  its
 support and maintenance obligationsas cash or payday advances, as  being predatory or abusive could  disruptmaterially
 adversely affect the Company's cash advance and credit services  businesses.
 In recent years, consumer  advocacy groups and some  media reports, in  both
 the United States and Mexico, have advocated governmental action to prohibit
 or place severe  restrictions on short-term  consumer loans.   The  consumer
 advocacy groups and media reports generally focus on the cost to a  consumer
 for this type of loan, which  is higher than the interest typically  charged
 by banks  to consumers  with better  credit histories.  Though the  consumer
 advocacy groups  and  media  reports  do not  discuss  the  lack  of  viable
 alternatives  for  our  customers'   borrowing  needs,  they  do   typically
 characterize these short-term consumer loans as predatory or abusive despite
 the large customer demand for these loans. If the negative  characterization
 of these types of loans becomes  increasingly accepted by consumers,  demand
 for the  cash advance  products could  significantly decrease,  which  could
 materially  affect  the  Company's  results  of  operations  and   financial
 condition. Additionally, if the negative characterization of these types  of
 loans becomes  increasingly  accepted  by legislators  and  regulators,  the
 Company could become subject to more  restrictive laws and regulations  that
 could materially  adversely affect  the  Company's financial  condition  and
 results of operations.

      The  Company's  growth  is  subject  to  external  factors  and   other
 circumstances over which the Company has limited control or that are  beyond
 the Company's  control.  These  factors and  circumstances  could  adversely
 affect the  Company's ability  to  grow through  the  opening of  new  store
 locations.   The success of  this strategy is  subject to numerous  external
 factors,  such  as  the  availability  of  sites  with  favorable   customer
 demographics, limited  competition, acceptable  regulatory restrictions  and
 suitable lease terms,  the Company's ability  to attract,  train and  retain
 qualified unit  management  personnel and  the  ability to  obtain  required
 government permits  and  licenses. Some  of  these factors  are  beyond  the
 Company's control.  The failure  to execute  this expansion  strategy  would
 adversely affect  the Company's  ability to  expand its  business and  could
 materially adversely affect its  business, prospects, results of  operations
 and financial condition.

      Increased competition from banks,  savings and loans, other  short-term
 consumer lenders, and other entities offering similar financial services, as
 well as retail businesses  that offer products and  services offered by  the
 Company, could adversely  affect the  Company's results  of operations.  The
 Company has  many competitors  to its  core  lending and  merchandise  sales
 operations.   ItsThe Company's principal competitors are other pawnshops,  cash
 advance companies,  automotive  retailers, consumer  finance  companies  and
 other financial institutions that serve the Company's primary customer base.
 Many other financial institutions or other businesses that do not now  offer
 products or  services directed  toward  the Company's  traditional  customer
 base, many of whom may  be much larger than  the Company, could begin  doing
 so. Significant increases  in the  number and  size of  competitors for  the
 Company's business could result in a decrease in the number of short-termcash advances
 or pawn loans that the Company writes, resulting in lower levels of revenues
 and  earnings  in  these  categories.  Furthermore,  the  Company  has  many
 competitors to its retail operations, such  as retailers of new  merchandise
 and automobiles, retailers of  pre-owned merchandise and automobiles,  other
 pawnshops,  thrift  shops,  online  retailers  and  online  auction   sites.
 Increased competition or aggressive marketing and pricing practices by these
 competitors could result in decreased  revenues, margins and turnover  rates
 in the  Company's  retail  operations.   In  Mexico,  the  Company  competes
 directly with  certain pawn  stores owned  by a  governmental  entity.   The
 government could  take actions  that would  harm  the Company's  ability  to
 compete in the Mexico market.

      A sustained deterioration  of economic conditions  could reduce  demand
 for  the  Company's  products  and  services and result in reduced earnings.
 While  the  credit  risk  for  mostsome  of  the Company's  consumer lending  is
 mitigated  by  the  collateralized  nature  of  pawn  lending,  a  sustained
 deterioration in the economy could adversely affect the Company's operations
 through deterioration  in  performance of  its  pawn loan  or  short-termcash  advance
 portfolios, or by  reducing consumer demand  for the  purchase of  pre-owned
 merchandise.

      Adverse  gold  market  fluctuations could affect the Company's profits.
 The Company  holds  significant  gold  inventories and a significant portion
 of  its  pawn  receivables  are  secured  by  gold  jewelry  collateral.   A
 significant decline in  gold prices  could result  in decreased  merchandise
 sales   margins,   decreased    inventory   valuations   and    sub-standard
 collateralization of outstanding pawn loans.  In addition, a decline in gold
 prices could result  in a lower  balance of pawn  loans outstanding for  the
 Company, as customers would receive lower loan amounts for individual pieces
 of jewelry.

      Adverse real estate market  fluctuations  could  affect  the  Company's
 profits.  The Company leases most  of its  locations.  A  significant   rise
 in real estate prices could  result in an increase  in store lease costs  as
 the Company opens new locations and renews leases for existing locations.

      Risks and  uncertainties related  to the  Company's foreign  operations
 could negatively impact the Company's operating results.   The  Company  has
 a significant number of pawnshop  locations in Mexico, a  country in which there  are
 potential risks  related to  geo-political events,  enforcement of  property
 rights, public safety and  security among others.   Actions or events  could
 occur in Mexico that are beyond the Company's control, which could  restrict
 or eliminate the  Company's ability to  operate its locations  in Mexico  or
 significantly reduce the profitability of such operations.  In addition, the
 Company conducts a significant number of transactions in pesos, the national
 currency  in  Mexico,  and  holds  significant  financial  assets  that  are
 denominated in pesos.   Significant fluctuations  in the value  of the  peso
 compared to the U.S. dollar could negatively impact the Company's  operating
 results.

      Media reports  and  public perception  of short-term  consumer loans as
 being predatory or abusiveThe inability to  successfully integrate  acquisitions could  materially  adversely
 affect results.  The  success of the Auto  Master acquisition is subject  to
 numerous internal and external factors, such  as the ability to  consolidate
 data processing  and  accounting  functions, the  management  of  additional
 sales,  administrative,   operations  and   management  personnel,   overall
 management of a larger organization, the ability to manage a longer-maturing
 portfolio of customer  receivables, competitive market  forces, and  general
 economic factors.

      The Company's success depends upon  the continued contributions of  the
 Auto Master management team and key  employees of Auto Master.  The  Company
 is dependent upon the continued contributions of key Auto Master  employees.
 The loss of  the services  of key employees  could have  a material  adverse
 effect on the Company's short-term advanceresults of operations.  In addition, as Auto  Master
 opens new dealerships, the Company will  need to hire additional  personnel.
 The market for qualified employees in  the industry and in the regions  Auto
 Master operates  is  highly  competitive and  may  subject  the  Company  to
 increased labor costs during periods of low unemployment.

      The Company's  allowance for  credit services businesses. In recent years, consumer
 advocacy groupslosses  may not  be sufficient  to
 cover actual  credit  losses  which could  adversely  affect  its  financial
 condition and some  media  reports, in  bothoperating  results.   From time to  time, the  United  StatesCompany has  to
 recognize losses resulting from the inability of certain borrowers to  repay
 loans and Mexico, have  advocated  governmental action  to  prohibit or  place  severe
 restrictions on short-term consumerthe insufficient realizable value  of the collateral securing  the
 loans. The consumer  advocacy  groupsCompany maintains an allowance for credit losses in an attempt to
 cover credit losses inherent in its loan portfolio. Additional credit losses
 will likely occur in  the future and media reports generally focusmay  occur at a  rate greater than  the
 Company has experienced to  date. The allowance for  credit losses is  based
 primarily upon historical credit  loss experience, with consideration  given
 to  delinquency   levels,  collateral   values,  economic   conditions   and
 underwriting  and  collection  practices.  This  evaluation  is   inherently
 subjective as  it  requires  estimates  of  material  factors  that  may  be
 susceptible  to  significant  change.  If  the  Company's  assumptions   and
 judgments prove to be incorrect, its current allowance may not be sufficient
 and adjustments may be necessary to allow for different economic  conditions
 or adverse developments in its loan portfolio.

      The Company is dependent on the availability of used vehicle  inventory
 and access to  such inventory.   Auto  Master  acquires  vehicles  primarily
 through auction wholesalers and new car dealers.  There can be no  assurance
 that sufficient inventory will  continue to be available  to the Company  or
 will be available at comparable costs.  Any reduction in the availability of
 inventory or increases in the cost of vehicles would adversely affect  gross
 profit percentages as the Company focuses on keeping payments affordable  to
 its customer base.  The Company could have to absorb cost increases.

      A decreased demand for the Company's products and services and  failure
 of  the  Company  to  adapt to such decrease could adversely affect results.
 Although  the  Company's  products  and  services  are  a  staple   of   its
 customer base, the demand for a  particular product or service may  decrease
 due to a consumer for this typevariety of loan, which  is higher  thanfactors, such as the interest  typically  charged by  banksavailability of competing products,
 changes in customers' financial conditions, or regulatory restrictions  that
 reduce customer access to consumers with better credit histories. Thoughparticular products.   Should the consumer advocacy  groups
 and media reports  do not discuss  the lack of  viable alternatives for  ourCompany fail  to
 adapt to a significant  change in its customers' borrowing needs, they do typically characterize these  short-term
 consumer loans as predatory or abusive despite the large customer  demand for, these loans.  Ifor access  to,
 its products, the negative  characterizationCompany's revenues  could decrease significantly. Even  if
 the Company  does  make adaptations,  customers  may resist  or  may  reject
 products whose adaptations make them less  attractive or less available.  In
 any event, the effect of these  typesany product change on the results of loans
 becomes increasingly  accepted by  consumers, demandthe  Company's
 business may not be fully ascertainable until the change has been in  effect
 for some time. In particular, the Company has changed, and will continue  to
 change, some of  the cash  advance products could  significantly decrease,  which could  materially affectand  services it  offers due  to
 regulatory developments.

      Inclement weather can adversely impact the Company's resultsoperating results.
 The occurrence of operationsweather  events, such as rain,  cold weather, snow,  wind,
 storms, hurricanes, or other natural disasters, adversely affecting consumer
 traffic and financial  condition. Additionally,  if
 the negative characterization of these  types of loans becomes  increasingly
 accepted by legislators and regulators, the Company could become subject  to
 more restrictive laws and regulations that could materially adversely affectcollection activities at  the Company's financial conditionstores and  results of operations.dealerships,
 could negatively impact the Company's operating results.

       Other risk  factors are discussed  under Quantitative and  Qualitative
 Disclosures about Market Risk.

      Other risks  that  are indicated  in  the Company's  filings  with  the
 Securities and Exchange Commission may apply as well.


 Item 1b.  Unresolved Staff Comments
 -----------------------------------

      As  of  December 31, 2005,2006,  the Company  had  no unresolved  SEC  staff
 comments.


 Item 2.  Properties
 -------------------

      The Company owns the  real estate and buildings  for three of its  pawn
 stores and leases  355443 pawn, cash  advance and payday advancebuy-here/pay-here  automotive
 dealership locations  that are  currently  open or  are  in the  process  of
 opening.  Leased facilities are generally leased for a term of three to five
 years with one  or more  options to renew.   The  Company's existing  leases
 expire on  dates ranging  between 20062007  and  2017.   All current  store  and
 dealership leases  provide for  specified periodic  rental payments  ranging
 from approximately $700$740 to $9,900$10,600 per month.

      The Company currently leases approximately 19,500 square feet of office
 space in  Arlington, Texas  for its  corporate offices.   The  lease,  which
 expires April 30, 2010,  currently provides for  monthly rental payments  of
 approximately $29,000.  The Company  also leases approximately 7,500  square
 feet of  office space  in Monterrey,  Mexico for  its Mexico  administrative
 offices.  The  lease, which expires  July 30, 2009,  currently provides  for
 monthly rental payments of  approximately $3,500.   The Company also  leases
 approximately 13.5 acres and buildings in  Tontitown, Arkansas for the  Auto
 Master corporate  offices,  reconditioning  facility and  detail  center  of
 approximately 5,500, 11,800 and 9,600 square feet, respectively.  The lease,
 which expires  December  31, 2010,  currently  provides for  monthly  rental
 payments of approximately $22,800.

      The Company's 50%  owned joint  venture, Cash  & Go,  Ltd., leases  its
 kiosk locations under operating leases generally with terms ranging from one
 to five  years, with  renewal  options for  certain  locations.   The  joint
 venture's existing leases  expire on dates  ranging between  2007 and  2009.
 All current Cash &  Go, Ltd., leases provide  for specified periodic  rental
 payments ranging from approximately $1,100 to $1,700 per month.

      Most leases require the  Company to maintain the  property and pay  the
 cost of insurance and property taxes.  The Company believes that termination
 of any particular lease  would not have a  materially adverse effect on  the
 Company's operations.  The Company's strategy is generally to lease,  rather
 than purchase, space  for its pawnshop,  cash advance and  payday advancebuy-here/pay-here
 automotive locations,  unless  the  Company finds  what  it  believes  is  a
 superior location at  an attractive price.   The Company  believes that  the
 facilities currently owned  and leased by  it as pawn  stores, cash  advance
 stores and payday advance  locationsbuy-here/pay-here  automotive dealerships are  suitable for  such
 purposes.  The Company considers its equipment, furniture and fixtures to be
 in good condition.

      The Company  currently  leases  approximately  18,000  square  feet  in
 Arlington, Texas for its corporate offices.  The lease, which expires  April
 30, 2010, currently  provides for monthly  rental payments of  approximately
 $25,000.  The  Company  also  leases  approximately  7,500  square  feet  in
 Monterrey, Mexico for its Mexico administrative  offices.  The lease,  which
 expires July 30,  2009, currently provides  for monthly  rental payments  of
 approximately $3,500.  The  Company's 50%  owned joint venture,  Cash &  Go,
 Ltd., leases its kiosk locations under operating leases generally with terms
 ranging from one to five years, with renewal options for certain  locations.
 The joint venture's existing leases expire on dates ranging between 2006 and
 2009.  All current Cash & Go, Ltd., leases  provide  for specified  periodic
 rental payments ranging from approximately $1,100 to $1,700 per month.


 Item 3.  Legal Proceedings
 --------------------------

      The Company is from time to time a defendant (actual or threatened)  in
 certain lawsuits and arbitration claims  encountered in the ordinary  course
 of its business,  the resolution  of which,  in the  opinion of  management,
 should not  have a  materially adverse  effect  on the  Company's  financial
 position, results of operations, or cash flows.


 Item 4.  Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders
 ------------------------------------------------------------

      No matter was  submitted to a  vote of the  Company's security  holders
 during the fourth quarter of Fiscal 2005.fiscal 2006.


                                   PART II
                                   -------

 Item 5. Market for Registrant's Common Equity and Related Stockholder Matters
 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------

 In January 2006, the Company's Board  of Directors approved  a two-for-
 one stock split in the form of a stock dividend to shareholders of record on
 February 6, 2006.  The additional shares  were  distributed on  February 20,
 2006 and stock  began trading at  the split-adjusted  price  on February 22,
 2006.  All share  and  per  share amounts (except authorized shares and  par
 value) have been retroactively adjusted to reflect the split.General Market Information

      The Company's common stock is quoted on the Nasdaq NationalGlobal Select Market
 under the symbol "FCFS"."FCFS."  The following table sets forth the quarterly  high
 and low closing sales prices per share for the common stock, as reported  by
 the Nasdaq National Market:

                                First   Second    Third   Fourth
                               Quarter  Quarter  Quarter  Quarter
                               -------  -------  -------  -------
       2006
         High                  $21.00   $22.37   $21.70   $26.12
         Low                    14.39    18.60    16.85    19.66


       2005
         High ...............                  $13.32   $11.36   $13.16   $14.89
         Low                    ................   10.08     8.45    10.53    12.01

      2004
         High ...............  $12.15   $12.36   $10.71   $13.68
         Low ................    8.47     9.80     8.43    10.17

      On March 13, 2006,14, 2007,  the  closing sales price  for the  common stock  as
 reported by the Nasdaq National Market was $18.61 per$20.78 share.  On March 13,
 2006,14, 2007,
 there were approximately 6359 stockholders of record of the common stock.

      No cash dividends have  been paid by the  Company on its common  stock.
 The dividend and earnings  retention policies are reviewed  by the Board  of
 Directors of the Company from time to time in light of, among other  things,
 the Company's earnings, cash flows, and  financial position.  The  Company's
 revolving credit facility contains provisions that allow the Company to  pay
 cash dividends within certain parameters.

 Recent Issuances of Common Stock

      During the period from January 1, 2005,2006, through December 31, 2005,2006,  the
 Company issued 157,0001,020,000 shares of common stock relating to the exercise  of
 outstanding stock options  for an  aggregate exercise  price of  $1,327,000$14,899,000
 (including income tax  benefit).  During  the period from  January 1,  2005,2006,
 through December 31, 2005,2006, the Company issued 520,000418,000 shares of common stock
 relating to  the exercise  of outstanding  stock warrants  for an  aggregate
 price of $3,356,000$3,415,000  (including income  tax effect).   While theThe  issuance of  the
 derivative securities to  officers and  employees was  exempt under  Section
 4(2) of the Act,  the resale was registered under the Act.and all holders  had access to  and/or reviewed copies  of
 Exchange Act filings.  No sales commissions were paid with respect to  these
 issuances.

 Issuer Purchases of Equity Securities

      In July 2004, the Company's Board of Directors authorized an open-
 endedopen-ended
 stock  repurchase  plan,  with  no  dollar  limitation,  to  permit   future
 repurchases of up to  3,200,000 shares of  the Company's outstanding  common
 stock.   During  2004,the  second  quarter  of  2006,   First  Cash   repurchased
 approximately 802,000 shares to close out the 2004-authorized program.   The
 repurchase price of  the 3,200,000 shares  repurchased under  this plan  was
 $39,425,000 or a weighted-average of $12.32 per share.

      In June 2006, the Company's Board of Directors authorized a  repurchase
 program for up to 2,000,000 shares of First Cash's outstanding common stock.
 During the  second quarter  of  2006, the  Company  repurchased a  total  of
 1,245,000461,000 common shares under the new  stock repurchase plan for an  aggregate
 purchase price of  $12,116,000$8,848,000 or  $9.73$19.21 per share.   The following  table  providesThere  were no  shares
 repurchased during  the  information with respect to purchases made  bythird and  fourth  quarters  of  2006.   There  are
 1,539,000 total remaining  shares available for  repurchase under the  Company of shares  of its
 common stock during each month of 2005 that the program was in effect:


                                                 Number of        Number
                           Total     Average  Shares Purchased   Of Shares
                           Number     Price       as Part       that May Yet
                         Of Shares    Paid      of Publicly     Be Purchased
                         Purchased  Per Share  Announced Plan  Under the Plan
                         ---------  ---------  --------------  --------------
 January 1 through
   January 31, 2005             -         -             -        1,954,570
 February 1 through
   February 28, 2005            -         -             -        1,954,570
 March 1 through
   March 31, 2005               -         -             -        1,954,570
 April 1 through
   April 30, 2005       1,152,958     $9.89     1,152,958          801,612
 May 1 through
   May 31, 2005                 -         -             -          801,612
 June 1 through
   June 30, 2005                -         -             -          801,612
 July 1 through
   July 31, 2005                -         -             -          801,612
 August 1 through
   August 31, 2005              -         -             -          801,612
 September 1 through
   September 30, 2005           -         -             -          801,612
 October 1 through
   October 31, 2005             -         -             -          801,612
 November 1 through
   November 30, 2005            -         -             -          801,612
 December 1 through
   December 31, 2005            -         -             -          801,612
                        ---------               ---------
 Total                  1,152,958     $9.89     1,152,958
                        =========               =========2006-
 authorized plan.


 Item 6.  Selected Financial Data
 --------------------------------

      The information below should be  read in conjunction with  Management's
 Discussion and Analysis  of Financial  Condition and  Results of  Operations
 included in Item 7 and the  Company's Consolidated Financial Statements  and
 related notes thereto required by Item 8.

Year Ended December 31, ---------------------------------------------------- 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001-------- -------- -------- -------- -------- (in thousands, except per share amounts and certain operating data) Income Statement Data: Total revenues $ 269,722 $ 207,775 $ 179,813 $ 145,468 $ 118,793 $ 110,427 Cost of revenues 106,132 75,768 63,867 51,222 41,817 43,498 Gross profitNet revenues 163,590 132,007 115,946 94,246 76,976 66,929 Total expenses and other income 113,990 92,329 83,079 69,517 59,585 54,410 Income from continuing operations before income taxes 49,600 39,678 32,867 24,729 17,391 12,519 Provision for income taxes 17,856 14,295 12,161 9,397 6,451 4,507 Income from continuing operationsbefore change in accounting principle 31,744 25,383 20,706 15,332 10,940 8,012 Discontinued operations: Income (loss) from discontinued operations, net of taxes - - - - 33 Loss on sale of subsidiary, net of taxes - - - - (175) Cumulative effect of change in accounting principle, net of taxes - - - (357) - - Net income 31,744 25,383 20,706 14,975 10,940 7,870 Net Incomeincome per share: Basic: Income from continuing operationsbefore change in accounting principle $ 1.01 $ 0.81 $ 0.66 $ 0.55 $ 0.42 $ 0.31 ======== ======== ======== ======== ======== Net income $1.01 0.81 $ 0.66 $ 0.54 $ 0.42 $ 0.30 ======== ======== ======== ======== ======== Diluted: Income from continuing operations $before change in accounting principle 0.97 0.76 $ 0.61 $ 0.49 $ 0.38 $ 0.29 ======== ======== ======== ======== ======== Net income $0.97 0.76 $ 0.61 $ 0.48 $ 0.38 $ 0.29 ======== ======== ======== ======== ======== Unaudited pro forma amounts assuming retroactive application of change in accounting principle: Revenues from continuing operations$ 269,722 $ 207,775 $ 179,813 $ 152,162 $ 125,886 $ 117,260 Income from continuing operationsNet income 31,744 25,383 20,706 15,362 10,790 7,951 Basic earnings per share from continuing operations1.01 0.81 0.66 0.55 0.42 0.31 Diluted earnings per share from continuing operations0.97 0.76 0.61 0.49 0.38 0.29 Balance Sheet Data: Working capital $ 93,653 $ 93,506 $ 81,389 $ 60,840 $ 47,187 $ 8,540 Total assets 233,842 185,954 162,343 140,064 130,999 122,806 Long-term liabilities 23,485 8,616 8,755 11,955 33,525 5,277 Total liabilities 45,246 23,246 18,297 22,841 44,479 48,703 Stockholders' equity 188,596 162,708 144,046 117,223 86,520 74,103 End of Year Location Counts: Pawn-only stores 183 157 127 89 57 35 Pawn stores offering paydaycash advances (1) 69 69 70 71 74 77 PaydayCash advance stores (1) 145 102 87 75 59 46Buy-here/pay-here dealerships 10 - - - - -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- End of the year407 328 284 235 190 158 ======== ======== ======== ======== ======== (1) Includes locations where cash advances are provided through the CSO program.
Item 7. Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Results of Operations --------------------- General The Company's pawn store revenues are derived primarily from service fees on pawns, service fees from short-term advances, also known as payday loans, credit services fees and the salemerchandise sales of unredeemed goods, or "merchandise sales."forfeited pawn collateral. The Company accrues pawn service charge revenue on a constant-yield basis over the life of the pawn for all pawns that the Company deems collection to be probable based on historical pawn redemption statistics. If a pawn is not repaid prior to the expiration of the automatic extension period, if applicable, the property is forfeited to the Company and transferred to inventory at a value equal to the principal amount of the loan, exclusive of accrued interest. The Company's paydaycash advance store revenues are derived primarily from fees on short-term/paydaycash advances and credit services fees, check cashing fees and fees from the sale of money orders, money transfers and prepaid card products.fees. The Company recognizes service fee income on short-termcash advances on a constant-yield basis over the life of the advance, which is generally thirty-one days or less. The net defaults on short-termcash advances and changes in the short-termcash advance valuation reserve are charged to the short-termcash advance loss provision. Effective July 1, 2005,The credit loss provision is based primarily upon historical credit loss experience, with consideration given to recent credit loss trends, delinquency, economic conditions and management's expectations of future credit losses. First Cash Credit, Ltd., a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Company, began offeringoffers a fee-based credit services organization program to assist consumerscustomers in itsall of the Company's Texas marketslocations in obtaining credit. Under the CSO program, FCC assists customers in applying for a short-term loan from an independent, non-bank, consumer lending company and issues the Independent Lender a letter of credit to guarantee the repayment of the loan. The Company recognizes credit services fees, which are collected from the customer at the inception of the loan, ratably over the life of the loan made by the Independent Lender. The loans made by the Independent Lender to credit services customers of FCC have terms of seven to thirty-one days. The Company records a liability for collected, but unearned, credit services fees received from its customers.customers and the estimated fair value of the liability under the letters of credit. The Company's buy-here/pay-here automotive revenues are derived primarily from the sale of used vehicles and the finance charges from related vehicle financing contracts. Revenues from the sale of used vehicles are recognized when the sales contract and related finance agreement is signed and the customer has taken possession of the vehicle. Interest income is recognized on all active finance receivable accounts on a constant-yield basis. Late payment fees are recognized when collected and are included in revenue. The Company maintains an allowance for credit losses, on an aggregate basis, at a level it considers sufficient to cover estimated losses in the collection of its finance receivables. The credit loss provision is based primarily upon historical credit loss experience, with consideration given to recent credit loss trends, delinquency, economic conditions and management's expectations of future credit losses. Year Ended December 31, ----------------------------- 2006 2005 2004 2003 ------- ------- ------- Total receivable balances at end of period, in thousands: Pawn receivables $ 32,459 $ 27,314 $ 23,429 $ 20,037 Short-termCash advance receivables, net of allowance 7,510 6,488 15,465 13,759 CSO loans held by independent third-party lender (1) 12,732 10,724 - Buy-here/pay-here automotive receivables, net of allowance 34,295 - Short-term- Source of cash advance receivables balancebalances, net of allowance, and CSO loans at end of period, in thousands (1): Pawn stores $ 3,063 $ 3,313 $ 2,974 $ 3,414 PaydayCash advance stores (excluding15,339 12,031 10,967 Cash & Go, Ltd.) 12,031 10,967 8,609 Cash & Go, Ltd., joint venture kiosks 1,840 1,868 1,524 1,736 Average inventory per pawn storeSource of inventories, in thousands: Pawn stores $ 9725,034 $ 9021,987 $ 9717,644 Buy-here/pay-here dealerships 3,727 - - Annualized inventory turnoverturnover: Pawn stores 3.2x 3.2x 3.1x 2.8xBuy-here/pay-here dealerships 8.8x - - Annualized service/finance fee yield (2): Pawn receivables 160% 158% 156% 158% Short-termCash advance receivables, net of credit loss provision 332% 324% 326% 319%Buy-here/pay-here receivables 12% - - Net cash advance and credit services loss provision on short-term advance receivables and CSO loans as a percentage of service fees (1) 23% 23% 21% 23%Net buy-here/pay-here loss provision as a percentage of retail sales 27% - - Locations in operation (excluding joint venture kiosks): Beginning of the year 328 284 235 190 Opened 72 50 52 47Acquired 8 - - Consolidated/Closedclosed (1) (6) (3) (2)------- ------- ------- End of the year 407 328 284 235======= ======= ======= Number of locations at end of period: Pawn-only stores 183 157 127 89 Pawn stores also offering paydaycash advances (3) 69 69 70 71 PaydayCash advance stores (3) 145 102 87 75 Cash & Go, Ltd., joint venture kiosks (3) 40 40 40 Buy-here/pay-here automotive dealerships 10 - - Year Ended December 31, ----------------------------- 2006 2005 2004 ------- ------- ------- Average receivables and CSO loan balances per location at end of period, in thousands: Pawn receivables in pawn stores $ 129 $ 121 $ 119 $ 125 Short-termCash advances in pawn stores (1) 44 48 43 47 Short-termCash advances in paydaycash advance stores (excluding Cash & Go, Ltd.) (1) 106 118 126 115 Short-termCash advances in Cash & Go, Ltd., joint venture kiosks (1) 46 47 38 43Buy-here/pay-here finance receivables in dealerships 3,430 - - Average inventories per location, in thousands: Pawn stores $ 99 $ 97 $ 90 Buy-here/pay-here dealerships 373 - - Average outstanding loan transactions:at December 31, 2006: Pawn receivables $ 99 $ 95 $ 85 $ 85 Short-termCash advance receivables 381 364 391 381 CSO loans held by independent third-party lender (1) 439 454 - Buy-here/pay-here receivables 6,335 - - (1) Short-termCash advance amount includes payday loanscash advances recorded on the Company's balance sheet and the principal portion of active CSO loans outstanding from the independent third-party lender, the balance of which is not included on the Company's balance sheet. (2) The annualized yield on pawn receivables is calculated by dividing total pawn service fees by the average quarterly pawn receivable balance for the year. The annualized yield, net of loss provision, for short-termcash advances is calculated by dividing total short-termcash advance service fees, net of the short-termcash advance loss provision, by the average quarterly short-termcash advance receivable balance for the year. The annualized yield calculation for short-termcash advances does not include credit services fees or the related credit services loss provision. The annualized yield on buy-here/pay-here receivables is calculated by dividing total buy-here/pay-here finance fees (annual amount estimated) by the average quarterly buy-here/pay-here receivable balance for the period August 25, 2006 through December 31, 2006. (3) Includes locations where paydaycash advances are provided through the CSO program. Stores included in the same-store revenue calculations are those stores that were opened prior to the beginning of the prior year comparative fiscal period and are still open. Also included are stores that were relocated during the year within a specified distance serving the same market, where there is not a significant change in store size and where there is not a significant overlap or gap in timing between the opening of the new store and the closing of the existing store. During the periods reported,third quarter of 2006, the Company has not hadrelocated one pawn store expansions that involved a significant change in the size of its retail showrooms,showroom, and accordingly, nothe expanded stores havestore has been excluded from the same-store calculations. SalesNon- retail sales of scrap jewelry are included in same-store revenue calculations. Revenues from the Cash & Go, Ltd., kiosks are includedThe Auto Master buy-here/pay-here automotive dealerships, acquired in same-store calculations for 2005 as the revenues from the kiosksAugust 2006, were not included in the consolidated revenues for fiscal 2004. Althoughsame-store revenue calculations. While the Company has had significant increases in revenues due primarily to new store openings and acquisitions, the Company has also incurred increases in operating expenses attributable to the additional stores, and increases in administrative expenses attributable to building a management team and the support personnel required by the Company's growth. Store operatinglocations. Operating expenses consist of all items directly related to the operation of the Company's stores and dealerships, including salaries and related payroll costs, rent, utilities, equipment, depreciation, advertising, property taxes, licenses, supplies and security. Administrative expenses consist of items relating to the operation of the corporate office,offices, including the salariescompensation and benefit costs of corporate officers,management, area supervisors and other operations management personnel, collections operations and personnel, accounting and administrative costs, information technology costs, liability and casualty insurance, professional servicesoutside legal and accounting fees and stockholder-related expenses. Year Ended December 31, ----------------------------- 2006 2005 2004 2003 ------- ------- ------- Income statement items as a percent of total revenues: Revenues: Merchandise sales 55.4% 49.2% 48.2% 48.0% PawnFinance and service fees 19.6 19.3 19.8 Short-term advance and credit services fees 29.3 30.1 29.5 Check cashing fees 1.4 1.7charges 43.1 48.9 49.4 Other 1.5 1.9 Other 0.5 0.7 0.82.4 Cost of Revenues:revenues: Cost of goods sold 31.2% 29.7% 29.0% 28.3% Short-term advance and credit servicesCredit loss provision 8.0 6.6 6.4 6.8 Check cashing returned items expenseOther 0.2 0.1 0.1 0.2 Expenses:Net revenues 60.7% 63.5% 64.5% Expenses and other income: Store operating expenses 30.1% 32.5% 34.0% 35.6% Administrative expenses 9.1 9.3 9.9 10.2 Depreciation 2.9 2.8 2.3 2.1Amortization - - - Interest expense 0.3 - - 0.3 Interest income (0.3) (0.2) - (0.4) Merchandise sales gross profit 43.6% 39.6% 40.0% 41.1% Short-term advance and credit services loss provision as a percentage of short-term advance and credit services fees 22.7% 21.4% 23.0% Critical Accounting Policies The preparation of financial statements in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities, related revenues and expenses, and disclosure of gain and loss contingencies at the date of the financial statements. Such estimates and assumptions are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties, which may cause actual results to differ materially from the Company's estimates. The significant accounting policies that we believe are the most critical to aid in fully understanding and evaluating our reported financial results include the following: Principles of consolidation - The accompanying consolidated financial statements of the Company include the accounts of its wholly-owned subsidiaries. All significant intercompany accounts and transactions have been eliminated. In addition, effective December 31, 2003, the accompanying consolidated financial statements also include the accounts ofThe Company is a 50% partner in Cash & Go, Ltd., a Texas limited partnership, which owns financial services kiosks inside convenience stores. The Company has a 50% ownership interestand in the partnership, which it has historically accounted for by the equity method of accounting as neither partner has control. Through December 31, 2003, the Company recorded its 50% share of the partnership's earnings or losses in its consolidated financial statements. Effective December 31, 2003, when the Company adoptedaccordance with FASB Interpretation No. 46(R) - Consolidation of Variable Interest Entities, the Company included the balance sheet accountsconsolidated operating results include those of Cash & Go, Ltd., On August 25, 2006, the Company acquired Guaranteed Auto Finance, Inc. and SHAC, Inc. (collectively doing business as "Auto Master"). Accordingly, the operating results of Auto Master are included in its consolidated financial statements. The Company recorded a non-recurring change in accounting principle charge of $357,000 net of income tax benefit on December 31, 2003, in order to reflect the other partner's share of accumulated losses in the partnership. The consolidated operating results for the fiscal periods beginning on or after January 1, 2004 include the operating results of Cash & Go, Ltd.period August 26, 2006 through December 31, 2006. See Note 4. All significant intercompany accounts and transactions have been eliminated. Receivables and income recognition - Receivables on the balance sheet consist of pawn, cash advances and short-term advances.buy-here/pay-here automotive customer receivables. Pawns are made on the pledge of tangible personal property. The Company accrues pawn service charge revenue on a constant-yield basis over the life of the pawn for all pawns that the Company deems collection to be probable based on historical pawn redemption statistics. The typical pawn loan has a term of thirty days. If the pawn is not repaid, the principal amount pawned becomes the carrying value of the forfeited collateral (inventory), which is held for sale. The Company accrues short-termcash advance service fees on a constant-yield basis over the term of the short-termcash advance. Short-termCash advances have terms that range from seven to thirty-one days. The Company recognizes credit services fees, which are collected from the customer at the inception of the credit services agreement, ratably over the life of the loan made by the Independent Lender. The loans made by the Independent Lender to credit services customers of FCC have terms of seven to thirty-onethirty-five days. The Company records a liability for collected, but unearned, credit services fees received from its customers. Short-termThe Company's buy-here/pay-here revenues are primarily from retail sales of used vehicles to the general public in its automotive dealerships. The Company provides financing to substantially all of its customers who purchase a vehicle at one of its dealerships. The Company's vehicle sales and finance contracts typically include down payments ranging from 5% to 10%, an average term of 30 months, and typical annual finance charges ranging from 8% to 16%. Cash advance and credit services loss provision - An allowance is provided for losses on active short-termcash advances and service fees receivable based upon expected default rates, net of estimated future recoveries of previously defaulted short-termcash advances and service fees receivable. The Company considers short-termcash advances to be in default if they are not repaid on the due date, and writes off the principal amount and service fees receivable as of the default date, leaving only active advances in the reported balance. Net defaults and changes in the short-termcash advance allowance are charged to the short-termcash advance loss provision. Under the CSO program, letters of credit issued by FCC to the Independent Lender constitute a guarantee for which the Company is required to recognize, at the inception of the guarantee, a liability for the fair value of the obligation undertaken by issuing the letters of credit. The Independent Lender may present the letter of credit to FCC for payment if the customer fails to repay the full amount of the loan and accrued interest after the due date of the loan. Each letter of credit expires within 60 days from the inception of the associated lending transaction. FCC's maximum loss exposure under all of the outstanding letters of credit issued on behalf of its customers to the Independent Lender as of December 31, 20052006 was $11,969,000.$14,239,000. According to the letter of credit, if the borrower defaults on the loan, the Company will pay the Independent Lender the principal, accrued interest, insufficient funds fee,fees, and late fees, all of which the Company records in the short-termcash advance and credit services loss provision. FCC is entitled to seek recovery directly from its customers for amounts it pays the Independent Lender in performing under the letters of credit. The Company records the estimated fair value of the liability under the letters of credit in accrued liabilities. This fair value estimate is based in part upon the Company's historical credit losses for the short-termcash advance product, which the Company considers to be a similar credit risk. Buy-here/pay-here credit loss provision - The Company maintains an allowance for credit losses on an aggregate basis at a level it considers sufficient to cover estimated losses in the collection of its finance receivables. The allowance for credit losses is based primarily upon historical credit loss experience, with consideration given to recent credit loss trends and changes in loan characteristics (i.e., average amount financed and term), delinquency levels, collateral values, economic conditions, age of dealership and underwriting and collection practices. The allowance for credit losses is regularly reviewed by management with any changes reflected in current operations. Although it is at least reasonably possible that events or circumstances could occur in the future that are not presently foreseen which could cause actual credit losses to be materially different from the recorded allowance for credit losses, the Company believes that it has given appropriate consideration to all relevant factors and has made reasonable assumptions in determining the allowance for credit losses. Inventories - InventoriesPawn inventories represent merchandise purchased directly from the public and merchandise acquired from forfeited pawns. Inventories purchased directly from customers are recorded at cost. Inventories from forfeited pawns are recorded at the amount of the pawn principal on the unredeemed goods. Vehicle inventories consist of used vehicles acquired from auctions, new car dealerships and trade-ins. Vehicle transportation and reconditioning costs are capitalized as a component of inventory. Repossessed vehicles are recorded at fair value, which approximates wholesale value. The cost of pawn and vehicle inventories is determined on the specific identification method. InventoriesPawn and vehicle inventories are stated at the lower of cost or market; accordingly, inventory valuation allowances are established when inventory carrying values are in excess of estimated selling prices, net of direct costs of disposal. Management has evaluated inventoryinventories and determined that a valuation allowance is not necessary. Long-lived assets - Property, plant and equipment and non-current assets are reviewed for impairment whenever events or changes in circumstances indicate that the net book value of the asset may not be recoverable. An impairment loss is recognized if the sum of the expected future cash flows (undiscounted and before interest) from the use of the asset is less than the net book value of the asset. Generally, the amount of the impairment loss is measured as the difference between the net book value of the asset and the estimated fair value of the related asset. Management does not believe any of these assets have been impaired at December 31, 2005.2006. Goodwill is reviewed annually for impairment based upon its fair value, or more frequently if certain indicators arise. Management has determined that goodwill has not been impaired at December 31, 2005.2006. Stock-based compensation - In December 2004,Prior to January 1, 2006, the FASB issued StatementCompany accounted for its share-based employee compensation plans under the recognition and measurement provisions of APB 25, as permitted by SFAS No. 123, "Accounting for Stock-Based Compensation." Effective January 1, 2006, the Company adopted the fair value recognition provisions of SFAS No. 123(R), Share Based Payments ("FAS 123(R)as described in Note 12, "Equity Compensation Plans and Share-Based Compensation."). This statement, which becomes effective Results of Operations Twelve Months Ended December 31, 2006 Compared to Twelve Months Ended December 31, 2005 The following table (amounts shown in thousands) details the components of revenues for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2006 ("Fiscal 2006"), as compared to the fiscal year ended December 31, 2005 ("Fiscal 2005"): Fiscal Year Ended December 31, -------------------- 2006 2005 Increase/Decrease -------- -------- ----------------- Domestic revenues: Pawn retail merchandise sales $ 60,097 $ 57,174 $ 2,923 5% Pawn scrap jewelry sales 11,337 7,230 4,107 57% Pawn service charges 27,847 25,429 2,418 10% Cash advance and credit services fees 66,167 60,881 5,286 9% Buy-here/pay-here retail automobile sales 22,507 - 22,507 - Buy-here/pay-here wholesale automobile sales 530 - 530 - Buy-here/pay-here finance charges 1,348 - 1,348 - Other 4,062 3,935 127 3% -------- -------- ------- $ 193,895 $ 154,649 $ 39,246 25% ======== ======== ======= Foreign revenues: Pawn retail merchandise sales $ 34,667 $ 24,165 $ 10,502 43% Pawn scrap jewelry sales 20,335 13,570 6,765 50% Pawn service charges 20,825 15,391 5,434 35% -------- -------- ------- $ 75,827 $ 53,126 $ 22,701 43% ======== ======== ======= Total revenues: Pawn retail merchandise sales $ 94,764 $ 81,339 $ 13,425 17% Pawn scrap jewelry sales 31,672 20,800 10,872 52% Pawn service charges 48,672 40,820 7,852 19% Cash advance and credit services fees 66,167 60,881 5,286 9% Buy-here/pay-here retail automobile sales 22,507 - 22,507 - Buy-here/pay-here wholesale automobile sales 530 - 530 - Buy-here/pay-here finance charges 1,348 - 1,348 - Other 4,062 3,935 127 3% -------- -------- ------- $ 269,722 $ 207,775 $ 61,947 30% ======== ======== ======= The Company beginningintroduced its credit services program in its Texas locations in July 2005. Credit services fees, which are included in reported cash advance and credit services fees, totaled $43,344,000 and $18,657,000 for Fiscal 2006 and Fiscal 2005, respectively. Same-store revenues (stores that were in operation during all of the year of both Fiscal 2005 and Fiscal 2006) increased 9% or $18,890,000 for Fiscal 2006 as compared to Fiscal 2005. Revenues generated by the 62 new pawn stores and the 58 new cash advance stores which have opened since January 1, 2005 increased by $19,534,000, compared to Fiscal 2005. Revenues from the eight buy-here/pay-here automobile dealerships acquired in August 2006 requiresand the two dealerships opened in November 2006 totaled $24,466,000. The following table (amounts shown in thousands) details pawn receivables, cash advance receivables, active CSO loans outstanding from an independent third-party lender and buy/here-pay/here automotive receivables as of December 31, 2006, as compared to December 31, 2005: Balance at December 31, ----------------------- 2006 2005 Increase/Decrease -------- -------- ----------------- Domestic customer receivables & CSO loans outstanding: Pawn receivables $ 21,350 $ 18,603 $ 2,747 15% Cash advance receivables, net of allowance 7,510 6,488 1,022 16% CSO loans held by independent third-party lender (1) 12,732 10,724 2,008 19% Buy-here/pay-here receivables, net of allowance 34,295 - 34,295 - -------- -------- ------- $ 75,887 $ 35,815 $ 40,072 112% ======== ======== ======= Foreign customer receivables: Pawn receivables $ 11,109 $ 8,711 $ 2,398 28% -------- -------- ------- Total customer receivables and CSO loans outstanding: Pawn receivables $ 32,459 $ 27,314 $ 5,145 19% Cash advance receivables, net of allowance 7,510 6,488 1,022 16% CSO loans held by independent third-party lender (1) 12,732 10,724 2,008 19% Buy-here/pay-here receivables, net of allowance 34,295 - 34,295 - -------- -------- ------- $ 86,996 $ 44,526 $ 42,470 95% ======== ======== ======= (1) CSO loans outstanding are comprised of the principal portion of active CSO loans outstanding from an independent third-party lender, which are not included on the Company's balance sheet. Of the $5,145,000 total increase in pawn receivables, $3,799,000 was attributable to the growth at the stores that companieswere in operation as of December 31, 2006 and 2005, and $1,346,000 was attributable to the 27 new pawn stores opened since December 31, 2005, all of which were located in Mexico. Of the $3,030,000 total increase in cash advance and CSO loan receivables, $1,413,000 was attributable to the growth at the stores that were in operation as of December 31, 2006 and 2005, and $1,617,000 was attributable to the 43 new cash advance stores opened since December 31, 2005. The Company's credit services customers had current loans outstanding with the Independent Lender in the amount of $12,732,000 at December 31, 2006, compared to $10,724,000 at December 31, 2005. The Company's loss reserve on cash advance receivables decreased from $242,000 at December 31, 2005, to $230,000 at December 31, 2006. Under the CSO program, letters of credit issued by FCC to the Independent Lender constitute a guarantee for which the Company is required to recognize, compensation expense equal toat the inception of the guarantee, a liability for the fair value of stock options or other share-based payments. In Januarythe obligation undertaken by issuing the letters of credit. The estimated loss reserve under the letters of credit, net of anticipated recoveries from customers, was $569,000 at December 31, 2006 compared to $508,000 at December 31, 2005. This reserve is included as a component of the Company's accrued expenses on its consolidated balance sheets. The gross profit margin on total pawn merchandise sales was 42% during Fiscal 2006, compared to 40% during Fiscal 2005, primarily as a result of improved margins on wholesale scrap jewelry revenues. Retail pawn merchandise margins, which exclude scrap jewelry sales, were 44% during Fiscal 2006 and Fiscal 2005. The gross margin on wholesale scrap jewelry sales was 34% during Fiscal 2006, compared to 22% during Fiscal 2005. This difference was primarily the Company issued options to purchase 4,152,000 sharesresult of common stock to certain employees and directors under its existing stock option plans. These options were issued in seven equal layers to each recipient with exerciseincreased selling prices for gold during the layers set at $12.50, $15.00, $17.50, $20.00, $22.50, $25.00 and $27.50. In December 2005,applicable periods. The volume-weight of scrap jewelry sold during Fiscal 2006 increased approximately 13% compared to Fiscal 2005. The gross profit margin, before the Company issued options to purchase 1,706,000 shares of common stock to certain employees and directors under its existing stock option plans. These options were issued in three equal layers to each recipient with exercise pricescredit loss provision, on buy-here/pay-here retail automobile sales was 57% for the layers setperiod August 26, 2006 through December 31, 2006. The Company's cash advance and credit services loss provision for Fiscal 2006 was unchanged from Fiscal 2005 at $15.00, $17.0023% of cash advance and $19.00. Allcredit services fee revenues. The Company realized approximately $1,883,000 and $1,569,000 from sales of charged off cash advance and credit services receivables during Fiscal 2006 and 2005, respectively. These amounts were recorded as a reduction to the cash advance and credit services loss provision. The buy-here/pay-here automotive credit loss provision was $6,137,000 for the period August 26, 2006 through December 31, 2006, which represented 27% of retail automobile sales. Store operating expenses increased 20% to $81,089,000 during Fiscal 2006 compared to $67,430,000 during Fiscal 2005, primarily as a result of the options grantednet addition of 113 pawn and cash advance stores since January 1, 2005, which is a 40% increase in the store count. Administrative expenses increased 27% to $24,671,000 during Fiscal 2006 compared to $19,412,000 during Fiscal 2005, were fully-vested aswhich is primarily attributable to increased management and supervisory compensation expense, additional administrative expenses related to new store openings, the Auto Master acquisition and a non-cash charge of the date of grant, and accordingly, the Company will recordapproximately $583,000 for share-based compensation expense related to these options when FASas a result of the adoption of SFAS 123(R) is adopted., effective January 1, 2006. The Company designed the terms and conditions of this option grant in a manner so as to provide meaningful long-term performance-based incentives for the management team and to reduce future share-based compensationincurred interest expense under FAS 123(R). In June 2005, 1,716,000 of the options issued in January 2005, and still outstanding, were canceled. These options had exercise prices ranging from $22.50 to $27.50. The Company anticipates that it will record share-based compensation expense in 2006 of approximately $690,000 related to the vesting of other previously issued options. Approximately $625,000 of the estimated 2006 equity compensation expense will be recordedon acquisition-related debt in the quarter ended March 31, 2006, which relates primarily to options with accelerated vesting features that are expected to be triggered due to an increase in the Company's stock price. The remaining $65,000 of expected 2006 equity compensation expense will be recorded ratably in the second, third and fourth quarters of 2006. Results2006 of Operations$916,000. There was no debt outstanding during Fiscal 2005. Interest income increased from $317,000 in Fiscal 2005 to $727,000 in Fiscal 2006, due primarily to interest income earned on increased levels of invested cash and cash equivalents. For both Fiscal 2006 and 2005, the Company's effective federal income tax rate of 36% differed from the statutory tax rate of approximately 35%, primarily as a result of state income taxes. Net income increased 25% to $31,744,000 during Fiscal 2006 compared to $25,383,000 during Fiscal 2005. Twelve Months Ended December 31, 2005 Compared to Twelve Months Ended December 31, 2004 The following table (amounts shown in thousands) details the components of revenues for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2005, ("Fiscal 2005"), as compared to the fiscal year ended December 31, 2004 ("Fiscal 2004"): Fiscal Year Ended December 31, -------------------------------------------------- 2005 2004 Increase/Decrease -------- -------- ----------------- Domestic revenues: MerchandisePawn retail merchandise sales $ 57,174 $ 55,307 $ 1,867 3% ScrapPawn scrap jewelry sales 7,230 7,787 (557) (7%) Pawn service feescharges 25,429 23,887 1,542 6% Short-termCash advance and credit services fees 60,881 54,123 6,758 12% Check cashing fees 2,900 3,030 (130) (4%) Other 1,035 1,252 (217) (17%3,935 4,282 (347) (8%) -------- -------- ------- $ 154,649 $ 145,386 $ 9,263 6% ======== ======== ======= Foreign revenues: MerchandisePawn retail merchandise sales $ 24,165 $ 14,774 $ 9,391 64% ScrapPawn scrap jewelry sales 13,570 8,877 4,693 53% Pawn service feescharges 15,391 10,776 4,615 43% -------- -------- ------- $ 53,126 $ 34,427 $ 18,699 54% ======== ======== ======= Total revenues: MerchandisePawn retail merchandise sales $ 81,339 70,081 11,258 16% ScrapPawn scrap jewelry sales 20,800 16,664 4,136 25% Pawn service feescharges 40,820 34,663 6,157 18% Short-termCash advance and credit services fees 60,881 54,123 6,758 12% Check cashing fees 2,900 3,030 (130) (4%) Other 1,035 1,252 (217) (17%3,935 4,282 (347) (8%) -------- -------- ------- $ 207,775 $ 179,813 $ 27,962 16% ======== ======== ======= The Company introduced its credit services program in its Texas locations in July 2005. Credit services fees, which are included in reported short-termcash advance and credit services fees, totaled $18,657,000 for Fiscal 2005. Same-store revenues (stores that were in operation during all of the year of both Fiscal 2004 and Fiscal 2005) increased 6% or $10,885,000 for Fiscal 2005 as compared to Fiscal 2004. Revenues generated by the 102 new pawn and paydaycash advance stores that have opened since January 1, 2004 increased by $18,175,000, compared to Fiscal 2004. The following table (amounts shown in thousands) details the pawn receivables, cash advance receivables and short-term advance receivable balancesactive CSO loans outstanding from an independent third-party lender as of December 31, 2005, as compared to December 31, 2004: Balance at December 31, ----------------------- 2005 2004 Increase/Decrease -------- -------- ----------------- Domestic receivables:customer receivables & CSO loans outstanding: Pawn receivables $ 18,603 $ 16,707 $ 1,896 11% Short-termCash advance receivables, net of allowance 6,488 15,465 (8,977) (58%) CSO loans held by independent third-party lender (1) 10,724 - 10,724 - -------- -------- ------- $ 35,815 $ 32,172 $ 3,643 11% ======== ======== ======= Foreign customer receivables: Pawn receivables $ 8,711 $ 6,722 $ 1,989 30% ======== ======== =======-------- -------- ------- Total receivables:customer receivables and CSO loans outstanding: Pawn receivables $ 27,314 $ 23,429 $ 3,885 17% Short-termCash advance receivables, net of allowance 6,488 15,465 (8,977) (58%) CSO loans held by independent third-party lender (1) 10,724 - 10,724 - -------- -------- ------- $ 44,526 $ 38,894 $ 5,632 14% ======== ======== ======= (1) CSO loans includeoutstanding are comprised of the principal portion of active CSO loans outstanding from an independent third-party lender, the balance of which isare not included on the Company's balance sheet. Of the $3,885,000 total increase in pawn receivables, $2,639,000 was attributable to the growth at the stores that were in operation as of December 31, 2005 and 2004, and $1,246,000 was attributable to the 35 new pawn stores opened since December 31, 2004, all of which were located in Mexico. The decrease in short-term advance receivables was due primarily to the introduction of the credit services program in the Company's Texas locations, and the resulting discontinuation of the short-term advance product in Texas during the second half of Fiscal 2005. As a result, short- term advance receivables in the Company's Texas locations, including the Cash & Go, Ltd., joint venture kiosks, decreased from $8,826,000 at December 31, 2004, to zero at December 31, 2005. As of December 31, 2005, the Company's credit services customers had current loans outstanding with the Independent Lender in the amount of $10,724,000. Short-term advance receivables in the Company's non-Texas locations decreased from $6,638,000 at December 31, 2004, to $6,488,000 at December 31, 2005. The Company's loss reserve on short-term advance receivables decreased from $552,000 at December 31, 2004, to $242,000 at December 31, 2005 as a result of the decrease in outstanding short-term advance receivables. Under the CSO program, letters of credit issued by FCC to the Independent Lender constitute a guarantee for which the Company is required to recognize, at the inception of the guarantee, a liability for the fair value of the obligation undertaken by issuing the letters of credit. The estimated loss reserve under the letters of credit, net of anticipated recoveries from customers, is $456,000,was $508,000 at December 31, 2005, which is included as a component of the Company's accrued expenses on its consolidated balance sheets. Gross profit margins on total merchandise sales were 40% during Fiscal 2005 and Fiscal 2004. Retail merchandise margins, which exclude scrap jewelry sales, were 44% during Fiscal 2005 and Fiscal 2004. Profit margins on scrap jewelry sales were 22% during Fiscal 2005 and Fiscal 2004. The Company's payday advance and credit services loss provision increased from 21% of short-termcash advance and credit services fee revenues during Fiscal 2004 to 23% during Fiscal 2005. During the Second Quartersecond quarter of 2005, the Company initiated a program to sell selected payday advance receivables which havehad been previously written-off. The Company realized approximately $1,569,000 from sales of receivables written-off in 2004 and prior during Fiscal 2005. This amount was recorded as a reduction to the short-term advance and credit services loss provision. It is anticipated that such sales of selected charged-off receivables, along with the implementation of other collection improvement initiatives, will continue into future periods for the purpose of ongoing reduction of the payday advance and credit services loss provision. Store operating expenses increased 10% to $67,430,000 during Fiscal 2005 compared to $61,063,000 during Fiscal 2004, primarily as a result of the net addition of 93 pawn and check cashing/short-termcash advance stores since January 1, 2004, which is a 40% increase in the store count. Administrative expenses increased 9% to $19,412,000 during Fiscal 2005 compared to $17,837,000 during Fiscal 2004, which is primarily attributable to increased costs related to variable management and supervisory compensation expense and increased professional services fees. The Company had no interest expense during Fiscal 2005 as it had no interest-bearing debt outstanding during the year. Interest income increased from $67,000 in Fiscal 2004 to $317,000 in Fiscal 2005, due primarily to interest income earned on increased levels of invested cash and cash equivalents. For Fiscal 2005 and 2004, the Company's effective federal income tax rates of 36% and 37%, respectively, differed from the statutory tax rate of approximately 35% and 34%, respectively, primarily as a result of state income taxes. Twelve Months Ended December 31, 2004 ComparedNet income increased 23% to Twelve Months Ended December 31, 2003 The following table (amounts shown in thousands) details the components of revenues for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2004 ("$25,383,000 during Fiscal 2004"), as2005 compared to the fiscal year ended December 31, 2003 ("Fiscal 2003"): Fiscal Year Ended December 31, ------------------------------ 2004 2003 Increase/Decrease -------- -------- ----------------- Domestic revenues: Merchandise sales $ 55,307 $ 52,477 $ 2,830 5% Scrap jewelry sales 7,787 5,834 1,953 33% Pawn service fees 23,887 21,542 2,345 11% Short-term advance fees (1) 54,123 42,939 11,184 26% Check cashing fees (1) 3,030 2,749 281 10% Other (1) 1,252 1,168 84 7% -------- -------- ------- $ 145,386 $ 126,709 $ 18,677 15% ======== ======== ======= Foreign revenues: Merchandise sales 14,774 7,390 7,384 100% Scrap jewelry sales 8,877 4,107 4,770 116% Pawn service fees 10,776 7,262 3,514 48% -------- -------- ------- $ 34,427 $ 18,759 $ 15,668 84% ======== ======== ======= Total revenues: Merchandise sales 70,081 59,867 10,214 17% Scrap jewelry sales 16,664 9,941 6,723 68% Pawn service fees 34,663 28,804 5,859 20% Short-term advance fees (1) 54,123 42,939 11,184 26% Check cashing fees (1) 3,030 2,749 281 10% Other (1) 1,252 1,168 84 7% -------- -------- ------- $ 179,813 $ 145,468 $ 34,345 24% ======== ======== ======= (1) Effective December 31, 2003, when the Company adopted FASB Interpretation No. 46(R) - Consolidation of Variable Interest Entities, the Company included the balance sheet accounts of Cash & Go, Ltd., in its consolidated financial statements. The consolidated operating results for Fiscal 2004 include the operating results of Cash & Go, Ltd.; which include short-term advance fees, check cashing fees and other revenues of $5,059,000, $545,000 and $75,000, respectively. Same-store revenues (stores that were in operation during all of the year of both Fiscal 2003 and Fiscal 2004) increased 10% or $14,056,000 for Fiscal 2004 as compared to Fiscal 2003. Revenues generated by the 99 new pawn and payday advance stores that have opened since January 1, 2003 increased by $15,934,000, compared to Fiscal 2003. An increase in revenues of $5,679,000 was related to the consolidation of the 40 Cash & Go, Ltd. kiosks. The following table (amounts shown in thousands) details the pawn and short-term advance receivable balances as of December 31, 2004, as compared to December 31, 2003: Balance at December 31, ----------------------- 2004 2003 Increase/Decrease -------- -------- ----------------- Domestic receivables: Pawn receivables $ 16,707 $ 15,695 $ 1,012 6% Short-term advance receivables 15,465 13,759 1,706 12% -------- -------- ------- $ 32,172 $ 29,454 $ 2,718 9% ======== ======== ======= Foreign receivables: Pawn receivables $ 6,722 $ 4,342 $ 2,380 55% ======== ======== ======= Total receivables: Pawn receivables 23,429 20,037 3,392 17% Short-term advance receivables 15,465 13,759 1,706 12% -------- -------- ------- $ 38,894 $ 33,796 $ 5,098 15% ======== ======== ======= Of the $3,392,000 total increase in pawn receivables, $2,082,000 was attributable to the growth at the stores that were in operation as of December 31, 2004 and 2003, and $1,310,000 was attributable to the 40 new pawn stores opened since December 31, 2003, all of which were located in Mexico. Of the $1,706,000 total increase in short-term advance receivables, a same-store increase of $1,146,000 was attributable to the growth in short- term advance receivable balances at the stores that were in operation as of December 31, 2004 and 2003 and an increase of $560,000 was attributable to the 12 new payday advance stores opened since December 31, 2003. The Company's loss reserve on short-term advance receivables increased from $497,000 at December 31, 2003, to $552,000 at December 31, 2004. Gross profit margins on total merchandise sales were 40%$20,706,000 during Fiscal 2004 compared to 41% during Fiscal 2003. This decrease was primarily the result of the increased mix of non-retail bulk sales of scrap jewelry, which is typically sold at lower profit margins. Retail merchandise margins, which exclude bulk scrap jewelry sales, decreased from 45% during Fiscal 2003 compared to 44% during Fiscal 2004. Scrap jewelry sales increased 68% to $16,664,000 for Fiscal 2004 compared to $9,941,000 for Fiscal 2003. Profit margins on scrap jewelry sales were 22% during Fiscal 2004 compared to 18% during Fiscal 2003. The Company's loss provision relating to short- term advances increased from $9,879,000 in Fiscal 2003 to $11,559,000 in Fiscal 2004. As a percentage of short-term advance and credit services fee revenue, the loss provision decreased from 23% during Fiscal 2003 to 21% during Fiscal 2004. This decrease was due in part to the consolidation of the Cash & Go, Ltd., joint venture, which is a more mature group of stores with a lower than average loss provision expense. Store operating expenses increased 18% to $61,063,000 during Fiscal 2004 compared to $51,814,000 during Fiscal 2003, primarily as a result of the consolidation of Cash & Go, Ltd.'s operating results and the net addition of 49 pawn and payday advance stores in Fiscal 2004, which is a 21% increase in store count. Administrative expenses increased 20% to $17,837,000 during Fiscal 2004 compared to $14,807,000 during Fiscal 2003 primarily as a result of the consolidation of Cash & Go, Ltd.'s operating results and increased costs related to additional administrative personnel, professional services fees, and other expenses necessary to support the Company's growth strategy and increase in store counts. Interest expense decreased to $73,000 in Fiscal 2004 compared to interest expense of $472,000 in Fiscal 2003 as a result of lower average outstanding debt balances during Fiscal 2004. Interest income decreased from $595,000 in Fiscal 2003 to $67,000 in Fiscal 2004, due primarily to the elimination of interest income associated with the consolidation of Cash & Go, Ltd. For Fiscal 2004 and 2003, the Company's effective federal income tax rates of 37% and 38%, respectively, differed from the statutory tax rate of approximately 34% primarily as a result of state and foreign income taxes. Liquidity and Capital Resources As of December 31, 2005,2006, the Company's primary sources of liquidity were $42,741,000$15,535,000 in cash and cash equivalents, $37,978,000$79,230,000 in receivables, $21,987,000$28,761,000 in inventories and $25,000,000$42,000,000 of available and unused funds under the Company's line of credit. The Company had working capital of $93,506,000$93,653,000 as of December 31, 2005,2006, and total equity exceeded total liabilities by a ratio of 74 to 1. The Company's operations and store openings have been financed with funds generated primarily from operations. The Company maintains a long-term line of credit with two commercial lenders ("the Credit Facility"). which was amended during the third quarter of 2006 to increase the amount available under the line of credit from $25,000,000 to $50,000,000 and to extend the term of the facility until April 2009. The Credit Facility provides a $25,000,000 long-term line of credit that matures on April 15, 2007 and bears interest at the prevailing LIBOR rate (which was approximately 4.4%5.3% at December 31, 2005)2006) plus a fixed interest rate margin of 1.375%. Amounts available under the Credit Facility are limited to 300% of the Company's earnings before income taxes, interest, depreciation and amortization for the trailing twelve months. At December 31, 2005, no amounts were2006, the Company had $8,000,000 outstanding under the Credit Facility and the Company had $25,000,000$42,000,000 available for borrowings. Under the terms of the Credit Facility, the Company is required to maintain certain financial ratios and comply with certain technical covenants. The Company was in compliance with the requirements and covenants of the Credit Facility as of December 31, 2005,2006, and March 13, 2006.14, 2007. The Company is required to pay an annual commitment fee of 1/8 of 1% on the average daily- unuseddaily-unused portion of the Credit Facility commitment. The Company's Credit Facility contains provisions that allow the Company to repurchase stock and/or pay cash dividends within certain parameters. Substantially all of the unencumbered assets of the Company have been pledged as collateral against indebtedness under the Credit Facility. Net cash provided by operating activitiesAt December 31, 2006, the Company had notes payable to individuals arising from the Auto Master acquisition which total $9,438,000 in aggregate and bear interest at 7%, with quarterly payments of principal and interest scheduled over the next four years. Of the $9,438,000 in notes payable, $2,250,000 is classified as a current liability and $7,188,000 is classified as long-term debt. One of the Company duringnotes payable, in the principal amount of $1,000,000, is convertible after one year endedinto 55,555 shares of the Company's common stock at a conversion price of $18.00 per share. The following table sets forth certain historical information with respect to the Company's statements of cash flows: Year Ended December 31, ----------------------------- 2006 2005 was $42,095,000, consisting primarily of2004 ------- ------- ------- (in thousands) Cash flows from operating activities: Net income $ 31,744 $ 25,383 $ 20,706 Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash flows from operating activities: Depreciation and amortization 8,041 5,804 4,173 Share-based compensation 583 - - Non-cash portion of $25,383,000 plus non-cash adjustments for depreciation, the short- term advancecredit loss provision 9,920 7,118 11,559 Stock option and thewarrant income tax benefit from the exercise of employee stock options of $5,804,000, $7,118,000, and $2,066,000, respectively. Net changes- 2,066 8,736 Changes in operating assets and liabilities: Buy-here/pay-here automative customer receivables (11,939) - - Finance and service fees receivable (790) 336 (594) Inventories (1,936) (1,563) (720) Prepaid expenses and other assets 438 (2,832) (530) Accounts payable and accrued liabilities increased2,360 5,088 (1,344) Current and deferred income taxes (1,868) 695 2,142 ------- ------- ------- Net cash provided byflows from operating activities in the amount36,553 42,095 44,128 ------- ------- ------- Cash flows from investing activities: Pawn customer receivables (7,095) (6,665) (4,728) Cash advance customer receivables (4,805) 1,859 (13,265) Purchases of $1,724,000.property and equipment (14,716) (11,993) (7,131) Acquisition of Auto Master buy-here/pay-here automotive division (23,652) - - ------- ------- ------- Net cash used byflows from investing activities during the year ended December 31, 2005, was $16,799,000, which was primarily comprised(50,268) (16,799) (25,124) ------- ------- ------- Cash flows from financing activities: Proceeds from debt 31,000 - 10,000 Payments of net cash outflows from pawn receivables activity of $6,665,000, net cash inflows from short-term advance receivables activity of $1,859,000, and cash paid for fixed asset additions of $11,993,000. Net inflows from short-term advance activity were due to the reduction in outstanding short-term advances in the Company's Texas locations resulting from the introduction of the credit services program. The opening of 50 new stores and the purchases of corporate fixed assets during Fiscal 2005 contributed significantly to the volume of fixed asset additions. Net cash used by financing activities was $8,787,000 during the year ended December 31, 2005, which consisted of purchasesdebt (38,052) - (16,000) Purchase of treasury stock in the amount of $11,404,000, net of proceeds(24,753) (11,404) (13,463) Proceeds from exercisesexercise of stock options and warrants 13,570 2,617 10,844 Stock option and warrant income tax benefit 4,744 - - ------- ------- ------- Net cash flows from financing activities (13,491) (8,787) (8,619) ------- ------- ------- Change in cash and cash equivalents (27,206) 16,509 10,385 Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of $2,617,000.the period 42,741 26,232 15,847 ------- ------- ------- Cash and cash equivalents at end of the period $ 15,535 $ 42,741 $ 26,232 ======= ======= ======= During the second quarter of 2006, the Company completed its 3,200,000 share repurchase plan authorized in July 2004 at an average repurchase price of $12.32 per share. The Board of Directors subsequently authorized an additional 2,000,000 share repurchase. During Fiscal 2006, the Company utilized excess cash flows to repurchase $24,753,000 of common stock for a total of 1,262,000 shares under the two authorizations. For purposes of its internal liquidity assessments, the Company considers net cash changes in pawn receivables and short-termcash advance customer receivables to be closely related to operating cash flows, although in the Statements of Cash Flows these are classified as investing cash flows. For Fiscal 2005, total2006, net cash flows from operations were $36,553,000, while net cash outflows related to pawn receivables activity was $7,095,000 and the net cash outflows related to cash advance receivables activity was $4,805,000. The combined net cash flows from operations and pawn and cash advance receivables totaled $24,653,000 during Fiscal 2006. For the comparable prior year period, net cash flows from operations were $42,095,000 whileand net cash outflows related to pawn receivables activity was $6,665,000 and the net cash inflows related to short-termcash advance receivables activity was $1,859,000. The combined net cash flows from operations and pawn and short- termcash advance receivables totaled $37,289,000 forduring Fiscal 2005, which included a non-recurring operating cash flow benefit of approximately $7,454,000 related to the replacement of the short-term advance product with the credit services product in Texas during the third quarter of 2005. For Fiscal 2004, total cash flows from operations were $44,128,000 while net cash outflows related to pawn receivables activity was $4,728,000 and short-termthe net cash outflows related to cash advance receivables were $4,728,000 and $13,265,000, respectively.activity was $13,265,000. The combined net cash flows from operations and pawn and short-termcash advance receivables totaled $26,135,000 for Fiscal 2004. For Fiscal 2003, cash flows from operations were $32,606,000, and net cash outflows related to pawn receivables and short- term advance receivables were $4,635,000 and $11,211,000, respectively. The combined net cash flows from operations and pawn and short-term advance receivables totaled $16,760,000 for Fiscal 2003. The profitability and liquidity of the Company is affected by the amount of pawn loans outstanding, which is controlled in part by the Company's lending decisions. The Company is able to influence the frequency of pawn redemptions by increasing or decreasing the amount pawned in relation to the resale value of the pledged property. Tighter credit decisions generally result in smaller pawns in relation to the estimated resale value of the pledged property and can thereby decrease the Company's aggregate pawn balance and, consequently, decrease pawn service fees. Additionally, small advances in relation to the pledged property's estimated resale value tend to increase pawn redemptions and improve the Company's liquidity. Conversely, providing larger pawns in relation to the estimated resale value of the pledged property can result in an increase in the Company's pawn service charge income. Also, larger average pawn balances can result in an increase in pawn forfeitures, which increases the quantity of goods on hand and, unless the Company increases inventory turnover, reduces the Company's liquidity. The Company's renewal policy allows customers to renew pawns by repaying all accrued service fees on such pawns, effectively creating a new pawn transaction. The amount of short-term advancescustomer receivables outstanding and related potential loss provision expense also affectcollections of such receivables. In general, revenue growth is dependent upon the profitabilityCompany's ability to fund the growth of customer receivable balances and liquidityinventories and the ability to absorb related credit losses. At the current time, the majority of the Company. An allowance for lossesthis growth is provided on active short-term advances and service fees receivable, based upon expected default rates, net of estimated future recoveries of previously defaulted short-term advances and service fees receivable. The Company considers short-term advances to be in default if they are not repaid on the due date, and writes off the principal amount and service fees receivable as of the default date, leaving only active receivables in the reported balances. Net defaults and changes in the short-term advance allowance are charged to the short-term advance loss provision.funded from operating cash flows. In addition to these factors, merchandise sales and the pace of store and dealership expansions affect the Company's liquidity. Management believes that the Credit Facility and cash generated from operations will be sufficient to accommodate the Company's current operations and planned growth for fiscal 2006. The Company has no significant capital commitments. The Company currently has no written commitments for additional borrowings or future acquisitions; however, the Company intends to continue to grow and may seek additional capital to facilitate expansion. The Company will evaluate acquisitions, if any, based upon opportunities, acceptable financing, purchase price, strategic fit and qualified management personnel.Fiscal 2007. The Company currently intends to continue to engage in a plan of expansion primarily through new store and dealership openings. During fiscalWith 80 stores opened during Fiscal 2006 (including the eight acquired Auto Master dealerships), the Company currently plans to open approximatelyattained its target of 60 to 70 new store openings for the year. The Company intends to continue its new store expansion program in 2007, with a total of 75 to 80 new pawn and cash advance stores comprised of both payday advance locations, primarily located in Texasanticipated for opening. In addition, the Company expects to open 3 to 5 new Auto Master buy-here/pay-here automotive dealerships during Fiscal 2007. All capital expenditures, working capital requirements and Michigan, and pawnshops, primarily in Mexico. Thisstart-up losses related to this expansion isare expected to be funded entirely through operating cash flows. While the Company continually looks for, and is presented with potential acquisition candidates,opportunities, the Company currently has no definitive plans or commitments for further acquisitions. The Company will evaluate potential acquisitions, if any, based upon growth potential, purchase price, strategic fit and quality of management personnel, among other factors. If the Company encounters an attractive acquisition opportunity to acquire new storesor additional expansion opportunity in the near future, the Company willmay seek additional financing, the terms of which will be negotiated on a case-by-case basis. The Company has no significant capital commitments. Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization ("EBITDA") for Fiscal 20052006 totaled $45,165,000,$57,830,000, an increase of 22%28% compared to $37,046,000$45,165,000 for Fiscal 2004.2005. The EBITDA margin, which is EBITDA as a percentage of revenues, for Fiscal 20052006 was 21.7%21.4%, compared to 20.6%21.7% for the comparable prior year period. EBITDA is commonly used by investors to assess a company's leverage capacity, liquidity and financial performance. EBITDA is not considered a measure of financial performance under U.S. generally accepted accounting principles ("GAAP"), and the items excluded from EBITDA are significant components in understanding and assessing the Company's financial performance. Since EBITDA is not a measure determined in accordance with GAAP and is thus susceptible to varying calculations, EBITDA, as presented, may not be comparable to other similarly titled measures of other companies. EBITDA should not be considered as an alternative to net income, cash flows provided by or used in operating, investing or financing activities or other financial statement data presented in the Company's consolidated financial statements as an indicator of financial performance or liquidity. Non-GAAP measures should be evaluated in conjunction with, and are not a substitute for, GAAP financial measures. The following table provides a reconciliation of net income from continuing operations to EBITDA (amounts in thousands): YearTwelve Months Ended December 31, ------------------------------------------------------------- 2006 2005 2004 2003 ------- ------- ------- Net income before change in accounting principle$ 31,744 $ 25,383 $ 20,706 $ 15,332 Adjustments: Interest expense 916 - Interest income net of interest expense(727) (317) 6 (123) Depreciation 5,804 4,173 3,019 Income taxes 17,856 14,295 12,161 9,397 -------Depreciation and amortization 8,041 5,804 ------- ------- Earnings before interest, income taxes, depreciation and amortization $ 45,16557,830 $ 37,046 $ 27,625 =======45,165 ======= ======= Contractual Commitments A tabular disclosure of contractual obligations at December 31, 2005,2006, including Cash & Go, Ltd., is as follows: Payments dueDue by periodPeriod ----------------------------------------------- (in thousands) Less More than 1 1 --- 3 3 --- 5 than 5 Total year years years years ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ Operating leases $52,440 $13,909 $22,642 $10,833$62,588 $17,582 $26,794 $13,401 $ 5,0564,811 Employment and consulting contracts for officers and directors 8,700 1,550 3,100 2,050 2,0006,900 1,300 2,600 1,200 1,800 Revolving credit facility (1) 8,000 - 8,000 - - Notes payable 9,438 2,250 5,125 2,063 - Interest on notes payable 1,384 602 710 72 - ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ Total $61,140 $15,459 $25,742 $12,883$88,310 $21,734 $43,229 $16,736 $ 7,0566,611 ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== (1) Excludes interest obligations under the line of credit agreement. See Note 8 of Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements. Off-Balance Sheet Arrangements AsIn the Company's Texas locations, First Cash Credit, Ltd. ("FCC"), a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Company, offers a fee-based credit services organization ("CSO") program to assist consumers in obtaining credit. Under the CSO program, FCC assists customers in applying for a cash advance from an independent, non-bank, consumer lending company (the "Independent Lender") and issues the Independent Lender a letter of credit to guarantee the repayment of the loan. When a consumer executes a credit services agreement with the Company, the Company agrees, for a fee payable to the Company by the consumer, to provide a variety of credit services to the consumer, one of which is to guarantee the consumer's obligation to repay the loan received by the consumer from the Independent Lender if the consumer fails to do so. For cash advance products originated by the Independent Lender, the Independent Lender is responsible for evaluating each of its customers' applications, determining whether to approve a cash advance based on an application and determining the amount of the cash advance. The Company is not involved in the Independent Lender's cash advance approval processes or in determining the lenders' approval procedures or criteria. At December 31, 2005,2006, the outstanding amount of active cash advances originated by the Independent Lender was $12.7 million. Since the Company had no off-balance sheet arrangements.may not be successful in collection of these delinquent accounts, the Company's cash advance loss provision includes amounts estimated to be adequate to absorb credit losses from cash advances in the aggregate cash advance portfolio, including those expected to be assigned to the Company or acquired by the Company as a result of its guaranty obligations. Accrued losses of $569,000 on portfolios owned by the Independent Lender are included in "accrued liabilities" in the consolidated balance sheets. The Company believes that this amount is adequate to absorb credit losses from cash advances expected to be assigned to the Company or acquired by the Company as a result of its guaranty obligations. Inflation The Company does not believe that inflation has had a material effect on the amountvolume of pawns and short-term advances madecustomer receivables originated, merchandise sales, or unredeemed goods sold by the Company, or its results of operation. Seasonality The Company's retail pawn business is seasonal in nature with its highest volume of merchandise sales occurring during the first and fourth calendar quarters of each year.year which coincides with Valentine's Day and Christmas. The Company's pawn lending and short-termcash advance activities are also seasonal, with the highest volume of lending activity occurring during the third and fourth calendar quarters of each year. The Company's buy- here/pay-here automotive business is less seasonal, although the Company expects that it will experience stronger sales and collection activities in the first quarter as a result of customers receiving tax refunds. Recent Accounting Pronouncements See discussion in Note 2 of Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements. Item 7a. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk -------------------------------------------------------------------- Market risks relating to the Company's operations result primarily from changes in interest rates, foreign exchange rates, and gold prices. The Company does not engage in speculative or leveraged transactions, nor does it hold or issue financial instruments for trading purposes. Interest Rate Risk The Company is potentially exposed to market risk in the form of interest rate risk in regards to its long-term line of credit. As of March 13,At December 31, 2006, the Company had $8,000,000 outstanding under its revolving line of credit did notcredit. This revolving line is priced with a variable rate based on LIBOR or a base rate, plus an applicable margin based on a defined leverage ratio for the Company. See "Note 8 - Revolving Credit Facility and Notes Payable." Based on the average outstanding indebtedness during the year ended December 31, 2006, a 10% increase in interest rates would have an outstanding balance; therefore,increased the Company's interest rate riskexpense by approximately $62,000 for 2006 is immaterial.the year ended December 31, 2006. The Company's cash and cash equivalents are invested in money market accounts. Accordingly, the Company is subject to changes in market interest rates. However, the Company does not believe a change in these rates would have a materially adverse effect on the Company's operating results, financial condition, or cash flows. Foreign Currency Risk The Company bears certain exchange rate risks from its operations in Mexico as approximately $3,304,000$4,337,000 of the Company's pawn loans in Mexico at December 31, 20052006 were contracted and expected to be settled in Mexican pesos. The Company also maintained certain peso-denominated bank balances at December 31, 2005,2006, which converted to a U.S. dollar equivalent of $2,570,000.$600,000. A 10% increase in the peso to U.S. dollar exchange rate would increase the Company's foreign currency translation exposure on its pawn loan balance and cash by approximately $300,000$385,000 and $234,000,$55,000, respectively. Gold Price Risk A significant and sustained decline in the price of gold would negatively impact the value of jewelry inventories held by the Company and the value of jewelry pledged as collateral by pawn customers. As a result, the Company's profit margins on existing jewelry inventories would be negatively impacted, as would be the potential profit margins on jewelry currently pledged as collateral by pawn customers in the event it is forfeited by the pawn customer. In addition, a decline in gold prices could result in a lower balance of pawn loans outstanding for the Company, as customers would receive lower loan amounts for individual pieces of jewelry. The Company believes that many customers would be willing to add additional items of value to their pledge in order to obtain the desired loan amount, thus mitigating a portion of this risk. Item 8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data ---------------------------------------------------- The financial statements prepared in accordance with Regulation S-X are included in a separate section of this report. See the index to Financial Statements at Item 15(a)(1) and (2) of this report. Item 9. Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Financial Disclosure -------------------- There have been no disagreements concerning matters of accounting principles or financial statement disclosure between the Company and Hein & Associates LLP requiring disclosure hereunder.Not applicable. Item 9a. Controls and Procedures --------------------------------- Evaluation of Disclosure Controls and Procedures TheUnder the supervision and with the participation of the Company's Chief Executive Officer ("CEO") and Chief Financial Officer, ("CFO") participated in an evaluation by our management of the Company has evaluated the effectiveness of the design and operation of the Company's disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d- 15(e) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934) as of December 31, 2006 ("Evaluation Date"). Based upon that evaluation, the Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer concluded that, as of the end ofEvaluation Date, the fiscal year that ended on December 31, 2005. Based on their participation in that evaluation, the CEO and CFO concluded that theCompany's disclosure controls and procedures wereare effective as of December 31, 2005(i) to ensure that information required information isto be disclosed on a timely basisby us in our reports filedthat the Company files or furnishedsubmits under the Exchange Act.Act is recorded, processed, summarized and reported within the time periods specified in the Securities and Exchange Commission rules and forms; and (ii) to ensure that information required to be disclosed in the reports that the Company files or submits under the Exchange Act is accumulated and communicated to our management, including the Company's Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer, to allow timely decisions regarding required disclosures. The CEO and CFO also participatedReport of Management on Internal Control Over Financial Reporting is included in an evaluation byItem 9a of this annual report on Form 10-K. There was no change in the management of any changes in theCompany's internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the yearquarter ended December 31, 2005. That evaluation did not identify any changes2006, that havehas materially affected, or areis reasonably likely to materially affect, the Company's internal control over financial reporting. Management's assessment of the Company's internal control over financial reporting excluded the buy-here/pay-here operating assets acquired from Guaranteed Auto Finance, Inc. and SHAC, Inc., collectively doing business as "Auto Master," because they were acquired by the Company in a purchase transaction during 2006. The Company's management, including its Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer, does not expect that the Company's disclosure controls and procedures or internal controls will prevent all possible error and fraud. The Company's disclosure controls and procedures are, however, designed to provide reasonable assurance of achieving their objectives, and the Company's Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer have concluded that the Company's financial controls and procedures are effective at that reasonable assurance level. Management's Report on Internal Control Over Financial Reporting Management is responsible for establishing and maintaining adequate internal control over financial reporting. This internal control system has been designed to provide reasonable assurance to the Company's management and board of directors regarding the preparation and fair presentation of the Company's published financial statements. All internal control systems, no matter how well designed, have inherent limitations. Therefore, even those systems determined to be effective can provide only reasonable assurance with respect to financial statement preparation and presentation. Management has assessed the effectiveness of the Company's internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2005.2006. To make this assessment, management used the criteria for effective internal control over financial reporting described in Internal Control-Integrated Framework, issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission. Based on this assessment, management believes that, as of December 31, 2005,2006, the Company's internal control over financial reporting is effective based on those criteria. Management's assessment of the effectiveness of our internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 20052006 has been audited by Hein & Associates LLP, an independent registered public accounting firm, as stated in their report which appears herein. REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM To the Board of Directors and Stockholders of First Cash Financial Services, Inc. We have audited management's assessment, included in the accompanying management's report on internal controls, that First Cash Financial Services, Inc., maintained effective internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2005,2006, based on criteria established in Internal Control - Integrated Framework issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission ("COSO"). Company management is responsible for maintaining effective internal control over financial reporting and for its assessment of the effectiveness of internal control over financial reporting. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on management's assessment and an opinion on the effectiveness of the company's internal control over financial reporting based on our audit. We conducted our audit in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether effective internal control over financial reporting was maintained in all material respects. Our audit included obtaining an understanding of internal control over financial reporting, evaluating management's assessment, testing and evaluating the design and operating effectiveness of internal control, and performing such other procedures as we considered necessary in the circumstances. We believe that our audit provides a reasonable basis for our opinion. A company's internal control over financial reporting is a process designed to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. A company's internal control over financial reporting includes those policies and procedures that (1) pertain to the maintenance of records that, in reasonable detail, accurately and fairly reflect the transactions and dispositions of the assets of the company; (2) provide reasonable assurance that transactions are recorded as necessary to permit preparation of financial statements in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles, and that receipts and expenditures of the company are being made only in accordance with authorizations of management and directors of the company; and (3) provide reasonable assurance regarding prevention or timely detection of unauthorized acquisition, use, or disposition of the Company's assets that could have a material effect on the financial statements. Because of its inherent limitations, internal control over financial reporting may not prevent or detect misstatements. Also, projections of any evaluation of effectiveness to future periods are subject to the risk that controls may become inadequate because of changes in conditions, or that the degree of compliance with the policies or procedures may deteriorate. In our opinion, management's assessment that the Company maintained effective internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2005,2006, is fairly stated, in all material respects, based on criteria established in Internal Control - Integrated Framework issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission ("COSO"). Also in our opinion, the Company maintained, in all material respects, effective internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2005,2006, based on criteria established in Internal Control - Integrated Framework issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission ("COSO"). We also audited, in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States), the consolidated balance sheets of First Cash Financial Services, Inc., as of December 31, 20052006 and 2004,2005, and the related consolidated statements of operations, stockholders' equity, and cash flows for the three years in the period ended December 31, 2005 and 20042006 and our report dated March 13, 200614, 2007 expressed an unqualified opinion thereon. Hein & Associates LLP Dallas, Texas March 13, 200614, 2007 Item 9b. Other Information --------------------------- None. PART III -------- Item 10. Directors, and Executive Officers of the Registrant ------------------------------------------------------------and Corporate Governance ---------------------------------------------------------------- The information required by this item with respect to the directors, executive officers and compliance with Section 16(a) of the Exchange Act is incorporated by reference from the information provided under the headings "Election of Directors," "Executive Officers" and "Section 16(a) Beneficial Ownership Reporting Compliance," respectively, contained in the Company's Proxy Statement to be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission in connection with the solicitation of proxies for the Company's Annual Meeting of Stockholders. The Company has adopted a Code of Ethics that applies to all of its directors, officers, and employees. This Code is publicly available on the Company's website at www.firstcash.com. Copies of the Company's Code of Ethics are available, free of charge, by submitting a written request to First Cash Financial Services, Inc., Investor Relations, 690 E. Lamar Blvd., Suite 400, Arlington, Texas 76011. Item 11. Executive Compensation -------------------------------- The information required by this item is incorporated by reference from the information provided under the heading "Executive Compensation" of the Company's Proxy Statement. Item 12. Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management and ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Related Stockholder Matters --------------------------- Equity Compensation Plan Information The following table gives information about the Company's common stock that may be issued upon the exercise of options under shareholder-approved plans, including its 1990 Stock Option Plan, its 1999 Stock Option Plan, and its 2004 Long-Term Incentive Plan as of December 31, 2005.2006. Additionally, the Company issues warrants to purchase shares of common stock to certain key members of management, members of the Board of Directors that are not employees or officers, and to other third parties. The issuance of warrants is not approved by shareholders, and each issuance is generally negotiated between the Company and such recipients. The issuance of warrants to outside consultants is accounted for using the fair value method prescribed by SFAS No. 123. Number of Number of securities securities to Weighted remaining available be issued upon average for future issuance exercise of exercise price under equity outstanding of outstanding compensation options, options, plans (excluding warrants and warrants and securities reflected rights rights in column A) Plan Category (A) (B) (C) ------------- --- --- --- Equity Compensation Plans Approved by Security Holders 5,373,8504,193,500 $ 14.17 213,71014.50 374,288 Equity Compensation Plans Not Approved by Security Holders 1,257,200 2.94839,000 3.00 - --------- --------- Total 6,631,0505,032,500 $ 12.04 213,71012.58 374,288 ========= ========= Other information required by this item is incorporated herein by reference from the information provided under the heading "Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management" of the Company's Proxy Statement. Item 13. Certain Relationships and Related Transactions, --------------------------------------------------------and Director ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Independence ------------ The information required by this item is incorporated herein by reference from the information provided in the Company's Proxy Statement. Item 14. Principal Accounting Fees and Services ------------------------------------------------ The information required by this item is incorporated by reference from the information provided in the Company's Proxy Statement under the discussion of the Company Audit Committee and under the item regarding shareholder ratification of the Company's independent accountants. PART IV ------- Item 15. Exhibits and Financial Statement Schedules ---------------------------------------------------- (a) The following documents are filed as a part of this report: (1) Consolidated Financial Statements: ReportsReport of Independent Registered Public Accounting FirmsFirm Consolidated Balance Sheets Consolidated Statements of Income Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows Consolidated Statements of Changes in Stockholders' Equity Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements (2) All schedules are omitted because they are not applicable or the required information is shown in the financial statements or the notes thereto. (3) Exhibits: 3.1(7) Amended Certificate of Incorporation 3.2(5) Amended Bylaws 4.1(2) Common Stock Specimen 10.1(1) First Cash, Inc. 1990 Stock Option Plan 10.2(8) Consulting Agreement - Phillip E. Powell 10.3(8) Employment Agreement - Rick L. Wessel 10.4(8) Employment Agreement - Alan Barron 10.5(3)10.4(3) Acquisition Agreement - Miraglia, Inc. 10.6(4)10.5(4) Acquisition Agreement for Twelve Pawnshops in South Carolina 10.7(4)10.6(4) Acquisition Agreement for One Iron Ventures, Inc. 10.8(4)10.7(4) First Cash Financial Services, Inc. 1999 Stock Option Plan 10.9(6)10.8(6) Executive Incentive Compensation Plan 10.10(7)10.9(7) 2004 Long-Term Incentive Plan 10.10(9) Stock Purchase Agreement - Auto Master 10.11(9) Third Amendment to the Credit Agreement 10.12(10) Amendment to Consulting Agreement - Phillip E. Powell 10.13(10) Amendment to Employment Agreement - Rick L. Wessel 14.1(8) Code of Ethics 21.1(9)21.1(10) Subsidiaries 23.1(9) Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm, Deloitte & Touche LLP 23.2(9)23.1(10) Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm, Hein & Associates LLP 31.1(9)31.1(10) Certification of Chief Executive Officer Pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. 31.2(9)2002 31.2(10) Certification of Chief Financial Officer Pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. 32.1(9)2002 32.1(10) Certification of Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350 as adopted Pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (1) Filed as an exhibit to the Company's Registration Statement on Form S-18 (No. 33-37760-FW) and incorporated herein by reference. (2) Filed as an exhibit to the Company's Registration Statement on Form S-1 (No. 33-48436) and incorporated herein by reference. (3) Filed as an exhibit to the Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended July 31, 1998 (File No. 0 - 19133) and incorporated herein by reference. (4) Filed as an exhibit to the Company's Registration Statement on Form S-3 dated January 22, 1999 (File No. 333-71077) and incorporated herein by reference. (5) Filed as an exhibit to the Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 1999 (File No. 0 - 19133) and incorporated herein by reference. (6) Filed as Exhibit A to the Company's Definitive Proxy Statement filed on April 30, 2003. (7) Filed as Exhibit A to the Company's Definitive Proxy Statement filed on April 29, 2004. (8) Filed as an exhibit to the Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2004 (File No. 0 - 19133) and incorporated herein by reference. (9) Filed as an exhibit to the Current Report on Form 8-K dated August 22, 2006 (File No. 0 - 19133) and incorporated herein by reference. (10) Filed herewith. SIGNATURES ---------- Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized. Dated: March 14, 2007 FIRST CASH FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC. Dated: March 13, 2006(Registrant) /s/ J. ALAN BARRONRICK L. WESSEL -------------------------------------------- J. Alan BarronRick L. Wessel Chief Executive Officer (Principal Executive Officer) Dated: March 13, 2006 /s/ R. DOUGLAS ORR -------------------------------------------- R. Douglas Orr Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer (Principal Financial and Accounting Officer) Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, this report has been signed below by the following persons on behalf of the registrant and in the capacities and on the dates indicated. Signature Capacity Date --------- -------- ---- /s/ PHILLIP E. POWELL Chairman of the Board March 13, 200614, 2007 ---------------------- Phillip E. Powell /s/ RICK L. WESSEL Vice Chairman of the Board, March 13, 200614, 2007 ---------------------- President, Secretary andChief Executive Rick L. Wessel TreasurerOfficer /s/ JOE R. LOVE Director March 13, 200614, 2007 ---------------------- Joe R. Love /s/ RICHARD T. BURKE Director March 13, 200614, 2007 ---------------------- Richard T. Burke /s/ TARA MACMAHON Director March 13, 200614, 2007 ---------------------- Tara MacMahon REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM To the Board of Directors and Stockholders of First Cash Financial Services, Inc. We have audited the accompanying consolidated balance sheets of First Cash Financial Services, Inc., and subsidiaries as of December 31, 20052006 and 2004,2005, and the related consolidated statements of income, stockholders' equity, and cash flows for the three years in the period ended December 31, 2005 and 2004.2006. These financial statements are the responsibility of the Company's management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on our audit.audits. We conducted our audits in accordance with standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the auditaudits to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. An audit also includes assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion. In our opinion, such consolidated financial statements present fairly, in all material respects, the consolidated financial position of First Cash Financial Services, Inc., and subsidiaries at December 31, 20052006 and December 31, 2004,2005, and the consolidated results of their operations and cash flows for the three years in the period ended December 31, 2005 and 2004,2006, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. We also have audited, in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States), the effectiveness of the Company's internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2005,2006, based on criteria established in Internal Control-Integrated Framework issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission, and our report dated March 13, 2006,14, 2007, expressed an unqualified opinion on management's assessment of the effectiveness of the Company's internal control over financial reporting and an unqualified opinion on the effectiveness of the Company's internal control over financial reporting. Hein & Associates LLP Dallas, Texas March 13, 2006 REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM To the Board of Directors and Stockholders of First Cash Financial Services, Inc. We have audited the accompanying consolidated statements of income, stockholders' equity, and cash flows of First Cash Financial Services, Inc., and subsidiaries for the year ended December 31, 2003. These financial statements are the responsibility of the Company's management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on our audit. We conducted our audit in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. An audit also includes assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. We believe that our audit provides a reasonable basis for our opinion. In our opinion, such consolidated financial statements present fairly, in all material respects, the consolidated results of operations and cash flows of First Cash Financial Services, Inc., and subsidiaries for the year ended December 31, 2003, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. As described in Note 3, effective December 31, 2003, in connection with the adoption of Financial Accounting Standards Board Interpretation No. 46(R), Consolidation of Variable Interest Entities, the Company consolidated into its financial statements its 50% owned joint venture, Cash & Go, Ltd. As described in Note 2, the consolidated statement of cash flows for the period ended December 31, 2003, has been restated. DELOITTE & TOUCHE LLP Fort Worth, Texas March 8, 2004 (October 8, 2004 as to the effects of the restatement described in the last paragraph of Note 2)14, 2007 FIRST CASH FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC. CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS December 31, December 31,---------------------- 2006 2005 2004 ------- --------------- -------- (in thousands, except per share data) ASSETS Cash and cash equivalents......................equivalents $ 15,535 $ 42,741 $ 26,232 Service fees receivable........................Finance and service charges receivable 4,966 4,176 4,512 Pawn receivables............................... 27,314 23,429 Short-term advanceCustomer receivables, net of allowanceallowances of $5,867 and $242, and $552, respectively..... 6,488 15,465 Inventories....................................respectively 60,251 33,802 Inventories 28,761 21,987 17,644 Prepaid expenses and other current assets......assets 5,901 5,430 3,649 ------- --------------- -------- Total current assets .........................115,414 108,136 90,931Customer receivables with long-term maturities, net of allowance of $3,895 and $0, respectively 14,013 - Property and equipment, net....................net 30,643 23,565 17,376 Goodwill.......................................Goodwill and other intangible assets, net 72,544 53,237 53,237 Other..........................................Other 1,228 1,016 799 ------- --------------- -------- Total assets .............................. $185,954 $162,343 ======= =======$ 233,842 185,954 ======== ======== LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY Current portion of notes payable $ 2,250 - Accounts payable .............................. $1,535 908 $ 856 Accrued liabilities............................liabilities 17,976 13,722 8,686 ------- --------------- -------- Total current liabilities ....................21,761 14,630 9,542Revolving credit facility 8,000 - Notes payable, net of current portion 7,188 - Deferred income taxes payable..................payable 8,297 8,616 8,755 ------- --------------- -------- Total liabilities .........................45,246 23,246 18,297 ------- --------------- -------- Commitments and contingencies (Notes 2 and 10) Stockholders' equity: Preferred stock; $.01 par value; 10,000,000 shares authorized; no shares issued or outstanding.................................outstanding - - Common stock; $.01 par value; 90,000,000 shares authorized; 33,900,86035,756,960 and 33,223,91033,900,860 shares issued, respectively; 31,502,47232,096,304 and 31,978,48031,502,472 shares outstanding, respectively 170 166353 340 Additional paid-in capital ................... 83,235 78,556101,949 83,065 Retained earnings ............................134,567 102,823 77,440 Common stock held in treasury, 2,398,3883,660,656 and 1,245,4302,398,388 shares at cost, respectively (48,273) (23,520) (12,116) ------- --------------- -------- Total stockholders' equity................equity 188,596 162,708 144,046 ------- --------------- -------- Total liabilities and stockholders' equity $185,954 $162,343 ======= =======$ 233,842 $ 185,954 ======== ======== The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements. FIRST CASH FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC. CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF INCOME Year Ended December 31, ----------------------------- 2006 2005 2004 2003 ------- ------- ------- (in thousands, except per share amounts) Revenues: Merchandise sales .......................$149,473 $102,139 $ 86,745 $ 69,808 PawnFinance and service fees ....................... 40,820 34,663 28,804 Short-term advance and credit services fees ......................... 60,881 54,123 42,939 Check cashing fees ...................... 2,900 3,030 2,749charges 116,187 101,701 88,786 Other ................................... 1,035 1,252 1,1684,062 3,935 4,282 ------- ------- ------- 269,722 207,775 179,813 145,468 ------- ------- ------- Cost of revenues: Cost of goods sold ......................84,229 61,659 52,056 41,110 Short-term advance and credit servicesCredit loss provision ........................21,463 13,808 11,559 9,879 Check cashing returned items expense ....Other 440 301 252 233 ------- ------- ------- 106,132 75,768 63,867 51,222 ------- ------- ------- Gross profit...........................Net revenues 163,590 132,007 115,946 94,246 ------- ------- ------- Expenses and other income: Store operating expenses ................81,089 67,430 61,063 51,814 Administrative expenses .................24,671 19,412 17,837 14,807 Depreciation ............................7,929 5,804 4,173 3,019Amortization 112 - - Interest expense ........................916 - 73 472 Interest income .........................(727) (317) (67) (595) ------- ------- ------- 113,990 92,329 83,079 69,517 ------- ------- ------- Income before income taxes .................49,600 39,678 32,867 24,729 Provision for income taxes ..............17,856 14,295 12,161 9,397 ------- ------- ------- Income before change in accounting principle 25,383 20,706 15,332 Cumulative effect of change in accounting principle, net of taxes (Note 3)....... - - (357) ------- ------- ------- Net income.............................income $ 31,744 $ 25,383 $ 20,706 $ 14,975 ======= ======= ======= Net income per share (Notes 2 and 4)(Note 3): Basic: Income before change in accounting principle..........................Basic $ 1.01 $ 0.81 $ 0.66 $ 0.55 Cumulative effect of change in accounting principle, net of taxes. - - (0.01) ------- ------- ------- Net income........................... $ 0.81 $ 0.66 $ 0.54 ======= ======= ======= Diluted: Income before change in accounting principle..........................Diluted $ 0.97 $ 0.76 $ 0.61 $ 0.49 Cumulative effect of change in accounting principle, net of taxes. - - (0.01) ------- ------- ------- Net income........................... $ 0.76 $ 0.61 $ 0.48 ======= ======= ======= The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements. FIRST CASH FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC. CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS Year Ended December 31, ----------------------------- 2006 2005 2004 2003 ------- ------- ------- (in thousands) Cash flows from operating activities: Income before change in accounting principle ..............................Net income $ 31,744 $ 25,383 $ 20,706 $ 15,332 Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash flows from operating activities: Depreciation ..........................and amortization 8,041 5,804 4,173 3,019 Short-term advanceShare-based compensation 583 - - Non-cash portion of credit loss provision .....9,920 7,118 11,559 9,878 Stock option and warrant income tax benefit .............................- 2,066 8,736 5,408 Changes in operating assets and liabilities, net of effect of Cash & Go, Ltd. consolidation: Serviceliabilities: Buy-here/pay-here automotive customer receivables (11,939) - - Finance and service fees receivable ...............(790) 336 (594) (553) Inventories ...........................(1,936) (1,563) (720) (718) Prepaid expenses and other assets .....438 (2,832) (530) 167 Accounts payable and accrued liabilities .........................2,360 5,088 (1,344) 545 Current and deferred income taxes .....(1,868) 695 2,142 (472) ------- ------- ------- Net cash flows from operating activities 36,553 42,095 44,128 32,606 ------- ------- ------- Cash flows from investing activities: Pawn customer receivables net ....................(7,095) (6,665) (4,728) (4,635) Short-termCash advance customer receivables net ......(4,805) 1,859 (13,265) (11,211) Purchases of property and equipment ......(14,716) (11,993) (7,131) (5,202) Cash from consolidationAcquisition of Cash & Go, Ltd.Auto Master buy-here/pay-here automotive division (23,652) - - 2,103 Net decrease in receivable from Cash & Go, Ltd ......................... - - 2,633 ------- ------- ------- Net cash flows from investing activities (50,268) (16,799) (25,124) (16,312) ------- ------- ------- Cash flows from financing activities: Proceeds from debt .......................31,000 - 10,000 - RepaymentsPayments of debt .......................(38,052) - (16,000) (23,502) Decrease in notes receivable from officers - - 4,228 PurchasesPurchase of treasury stock ..............(24,753) (11,404) (13,463) - Proceeds from exercise of stock options and warrants ...........................13,570 2,617 10,844 6,092Stock option and warrant income tax benefit 4,744 - - ------- ------- ------- Net cash flows from financing activities (13,491) (8,787) (8,619) (13,182) ------- ------- ------- Change in cash and cash equivalents ........(27,206) 16,509 10,385 3,112 Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of the year...............................period 42,741 26,232 15,847 12,735 ------- ------- ------- Cash and cash equivalents at end of the yearperiod $ 15,535 $ 42,741 $26,232 $ 15,84726,232 ======= ======= ======= Supplemental disclosureThe accompanying notes are an integral part of cash flow information: Cash paid during the year for: Interest ................................ $ - $ 70 $ 498 ======= ======= ======= Income taxes ............................ $ 11,380 $ 1,356 $ 4,256 ======= ======= =======these consolidated financial statements. FIRST CASH FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC. CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS (Continued) Year Ended December 31, ----------------------------- 2006 2005 2004 2003 ------- ------- ------- (in thousands) Supplemental disclosure of cash flow information: Cash paid during the period for: Interest $ 738 $ - $ 70 ======= ======= ======= Income taxes $ 14,576 $ 11,380 $ 1,356 ======= ======= ======= Supplemental disclosure of non-cash operating investing and financing activities: Non-cash transactionsactivity: Inventory acquired in connection with consolidation of Cash & Go, Ltd.: Fair market value of assets consolidated ........................repossession $ 310 $ - $ - $ 4,648 Less assumption of liabilities from consolidation .................. - - (5,791) ------- ------- ------- Net liabilities resulting from consolidation $ - $ - $ (1,143) ======= ======= ======= Supplemental disclosure of non-cash investing activity: Non-cash transactions in connection with pawn receivables settled through forfeitures of collateral forfeited and transferred to inventories .........$ 49,138 $ 42,241 $ 35,173 ======= ======= ======= Supplemental disclosure of non-cash financing activity: Notes payable issued in connection with the acquisition of Auto Master $ 27,11210,000 $ - $ - ======= ======= ======= The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements. FIRST CASH FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC. CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY Year Ended December 31, ----------------------------- 2006 2005 2004 2003 ------- ------- ------- (in thousands) Preferred stock...........................Stock - - - ------- ------- ------- Common stock: Balance at beginning of year ........... $ 166340 $ 109332 $ 96318 Exercise of stock options and warrants.. 4 15warrants 13 8 30 Cancellation of treasury stock ......... - (8) - Effect of stock split .................. - 50 -(16) ------- ------- ------- Balance at end of year ............ 170 166 109353 340 332 ------- ------- ------- Additional paid-in capital: Balance at beginning of year ........... 78,556 63,395 51,90883,065 78,390 63,179 Exercise of stock options and warrants, including income tax benefit of $4,744, $2,066, $8,736, and $5,408, respectively....... 4,679 19,572 11,487respectively 18,301 4,675 19,557 Cancellation of treasury stock ......... - (4,354) - Effect of stock split ..................(4,346) Stock option expense 583 - (57) - ------- ------- ------- Balance at end of year ............ 83,235 78,556 63,395101,949 83,065 78,390 ------- ------- ------- Retained earnings: Balance at beginning of year ...........102,823 77,440 56,734 41,759 Net income .............................31,744 25,383 20,706 14,975 ------- ------- ------- Balance at end of year ............134,567 102,823 77,440 56,734 ------- ------- ------- Treasury stock: Balance at beginning of year ...........(23,520) (12,116) (3,015) (3,015) Repurchases of treasury stock ..........(24,753) (11,404) (13,463) - Cancellation of treasury stock .........- - 4,362 - ------- ------- ------- Balance at end of year ............(48,273) (23,520) (12,116) (3,015) ------- ------- ------- Notes receivable from officers: Balance at beginning of year ........... - - (4,228) Repayment of notes receivable .......... - - 4,228 ------- ------- ------- Balance at end of year ............ - - - ------- ------- ------- Total stockholders' equity................equity $188,596 $162,708 $144,046 $117,223 ======= ======= ======= The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements. FIRST CASH FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC. NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS NOTE 1 - ORGANIZATION AND NATURE OF THE COMPANY First Cash Financial Services, Inc., (the "Company") was incorporated in Texas on July 5, 1988, and was reincorporated in Delaware in April 1991. The Company is engaged in the operation of pawn stores, which lend money on the collateral of pledged personal property and retail previously owned merchandise acquired through pawn forfeitures and purchases directly from the general public. In addition to making short-term secured pawns, many of the Company's pawn stores offer short-termcash advances and credit services. The Company also operates short-term or paydaycash advance stores that provide short-termcash advances, credit services, check cashing, and other related financial services. On August 25, 2006, the Company acquired Guaranteed Auto Finance, Inc. and SHAC, Inc. (collectively doing business as "Auto Master"), which operates automobile dealerships in the buy-here/pay-here segment of the used-vehicle sales and financing market. The automotive dealerships sell used vehicles and earn finance charges from the related vehicle financing contracts. As of December 31, 2005,2006, the Company owned and operated 226252 pawn stores, 145 cash advance stores and 102 payday advance stores.10 buy-here/pay-here automotive dealerships. The Company is also a 50% owner of Cash & Go, Ltd., a Texas limited partnership that owns and operates 40 financial services kiosks inside convenience stores. NOTE 2 - SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES The following is a summary of significant accounting policies followed in the preparation of these financial statements: Principles of consolidation - The accompanying consolidated financial statements of the Company include the accounts of its wholly-owned subsidiaries. In addition, effective December 31, 2003, the accompanying consolidated financial statements include the balance sheet accounts ofThe Company is a 50% partner in Cash & Go, Ltd., a 50%-owned Texas limited partnership, which owns financial services kiosks inside convenience stores.and in accordance with FASB Interpretation No. 46(R) - Consolidation of Variable Interest Entities, the consolidated operating results include those of Cash & Go, Ltd. The operating results of the partnershipAuto Master are included in consolidated operating results for the consolidated financial statements effective January 1, 2004.period August 26, 2006 through December 31, 2006. See Note 4. All significant intercompany accounts and transactions have been eliminated (see Note 3).eliminated. Cash and cash equivalents - The Company considers any highly liquid investments with an original maturity of three months or less at date of acquisition to be cash equivalents. ReceivablesCustomer receivables and incomerevenue recognition - Pawn receivables are short-term loans secured by the customer's pledge of tangible personal property. The Company accrues pawn service charge revenue on a constant-yieldconstant- yield basis over the life of the pawn loan for all pawns that the Company deems collection to be probable based on historical pawn redemption statistics. If the pawn is not repaid, the principal amount loaned becomes the carrying value of the forfeited collateral ("inventory"), which is recovered through sale. Cash advances are short-term loans with terms that range from seven to thirty-one days. The Company accrues short-termcash advance service fees on a constant-yield basis over the term of the short-termcash advance. Short-term advances have terms that range from seven to thirty-one days. Effective July 1, 2005, First Cash Credit, Ltd. ("FCC"), a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Company, began offering a fee-based credit services organization ("CSO") program to assist consumers inIn its Texas markets, in obtaining credit. Under the Company offers a credit services product ("CSO program, FCC assistsProgram") to assist customers in applying forobtaining a short-term loan from an independent, non-bank, consumer lending company (the "Independent Lender"). The Company recognizes credit services fees, which are collected from the customer at the inception of the credit services agreement, ratably over the life of the loan made by the Independent Lender. The loans made by the Independent Lender to credit services customers of FCC have terms of seven to thirty- onethirty-one days. The Company records a liability for collected, but unearned, credit services fees received from its customers. Short-termThe Company originates installment loan contracts from the sale of used vehicles at its dealerships. Such automotive receivables are collateralized by vehicles sold and consist of contractually scheduled payments from installment contracts, net of unearned finance charges and an allowance for credit losses. Unearned finance charges represent the balance of interest income remaining from the total interest to be earned over the term of the related installment contract. Credit loss provisions - The Company maintains an allowance for credit losses on an aggregate basis at a level it considers sufficient to cover estimated losses in the collection of its cash advance and automobile finance receivables. The allowance for credit serviceslosses is based primarily upon historical credit loss provision - Anexperience, with consideration given to recent credit loss trends and changes in loan characteristics (i.e., average amount financed and term), delinquency levels, collateral values, economic conditions and underwriting and collection practices. The allowances for credit losses are periodically reviewed by management with any changes reflected in current operations. Although it is at least reasonably possible that events or circumstances could occur in the future that are not presently foreseen which could cause actual credit losses to be materially different from the recorded allowance is provided on short-term advance receivablesfor credit losses, the Company believes that it has given appropriate consideration to all relevant factors and service charge receivables, based upon expected default rates, net of estimated future recoveries of previously defaulted short-term advances and service charge receivables.has made reasonable assumptions in determining the allowance for credit losses. The Company considers short-termcash advances to be in default if they are not repaid on the due date, and writes off the principal amount and service charge receivable as of the default date. Net defaults and changes in the short-termcash advance allowance are charged to the short-termcash advance loss provision. Under the CSO program, the Company issues the Independent Lender a letter of credit to guarantee the repayment of the loan. These letters of credit constitute a guarantee for which the Company is required to recognize, at the inception of the guarantee, a liability for the fair value of the obligation undertaken by issuing the letters of credit. The Independent Lender may present the letter of credit to FCC for payment if the customer fails to repay the full amount of the loan and accrued interest after the due date of the loan. Each letter of credit expires within 60 days from the inception of the associated lending transaction. FCC's maximum loss exposure under all of the outstanding letters of credit issued on behalf of its customers to the Independent Lender as of December 31, 2005 was $11,969,000. According to the letter of credit, if the borrower defaults on the loan, the Company will pay the Independent Lender the principal, accrued interest, insufficient funds fee, and late fees, all of which the Company records as bad debt in the short-termcash advance and credit services loss provision. FCC is entitled to seek recovery directly from its customers for amounts it pays the Independent Lender in performing under the letters of credit. The Company records the estimated fair value of the liability under the letters of credit in accrued liabilities. An automotive finance receivable account is considered delinquent when a contractually scheduled payment has not been received by the scheduled payment date. The Company considers automotive finance receivables to be in default when a contractually scheduled payment is 90 days past due. Store operating expenses - Costs incurred in operating the pawn stores, and paydaycash advance stores and buy-here/pay-here dealerships have been classified as store operating expenses. Operating expenses include salary and benefit expense of store employees, rent and other occupancy costs, bank charges, security, insurance, utilities, cash shortages and other costs incurred by the stores. Layaway and deferred revenue - Interim payments from customers on layaway sales are credited to deferred revenue and subsequently recorded as income during the period in which final payment is received. Inventories - InventoriesPawn inventories represent merchandise purchased directly from the public and merchandise acquired from forfeited pawns. InventoriesCertain pawn inventories are purchased directly from customers and are recorded at cost. Inventories from forfeited pawns are recorded at the amount of the pawn principal on the unredeemed goods. Vehicle inventories consist of used vehicles acquired from auctions, new car dealerships and trade-ins. Vehicle transportation and reconditioning costs are capitalized as a component of inventory. Repossessed vehicles are recorded at fair value, which approximates wholesale value. The cost of pawn and vehicle inventories is determined on the specific identification method. InventoriesPawn and vehicle inventories are stated at the lower of cost or market; accordingly, inventory valuation allowances are established when inventory carrying values are in excess of estimated selling prices, net of direct costs of disposal. Management has evaluated inventories and determined that a valuation allowance is not necessary. Property and equipment - Property and equipment are recorded at cost. Depreciation is determined on the straight-line method based on estimated useful lives of thirty-onefifteen years for buildings and three to five years for equipment. The costs of improvements on leased stores are capitalized as leasehold improvements and are amortized on the straight-line method over the applicable lease period, or useful life, if shorter. Maintenance and repairs are charged to expense as incurred; renewals and betterments are charged to the appropriate property and equipment accounts. Upon sale or retirement of depreciable assets, the cost and related accumulated depreciation is removed from the accounts, and the resulting gain or loss is included in the results of operations in the period the assets are sold or retired. Long-lived assets - Property, plant and equipment and non-current assets are reviewed for impairment whenever events or changes in circumstances indicate that the net book value of the asset may not be recoverable. An impairment loss is recognized if the sum of the expected future cash flows (undiscounted and before interest) from the use of the asset is less than the net book value of the asset. Generally, the amount of the impairment loss is measured as the difference between the net book value of the assets and the estimated fair value of the related assets. Management does not believe any of these assets have been impaired at December 31, 2005.2006. Goodwill is reviewed annually for impairment based upon its fair value, or more frequently if certain indicators arise. Management has determined that goodwill has not been impaired at December 31, 2005.2006. Fair value of financial instruments - The fair value of financial instruments is determined by reference to various market data and other valuation techniques, as appropriate. Unless otherwise disclosed, the fair values of financial instruments approximate their recorded values, due primarily to their short-termcash nature. Income taxes - The Company uses the liability method of computing deferred income taxes on all material temporary differences. Temporary differences are the differences between the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and their tax bases. Advertising - The Company expenses the costs of advertising the first time the advertising takes place. Advertising expense for the fiscal years ended December 31, 2006, 2005 and 2004, was $2,489,000, $1,964,000 and 2003, was $1,964,000, $2,302,000, and $1,567,000, respectively. Stock-basedShare-based compensation - The Company's stock-based employee compensation plans are described in Note 11. The expensePrior to January 1, 2006, the Company applied the recognition and measurement principles of APB 25, Accounting for Stock Issued to Employees, and related interpretations, are followedas permitted by SFAS 123, Accounting for Stock-Based Compensation, in accounting for these plans. No stock-based employeeawards of stock options and warrants, whereby at the date of grant, no compensation has been charged to earnings because the exercise prices ofexpense was reflected in income, as all stock options and warrants granted under these plans have beenhad an exercise price equal to or greater than the market value of the Company'sunderlying common stock at the date of the grant. The following presents information about net income and earnings per share as if the Company had applied the fair value expense recognition requirements of Statement of Financial Accounting Standards ("SFAS") 123, Accounting for Stock-Based Compensation, to all employee stock options granted under the plan (in thousands, except per share data): Year Ended December 31, ----------------------------- 2005 2004 2003 ------- ------- ------- Net income, as reported $ 25,383 $ 20,706 $ 14,975 Less: Stock-based employee compensation determined under the fair value requirements of SFAS 123, net of income tax benefits 11,178 2,716 2,261 ------- ------- ------- Pro forma net income $ 14,205 $ 17,990 $ 12,714 ======= ======= ======= Earnings per share: Basic, as reported $ 0.81 $ 0.66 $ 0.54 Basic, pro forma $ 0.45 $ 0.57 $ 0.45 Diluted, as reported $ 0.76 $ 0.61 $ 0.48 Diluted, pro forma $ 0.43 $ 0.53 $ 0.40 Pursuant to the requirements of SFAS 123, the weighted-average fair value of the individual employee stock options and warrants granted during 2005, 2004 and 2003 have been estimated as $3.72, $4.97 and $2.97, respectively, on the date of the grant. In 2005, 594,000 options were granted with an exercise price equal to the market price of the stock on the date of grant and 5,264,000 options were granted with an exercise price that exceededgrant. Effective January 1, 2006, the market price on the date of grant ("premium-priced options"). The options granted at market price had a weighted-average exercise price of $12.50 and a weighted-average fair value of $3.46. The premium-priced options had a weighted-average exercise price of $19.89 and a weighted- average fair value price $3.75. All options granted in 2004 and 2003 had an exercise price equal to the market price on the date of grant. The fair values were determined using a Black-Scholes option-pricing model using the following assumptions: Year Ended December 31, ----------------------------- 2005 2004 2003 ------- ------- ------- Dividend yield - - - Volatility 44.1% 52.7% 54.0% Risk-free interest rate 3.5% 3.5% 3.5% Expected life 4.4 years 5.5 years 7.0 years In December 2004, the FASB issued StatementCompany adopted SFAS No. 123(R), Share Based Payments. This statement,Share-Based Payments, which becomes effective for the Company beginning January 2006, requires that companies recognize compensation expense equal to the fair value of stock options or other share-based payments.replaces SFAS 123 and supersedes APB 25 (see Note 12). Earnings per share - Basic net income per share is computed by dividing net income by the weighted average number of shares outstanding during the year. Diluted net income per share is calculated by giving effect to the potential dilution that could occur if securities or other contracts to issue common shares were exercised and converted into common shares during the year. All share amounts have been retroactively adjusted to give effect to a two-for-one split and three-for-two split of the Company's common stock in February 2006 and March 2004, respectively (see Note 4)3). The following table sets forth the computation of basic and diluted earnings per share (in thousands, except per share data): Year Ended December 31, ----------------------------- 2006 2005 2004 2003 ------- ------- ------- Numerator: Net income for calculating basic and diluted earnings per share $ 31,744 $ 25,383 $ 20,706 $ 14,975======= ======= ======= Denominator: Weighted-average common shares for calculating basic earnings per share 31,448 31,506 31,507 27,971 Effect of dilutive stocksecurities: Stock options and warrants 1,411 1,719 2,560 3,541 ------- ------- ------- Weighted-average common shares for calculating diluted earnings per share 32,859 33,225 34,067 31,512 ======= ======= ======= Basic earnings per share $ 1.01 $ 0.81 $ 0.66 $ 0.54======= ======= ======= Diluted earnings per share $ 0.97 $ 0.76 $ 0.61 $ 0.48======= ======= ======= Pervasiveness of estimates - The preparation of financial statements in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities, and related revenues and expenses, and the disclosure of gain and loss contingencies at the date of the financial statements. Such estimates and assumptions are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties, which may cause actual results to differ materially from the Company's estimates. Reclassification - Certain amounts for the years ended December 31, 20032004 and 2004,2005 have been reclassified in order to conform to the 20052006 presentation. In addition, the Statement of Cash Flows for the year ended December 31, 2003, was restated to correct the classification of certain transactions between sections of the Statement of Cash Flows. The effect of these reclassifications was to increase net cash flows from operating activities by $16,508,000 from the amount previously reported for 2003 with offsetting reductions to net cash flows from investing and financing activities. The specific adjustment was provided in the Company's amended and restated Annual Report on Form 10-K/A, dated October 8, 2004, for the year ended December 31, 2003. Recent accounting pronouncements - In December 2004,June 2006, the Financial Accounting Standards Board issued Interpretation No. 48, "Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes" ("FASB"FIN 48") enacted Statement. FIN 48 requires that a more-likely- than-not threshold be met before the benefit of a tax position may be recognized in the financial statements and prescribes how such benefit should be measured. It requires that the new standard be applied to the balances of assets and liabilities as of the beginning of the period of adoption and that a corresponding adjustment be made to the opening balance of retained earnings. FIN 48 will be effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2006. The Company is evaluating the potential effect of FIN 48, but does not expect it to have a material effect on the Company's consolidated financial position or results of operations. In September 2006, the Financial Accounting Standards 123 - revised 2004 ("SFAS 123R"), Share-Based Payments, which replacesBoard issued Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 123157, "Fair Value Measurements" ("SFAS 123"157"), Accounting for Stock-Based Compensation, and supersedes APB Opinion No. 25 ("APB 25"), Accounting for Stock Issued. SFAS 157 defines fair value to Employees. SFAS 123R requiresbe the price that would be received to sell an asset or paid to transfer a liability in an orderly transaction between market participants at the measurement of all employee share-based payments to employees, including grants of employee stock options, using a fair-value- based method and the recording of such expense in the consolidated statements of income. The accounting provisions of SFAS 123R will be adopted by the Company using the modified prospective method for reporting periods beginning January 1, 2006. A "modified prospective" method assumes compensation cost is recognized beginning with the effective date (a) based on the requirements of SFAS No. 123R for all share-based payments granted after the effective date and (b) based on the requirements of Statement 123 for all awards granted to employees prior to the effective date of SFAS No. 123R that remain unvested on the effective date. The pro forma disclosures previously permitted under SFAS 123 no longer will be an alternative to financial statement recognition. The pro forma net income and net income per share amounts for Fiscal 2003 through Fiscal 2005 as if the Company had used a fair-value-based method similar to the methods required under SFAS 123R to measure compensation expense for employee stock incentive awards is presented herein. The Company expects to adopt SFAS No. 123R using the modified prospective method, and expects to continue to estimate the fair value of stock options using the Black-Scholes option pricing model soemphasizes that fair value estimatesis a market-based measurement, not an entity- specific measurement. It establishes a fair value hierarchy and expands disclosures about fair value measurements in both interim and annual periods. SFAS 157 will be computed on a basis comparable with prior year pro forma compensation expense calculations.effective for fiscal years beginning after November 15, 2007 and interim periods within those fiscal years. The Company estimates that it will record share-based compensation expense in fiscal 2006 of approximately $690,000. Approximately $625,000 of the anticipated 2006 equity compensation expense will be recorded in the quarter ended March 31, 2006, which relates primarily to options with accelerated vesting features that are expected to be triggered due to an increase in the Company's stock price. The remaining $65,000 of expected 2006 equity compensation expense will be recorded ratably in the second, third and fourth quarters of 2006. NOTE 3 - CHANGE IN ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLE In December 2003, the FASB issued Interpretation No. 46(R) ("FIN 46"), Consolidation of Variable Interest Entities. FIN 46 addresses consolidation by business enterprises of variable interest entities (formerly special purpose entities). In general, a variable interest entity is a corporation, partnership, trust or any other legal structure used for business purposes that either (a) does not expect SFAS 157 to have equity investors with voting rights or (b) has equity investors that do not provide sufficient financial resources for the entity to support its activities. FIN 46 requires a variable interest entity to be consolidated by a company if that company is subject to a majority of the risk of loss from the variable interest entity's activities or entitled to receive a majority of the entity's residual returns or both. The objective of FIN 46 is not to restrict the use of variable interest entities, but to improve financial reporting by companies involved with variable interest entities. The consolidation requirements became effective beginning the first period that ended after March 15, 2004; however, the Company elected to adopt the requirements effective December 31, 2003. The Company has a 50% ownership interest in a joint venture, Cash & Go, Ltd., a Texas limited partnership, which owns and operates 40 check cashing and financial services kiosks inside convenience stores. The Company funds substantially all of the working capital requirements of Cash & Go, Ltd., in the form of a loan to the joint venture. This loan is callable at any time by the Company; bears interest at the prime rate plus 5%, and, is secured by substantially all of Cash & Go, Ltd.'s assets. The Company previously accounted for its share of the joint venture's operating results using the equity method of accounting, as neither joint venture partner had control. Accordingly, through December 31, 2003, the Company recorded its 50% share of the partnership's earnings or losses in its consolidated financial statements. As defined in FIN 46, Cash & Go, Ltd., meets the requirements of a variable interest entity that must be consolidated by the Company. The Company implemented FIN 46material effect on December 31, 2003, at which time it recorded a change in accounting principle charge of $357,000, net of income tax benefit, which was necessary to recognize the other joint venture partner's share of Cash & Go, Ltd.'s accumulated operating losses as part of the initial consolidation accounting. As of December 31, 2003, and periods thereafter, the Company's consolidated balance sheet includes the assets and liabilities of Cash & Go, Ltd., net of intercompany accounts, including the loan described below, which have been eliminated. For Fiscal 2003, Cash & Go, Ltd. had total revenues of $6,694,000 and total expenses of $6,596,000; resulting in income before taxes of $98,000. The Company's share of income, as accounted for using the equity method through December 31, 2003, was $49,000. The operatingfinancial position or results of Cash & Go, Ltd., are included in the Company's consolidated operating results effective for accounting periods beginning January 1, 2004. Summarized financial information for Cash & Go, Ltd., as of December 31, 2003, is as follows: December 31, 2003 ----------------- (in thousands) Current assets $ 4,120 Non-current assets 528 Current note payable to First Cash Financial Services, Inc. (5,504) Other current liabilities (287) ------- Net liabilities $ (1,143) ======= Company's net receivable from Cash & Go, Ltd.: Note receivable from Cash & Go, Ltd. $ 5,504 Company's share of net liabilities (572) ------- $ 4,932 ======= Had the Company accounted for its investment in Cash & Go, Ltd., under FIN 46 for the year ended December 31, 2003, the Company's net income would have been as follows (in thousands, except per share data): Year Ended December 31, 2003 ---------------------------- Reported net income $ 14,975 Additional loss related to consolidation of Cash & Go, Ltd., net of tax 387 ------- Adjusted net income $ 15,362 ======= Basic earnings per share: Reported net income $ 0.54 Adjusted net income $ 0.55 Diluted earnings per share: Reported net income $ 0.48 Adjusted net income $ 0.49operations but anticipates additional disclosures when it becomes effective. NOTE 43 - CAPITAL STOCK In January 2006, the Company's Board of Directors approved a two-for- one stock split in the form of a stock dividend to shareholders of record on February 6, 2006. The additional shares were distributed on February 20, 2006. AllCommon stock and all share and per share amounts (except authorized shares and par value) have been retroactively adjusted to reflect the split. In July 2004, the Company's Board of Directors authorized a stock repurchase program to permit future repurchases of up to 3,200,000 shares of the Company's outstanding common stock. During 2005 and 2004, the Company repurchased a total of 1,153,000 and 1,245,000 common shares, respectively, under the stock repurchase program for an aggregate purchase price of $11,404,000 and $12,116,000, respectively, or $9.89 and $9.73 per share, respectively; leaving a balance of 802,000 shares remaining available for repurchase under the plan. In March 2004, the Company's Board of Directors approved a three-for- two stock split in the form of a stock dividend to shareholders of record on March 22, 2004. The additional shares were distributed on April 6, 2004. All share and per share amounts (except authorized shares and par value) have been retroactively adjusted to reflect the split. In June 2006, the Company's Board of Directors authorized the repurchase of up to 2,000,000 shares of First Cash's outstanding common stock. During the second quarter of 2006, the Company repurchased a total of 461,000 common shares under the 2006-authorized stock repurchase plan for an aggregate purchase price of $8,848,000 or $19.21 per share. There were no shares repurchased during the second half of 2006. There are 1,539,000 total remaining shares available for repurchase under the 2006-authorized plan. In July 2004, the Company's Board of Directors authorized the repurchase of up to 3,200,000 shares of the Company's outstanding common stock. During 2005 and 2004, the Company repurchased a total of 1,153,000 and 1,245,000 common shares, respectively, under the stock repurchase program for an aggregate purchase price of $11,404,000 and $12,116,000. During 2006, First Cash repurchased approximately 802,000 shares for an aggregate purchase price of $15,905,000 to close out the 2004-authorized program. The weighted average repurchase price of the 3,200,000 shares repurchased under this plan was $12.32 per share or a total of $39,425,000. NOTE 4 - ACQUISITION Pursuant to the Company's strategic initiative to grow and diversify its product suite within the specialty consumer finance and retail industries, the Company acquired two affiliated companies, collectively doing business as Auto Master, an automotive retailer and related finance company focused exclusively on the "buy-here/pay-here" segment of the retail used vehicle market. Auto Master, based in Northwest Arkansas, owns and operates buy-here/pay-here automobile dealerships located in Arkansas, Missouri and Oklahoma, which specialize in the sale of clean, moderately- priced used vehicles. The definitive stock purchase agreement for the privately-held Auto Master group of companies was signed and closed on August 25, 2006. The purchase price, in the amount of $33.7 million, was funded through a combination of $23.7 million in cash and notes payable to the sellers in the amount of $10 million. In addition, the Company retired approximately $14 million of the outstanding interest-bearing debt of Auto Master subsequent to closing the purchase transaction. The acquisition has been accounted for using the purchase method of accounting. Accordingly, the purchase price was allocated to assets and liabilities acquired based upon their estimated fair market values at the date of acquisition. The excess purchase price over the estimated fair market value of the net tangible assets acquired and identifiable intangible assets has been recorded as goodwill. The total amount of goodwill and identified intangible assets, of approximately $19.4 million, is expected to be deductible for tax purposes. The results of operations of the acquired company are included in the consolidated financial statements from its date of acquisition. The allocation of the purchase price is as follows (in thousands): Cash $ 7 Fair market value of net tangible assets 28,723 Goodwill 13,637 Trade name 4,360 Customer relationships 1,423 Less: assumed debt (14,490) -------- Purchase price $ 33,660 ======== NOTE 5 - RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS AsCUSTOMER RECEIVABLES AND VALUATION ACCOUNTS Customer receivables, net of unearned finance charges, consist of the following (in thousands): Buy-Here/ Cash Pay-Here Pawn Advance Automotive Total -------- -------- ---------- -------- December 31, 2006 ----------------- Customer receivables with current maturities $ 32,459 $ 7,740 $ 25,919 $ 66,118 Less allowance for doubtful accounts - (230) (5,637) (5,867) -------- -------- -------- -------- 32,459 7,510 20,282 60,251 Customer receivables with long-term maturities - - 17,908 17,908 Less allowance for doubtful accounts - - (3,895) (3,895) -------- -------- -------- -------- - - 14,013 14,013 Total customer receivables 32,459 7,740 43,827 84,026 Less allowance for doubtful accounts - (230) (9,532) (9,762) -------- -------- -------- -------- $ 32,459 $ 7,510 $ 34,295 $ 74,264 ======== ======== ======== ======== December 31, 2005 ----------------- Customer receivables with current maturities $ 27,314 $ 6,730 $ - $ 34,044 Less allowance for doubtful accounts - (242) - (242) -------- -------- -------- -------- 27,314 6,488 - 33,802 Customer receivables with long-term maturities - - - - Less allowance for doubtful accounts - - - - -------- -------- -------- -------- - - - - Total customer receivables 27,314 6,730 - 34,044 Less allowance for doubtful accounts - (242) - (242) -------- -------- -------- -------- $ 27,314 $ 6,488 $ - $ 33,802 ======== ======== ======== ========
Changes in the customer receivables allowance for credit losses are as follows (in thousands): Buy-Here/ Cash Pay-Here Advance Automotive Total ------- ---------- ------- December 31, 2002,2006 ----------------- Balance, beginning of the Company had notes receivable outstanding from certainyear (1) $ 242 $ 9,299 $ 9,541 Provision for credit losses 2,658 6,137 8,795 Charge-offs, net of its officers totaling $4,228,000. Repaymentrecoveries (2,670) (5,904) (8,574) ------- ------- ------- Balance at end of these notes was completed during Fiscal 2003. The notes bore interestyear $ 230 $ 9,532 $ 9,762 ======= ======= ======= December 31, 2005 ----------------- Balance, beginning of the year $ 552 $ - 552 Provision for credit losses 7,118 - 7,118 Charge-offs, net of recoveries (7,428) - (7,428) ------- ------- ------- Balance at 3%.end of year $ 242 $ - $ 242 ======= ======= ======= (1) Buy-here/pay-here beginning balance is as of August 25, 2006, the date of acquistion. NOTE 6 - PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENT Property and equipment consist of the following (in thousands): Year Ended December 31, December 31,----------------------- 2006 2005 2004 ------- --------------- -------- Land $ 672715 $ 672 Buildings 1,002 1,002 Furniture, fixtures, equipment and leasehold improvements 62,611 46,870 35,210 ------- --------------- -------- 64,328 48,544 36,884-------- -------- Less: accumulated depreciation (33,685) (24,979) (19,508) ------- --------------- -------- $ 30,643 $ 23,565 $ 17,376 ======= =============== ======== NOTE 7 - ACCRUED LIABILITIES Accrued liabilities consist of the following (in thousands): Year Ended December 31, December 31,----------------------- 2006 2005 2004 ------- --------------- -------- Accrued compensation $ 5,476 $ 3,857 $ 3,492 Layaway deposits 2,495 2,057Deferred revenue 4,102 3,306 Third-party lending settlements payable 2,909 1,914 781 Sales and property taxes payable 1,289 1,284 910 Unearned credit services fees 965 - Money order and money transfer settlements payable 743 673 523 Income taxes payable 470 - ReserveReserves for expected losses on outstanding CSO letters of credit 456569 508 Vehicle warranty reserve 523 - Other 1,608 923 ------- -------2,365 2,180 -------- -------- $ 17,976 $ 13,722 $ 8,686 ======= =============== ======== NOTE 8 - REVOLVING CREDIT FACILITY AND NOTES PAYABLE The Company maintains a long-term line of credit with two commercial lenders (the "Credit("the Credit Facility"). which was amended during the third quarter of 2006 to increase the amount available under the line of credit from $25,000,000 to $50,000,000 and to extend the term of the facility until April 2009. The Credit Facility provides a $25,000,000 long-term line of credit that matures on April 15, 2007, and bears interest at the prevailing LIBOR rate (which was approximately 4.4%5.3% at December 31, 2005)2006) plus a fixed interest rate margin of 1.375%. Amounts available under the Credit Facility are limited to 300% of the Company's earnings before income taxes, interest, depreciation and amortization for the trailing twelve months. At December 31, 2005, no amounts were2006, the Company had $8,000,000 outstanding under the Credit Facility and the Company had $25,000,000$42,000,000 available for borrowings. Under the terms of the Credit Facility, the Company is required to maintain certain financial ratios and comply with certain technical covenants. The Company was in compliance with the requirements and covenants of the Credit Facility as of December 31, 2005,2006, and March 13, 2006.14, 2007. The Company is required to pay an annual commitment fee of 1/8 of 1% on the average daily- unuseddaily-unused portion of the Credit Facility commitment. The Company's Credit Facility contains provisions that allow the Company to repurchase stock and/or pay cash dividends within certain parameters. Substantially all of the unencumbered assets of the Company have been pledged as collateral against indebtedness under the Credit Facility. At December 31, 2006, the Company has notes payable to individuals arising from the Auto Master acquisition which total $9,438,000 in aggregate and bear interest at 7%, with quarterly payments of principal and interest scheduled over the next four years. Of the $9,438,000 in notes payable, $2,250,000 is classified as a current liability and $7,188,000 is classified as long-term debt. One of the notes payable, in the principal amount of $1,000,000, is convertible after one year into 55,555 shares of the Company's common stock at a conversion price of $18.00 per share. NOTE 9 - INCOME TAXES Components of the provision for income taxes consist of the following (in thousands): Year Ended December 31, ----------------------------- 2006 2005 2004 2003 ------- ------- ------- Current: Federal $ 16,012 $ 12,003 $ 9,874 $ 7,495 State and foreign 2,992 2,465 891 870 ------- ------- ------- 19,004 14,468 10,765 8,365 Deferred (1,148) (173) 1,396 1,032 ------- ------- ------- $ 17,856 $ 14,295 $ 12,161 $ 9,397 ======= ======= ======= The principal current and non-current deferred tax assets and liabilities consist of the following at(in thousands): Year Ended December 31, ----------------------- 2006 2005 and 2004 (in thousands): December 31, December 31, 2005 2004 ------- --------------- -------- Deferred tax assets: Inventory tax-basis difference $ 1,2911,385 $ 1,6731,291 Foreign tax credits 2,580 1,146 - Other 1,566 701 145 ------- --------------- -------- Total deferred tax assets 5,531 3,138 1,818 ------- --------------- -------- Deferred tax liabilities: Intangible asset amortization 9,984 8,655 7,264 Depreciation 745 872 1,013 State income taxes, net 324 386 407 Other 508 404 485 ------- --------------- -------- Total deferred tax liabilities 11,561 10,317 9,169 ------- --------------- -------- Net deferred tax liabilities $liablities 6,030 7,179 $ 7,351 ======= =============== ======== Reported as: Other current assets $2,267 1,437 $ 1,404 Non-current liabilities - deferred income taxes (8,297) (8,616) (8,755) ------- --------------- -------- Total deferred tax liabilities $ 6,030 $ 7,179 $ 7,351 ======= =============== ======== The provision for income taxes differs from the amounts determined by applying the expected federal statutory tax rate to income from continuing operations before income taxes. The following is a reconciliation of such differences (in thousands): Year Ended December 31, ----------------------------- 2006 2005 2004 2003 ------- ------- ------- Tax at the federal statutorystatuatory rate $ 17,360 $ 13,887 $ 11,175 $ 8,408 State and foreign income taxes, net of federal tax benefit for state taxes of $396, $312 $220 and $43,$220, respectively, and foreign tax credits of $1,861, $1,574 and $83, and $453, respectively 735 579 588 558 Other, net (239) (171) 398 431 ------- ------- ------- $ 17,856 $ 14,295 $ 12,161 $ 9,397 ======= ======= ======= NOTE 10 - COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES Leases - The Company leases certain of its facilities and equipment under operating leases with terms generally ranging from three to five years. Most facility leases contain renewal options. Remaining future minimum rentals due under non-cancelable operating leases, including Cash & Go, Ltd., are as follows (in thousands): Fiscal ------ 20062007 $ 13,909 2007 12,72917,582 2008 9,91315,014 2009 6,77511,780 2010 4,0588,808 2011 4,593 Thereafter 5,056 -------4,811 -------- $ 52,440 =======62,588 ======== Rent expense under such leases was $15,268,000, $12,513,000 $10,923,000 and $8,664,000$10,923,000 for the years ended December 31, 2006, 2005 2004 and 2003,2004, respectively. The Company is from time to time a defendant (actual or threatened) in certain lawsuits and arbitration claims encountered in the ordinary course of its business, the resolution of which, in the opinion of management, should not have a materially adverse effect on the Company's financial position, results of operations, or cash flows. Guarantees - First Cash Credit, Ltd. ("FCC"), a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Company, offers a fee-based credit services program ("CSO program") to assist consumers in its Texas markets in obtaining credit. Under the CSO program, FCC assists customers in applying for a short-term loan from an independent, non-bank, consumer lending company (the "Independent Lender") and issues the Independent Lender a letter of credit to guarantee the repayment of the loan. The loans made by the Independent Lender to credit services customers of FCC range in amount from $50 to $1,000, have terms of 7 to 35 days and bear interest at a rate of less than 10% on an annualized basis. These letters of credit constitute a guarantee for which the Company is required to recognize, at the inception of the guarantee, a liability for the fair value of the obligation undertaken by issuing the letters of credit. The Independent Lender may present the letter of credit to FCC for payment if the customer fails to repay the full amount of the loan and accrued interest after the due date of the loan. Each letter of credit expires within 60 days from the inception of the associated lending transaction. FCC's maximum loss exposure under all of the outstanding letters of credit issued on behalf of its customers to the Independent Lender as of December 31, 2006 was $14,239,000 compared to $11,969,000 at December 31, 2005. According to the letter of credit, if the borrower defaults on the loan, the Company will pay the Independent Lender the principal, accrued interest, insufficient funds fee, and late fees, all of which the Company records as bad debt in the short-term advance and credit services loss provision. FCC is entitled to seek recovery directly from its customers for amounts it pays the Independent Lender in performing under the letters of credit. The Company records the estimated fair value of the liability under the letters of credit in accrued liabilities. NOTE 11 - EMPLOYEE STOCK OPTIONGOODWILL AND INCENTIVEOTHER INTANGIBLE ASSETS Goodwill and other intangible assets having an indefinite useful life are tested for impairment annually or more frequently if events or changes in circumstances indicate that the assets might be impaired. An impairment loss is recognized if the sum of the expected future cash flows (undiscounted and before interest) from the use of the asset is less than the net book value of the asset. Management does not believe any of these assets have been impaired at December 31, 2006. Goodwill is reviewed annually for impairment based upon its fair value, or more frequently if certain indicators arise. Management has determined that goodwill has not been impaired at December 31, 2006. Changes in the carrying value of goodwill and other intangible assets were as follows (in thousands): Pawn and Buy-Here/ Cash Pay-Here Advance Automotive Total ------- ---------- ------- December 31, 2006 ----------------- Balance, beginning of year, net of amortization of $8,461 $ 53,237 $ - $ 53,237 Acquisitions, net of amortization of $112 - 19,307 19,307 Adjustments - - - ------- ------- ------- Balance, end of year $ 53,237 $ 19,307 $ 72,544 ======= ======= ======= December 31, 2005 ----------------- Balance, beginning of year, net of amortization of $8,461 $ 53,237 $ - $ 53,237 Acquisitions - - - Adjustments - - - ------- ------- ------- Balance, end of year $ 53,237 $ - $ 53,237 ======= ======= ======= Acquired intangible assets that are subject to amortization were as follows (in thousands): 2006 2005 ---------------------------- -------------------------- Accumulated Accumulated Cost Depreciation Net Cost Depreciation Net ------ ------------ ------ ---- ------------ ------ Customer relationships $ 1,423 $ (112) $ 1,311 $ - $ - $ - Customer relationships are generally amortized over six years based on the pattern of economic benefits provided. At December 31, 2006, the trade name obtained in the acquisition of Auto Master, valued at $4,360,000, was not subject to amortization. Amortization expense for acquired intangible assets was $112,000 and $0 for Fiscal 2006 and 2005, respectively. Estimated future amortization expense is approximately $200,000 annually over the next five years. NOTE 12 - EQUITY COMPENSATION PLANS AND OUTSTANDING WARRANTS On October 30, 1990,SHARE-BASED COMPENSATION The Company has adopted equity compensation plans to attract and retain executives, directors and key employees. Under these plans, including the Company's Board of Directors adopted theboard-approved 1990 Stock Option Plan, (the "1990 Plan"). The 1990 Plan provides for the issuance of incentive stock options and non-qualified stock options to key employees and directors of the Company. The total number of shares of common stock authorized and reserved for issuance under the 1990 Plan is 750,000 shares. The exercise price for each stock option granted under the 1990 Plan may not be less than the fair market value of the common stock on the date of the grant, unless, in the case of incentive stock options, the optionee owns greater than 10% of the total combined voting power of all classes of capital stock of the Company, in which case the exercise price may not be less than 110% of the fair market value of the common stock on the date of the grant. Unless otherwise determined by the Board, options granted under the 1990 Plan have a maximum duration of five years and vest in up to four equal installments, commencing on the first anniversary of the date of grant. As of December 31, 2005, no options to purchase shares of common stock were available for grant under the 1990 Plan. Options to purchase 66,000 shares of common stock under the 1990 Plan were granted and outstanding, of which 3,000 shares were vested at December 31, 2005. On January 14, 1999, the Company's shareholders adopted theshareholder-approved 1999 Stock Option Plan (the "1999 Plan"). The 1999 Plan provides forand the issuance of incentive stock options and non-qualified stock options to key employees and directors of the Company. The total number of shares of common stock authorized and reserved for issuance under the 1999 Plan is 7,500,000 shares. The exercise price for each stock option granted under the 1999 Plan may not be less than the fair market value of the common stock on the date of the grant, unless, in the case of incentive stock options, the optionee owns greater than 10% of the total combined voting power of all classes of capital stock of the Company, in which case the exercise price may not be less than 110% of the fair market value of the common stock on the date of the grant. Unless otherwise determined by the Board, options granted under the 1999 Plan have a maximum duration of ten years unless, in the case of incentive stock options, the optionee owns at least 10% of the total combined voting power of all classes of capital stock of the Company, in which case the maximum duration is five years. As of December 31, 2005, options to purchase 4,000 shares of common stock were available for grant under the 1999 Plan. Options to purchase 3,718,000 shares of common stock under the 1999 Plan were granted and outstanding, of which 3,490,000 options were vested as of December 31, 2005. On June 15, 2004, the Company's shareholders adopted theshareholder-approved 2004 Long-Term Incentive Plan (the "2004 Plan"). The 2004 Plan provides for(collectively described as the issuance of incentive"Plans"), it has granted qualified and non- qualified stock options non-qualified stock optionsto officers, directors and other forms of equity compensation such as stock appreciation rights and restricted stock to key employees and directors ofemployees. In addition, the Company. The total number of shares of common stock authorized and reserved for issuance under the 2004 Plan is 1,800,000 shares. The exercise price for each stock option or stock appreciation right granted under the 2004 Plan may not be less than the fair market value of the common stock on the date of the grant. Unless otherwise determined by the Board, options granted under the Plan have a maximum duration of ten years. As of December 31, 2005, options to purchase 210,000 shares of common stock were available for grant under the 2004 Plan. Options to purchase 1,590,000 shares of common stock under the 2004 Plan were outstanding and are fully vested as of December 31, 2005. The Company also issueshas previously issued warrants to purchase shares of common stock to certain key members of management, directors and other third parties. At December 31, 2006, 374,000 shares were reserved for future grants under the Plans. Historically, stock options and warrants have been granted to members ofpurchase the Board of Directors who are not employeesCompany's common stock at an exercise price equal to or officers of the Company and to outside consultants and advisors in connection with various acquisitions, debt offerings and consulting engagements. In accordance with the provisions of SFAS 123, the issuance of warrants to outside consultants and advisors is accounted for usinggreater than the fair market value method prescribed by SFAS 123. Stockat the date of grant and generally have a maximum duration of ten years. The Company typically issues shares of common stock to satisfy option and warrant exercises. Options and warrants outstanding as of December 31, 2006, are as follows (in thousands, except exercise price and life): Ranges of Total Warrants Weighted-Average Currently Exercise Prices and Options Remaining Life Exercisable --------------- ----------- -------------- ----------- $ 0.67 - $ 5.00 1,259 5.4 1,088 $ 5.01 - $10.00 448 7.0 448 $10.01 - $15.00 1,325 8.4 1,325 $15.01 - $20.00 1,997 8.6 1,912 $20.01 - $22.00 4 9.9 - ------ ------ 5,033 4,773 ====== ====== A summary of stock option and warrant activity for Fiscalthe years ended December 31, 2006, 2005 and 2004 and 2003 is summarized in the accompanying chartas follows (in thousands, except exercise price): 2006 2005 2004 2003 --------------------- --------------------- --------------------- Weighted- Weighted- Weighted- Average Average Average Underlying Exercise Underlying Exercise Underlying Exercise Shares Price Shares Price Shares Price ------ ----- ------ ----- ------ ----- Outstanding at beginning of periodyear 6,631 $12.04 3,367 $ 4.87 5,543 $ 3.33 7,501 $ 2.06 Granted 89 20.09 5,858 19.14 910 9.67 1,816 5.09 Exercised (1,438) 9.43 (677) 3.87 (3,086) 3.52 (3,720) 1.64 Canceled or forfeited (249) 19.11 (1,917) 24.01 - - (54) 2.67 ------ ------ ------ Outstanding at end of periodyear 5,033 12.58 6,631 12.04 3,367 4.87 5,543 3.33 ====== ====== ====== Exercisable at end of periodyear 4,773 $12.13 6,243 12.47$12.47 2,790 $ 4.71 4,926 3.23 ====== ====== ====== OptionsThe tax benefit realized from share options exercised during the year ended December 31, 2006 was $4,744,000. At December 31, 2006, the aggregate intrinsic value for the options outstanding was $66,863,000, of which $62,421,000 million was exercisable at the end of the year. The total intrinsic value of options and warrants outstandingexercised for Fiscal 2006, 2005 and 2004 was $13,829,000 $5,870,000 and $24,640,000, respectively. The aggregate intrinsic value reflects the total pretax intrinsic value (the difference between the Company's closing stock price on the last trading day of the period and the exercise price of the options and warrants, multiplied by the number of in-the-money options and warrants) that would have been received by the option and warrant holders had all option and warrant holders exercised their options and warrants on December 31, 2006, 2005 and 2004, respectively. The intrinsic value of the stock options and warrants exercised are based on the closing price of the Company's stock on the date of exercise. The Company typically issues shares of common stock to satisfy option and warrant exercises. Prior to January 1, 2006, the Company applied the recognition and measurement principles of APB 25, Accounting for Stock Issued to Employees, and related interpretations in accounting for awards of stock options and warrants, whereby at the date of grant, no compensation expense was reflected in income, as all stock options and warrants granted had an exercise price equal to or greater than the market value of the underlying common stock on the date of grant. Pro forma information regarding net income and earnings per share was provided in accordance with Statement of Financial Accounting Standards ("SFAS") 148, Accounting for Stock-Based Compensation - Transition and Disclosure, as if the fair value method defined by SFAS 123, Accounting for Stock-Based Compensation had been applied to stock-based compensation. For purposes of the pro forma disclosures, the estimated fair value of stock options was amortized to expense over the options' vesting period. Effective January 1, 2006, the Company adopted SFAS No. 123(R), Share- Based Payments, which replaces SFAS 123 and supersedes APB 25. SFAS 123(R) requires all share-based payments to employees, including grants of employee stock options, to be recognized in the financial statements based on their fair values. The Company adopted SFAS 123(R) using the modified-prospective transition method, which requires the Company, beginning January 1, 2006 and thereafter, to expense the grant-date fair value of all share-based awards over their remaining vesting periods to the extent the awards were not fully vested as of the date of adoption and to expense the fair value of all share-based awards granted subsequent to December 31, 2005 over their requisite service periods. Stock-based compensation expense for all share- based payment awards granted after January 1, 2006 is based on the grant- date fair value estimated in accordance with the provisions of SFAS 123(R). The Company recognizes compensation cost net of a forfeiture rate and recognizes the compensation cost for only those awards expected to vest on a straight-line basis over the requisite service period of the award, which is generally the vesting term. The Company estimated the forfeiture rate based on its historical experience and its expectations of future forfeitures. As required under the modified-prospective transition method, prior periods have not been restated. The Company records share-based compensation cost as an administrative expense. The Company applied the alternative transition method in calculating its pool of excess tax benefits available to absorb future tax deficiencies as provided by FSP FAS 123(R)-3, Transition Election Related to Accounting for the Tax Effects of Share-Based Payment Awards. The Company's income before income taxes and net income for Fiscal 2006 were approximately $583,000 and $379,000, respectively, less than if it had continued to account for share-based compensation under the recognition and measurement provisions of APB 25. Basic and diluted net income per share for Fiscal 2006 would have each increased by $0.01, to $1.02 and $0.98, respectively, if the Company had not adopted SFAS 123(R). SFAS 123(R) requires that cash flows from tax benefits resulting from tax deductions in excess of the compensation cost recognized for stock-based awards (excess tax benefits) be classified as financing cash flows prospectively from January 1, 2006. Prior to the adoption of SFAS 123(R), such excess tax benefits were presented as operating cash flows. Accordingly, $4,744,000 of excess tax benefits has been classified as a financing cash inflow in the Fiscal 2006 Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows. For Fiscal 2005 and 2004, such excess tax benefits amounted to $2,066,000 and $8,736,000, respectively, and were classified as an operating activity cash inflow. As of December 31, 2005, are2006, the total compensation cost related to nonvested awards not yet recognized was $556,000, and is expected to be recognized over the weighted-average period of 2.2 years. Stock options and warrants granted prior to January 1, 2006 were either fully vested and exercisable on the grant date, or vested and become exercisable ratably over a five year period beginning five years from the date of grant. In addition, certain options granted prior to January 1, 2006 included accelerated vesting provisions. As of December 31, 2006, there were no outstanding, unvested options with accelerated vesting features. Of the total share-based compensation expense (before tax benefit) of $583,000 for Fiscal 2006, approximately $490,000 related to accelerated vesting of previously issued options as a result of an increase in the market value of the Company's common stock during the first quarter of 2006. Prior to the adoption of SFAS 123(R), the Company accounted for share- based compensation plans under the provisions of APB 25, Accounting for Stock Issued to Employees, and related interpretations. If compensation cost for stock-based compensation plans had been determined based on the fair value method (estimated using the Black-Scholes option pricing model) recognized over the vesting period in accordance with SFAS 123, pro forma net income and earnings per share would have been as follows (in thousands, except exercise price and life)per share amounts): RangesYear Ended December 31, ----------------------- 2005 2004 -------- -------- Net income, as reported $ 25,383 $ 20,706 Less: Pro forma stock-based employee compensation determined under the fair value requirements of Total Warrants Weighted-Average Currently Exercise Prices and Options Remaining Life Exercisable --------------- ----------- -------------- -----------SFAS 123, net of income tax benefits 11,178 2,716 -------- -------- Adjusted net income $ 0.0114,205 $ 17,990 ======== ======== Earnings per share: Basic, as reported $ 0.81 $ 0.66 ======== ======== Basic, adjusted $ 0.45 $ 0.57 ======== ======== Diluted, as reported $ 0.76 $ 0.61 ======== ======== Diluted, adjusted $ 0.43 $ 0.53 ======== ======== The fair value of each option grant was estimated at the date of the grant using a Black-Scholes option pricing model with the following weighted-average assumptions: Year Ended December 31, ----------------------------------- 2006 2005 2004 ------- ------- ------- Dividend yield - - - Volatility 32.5 % 44.1 % 52.7 % Risk-free interest rate 4.0 % 3.5 % 3.5 % Expected term of options 6.8 years 4.4 years 5.5 years Weighted-average fair value of options granted $ 5.00 1,686 6.4 1,4526.79 $ 5.01 - $10.00 943 8.0 789 $10.01 - $15.00 1,684 9.4 1,684 $15.01 - $20.00 2,318 9.5 2,318 ------ ------ 6,631 6,243 ====== ======3.72 $ 3.69 NOTE 1213 - FIRST CASH 401(k) PROFIT SHARING PLAN The First Cash 401(k) Profit Sharing Plan (the "Plan") is provided by the Company for all full-time, U.S.-based, employees who have been employed with the Company for one year or longer. Under the Plan, a participant may contribute up to 15%100% of earnings, with the Company matching the first 3% at a rate of 50%. The employee and Company contributions are paid to a corporate trustee and invested in various funds. Contributions made to participants' accounts become fully vested upon completion of six years of service. The total Company matching contributions to the Plan were $279,000, $257,000 $250,000 and $213,000$250,000 for the years ended December 31, 2006, 2005 2004 and 2003,2004, respectively. NOTE 1314 - GEOGRAPHIC AREASOPERATING SEGEMENT INFORMATION The Company manages its business on the basis of onetwo reportable segment; see Note 1segments: the pawn and cash advance segment and the buy-here/pay-here automotive segment. There are no intersegmental sales and each segment is supervised separately. The following tables detail revenues, cost of revenues, net revenues, certain expenses, expenditures on property and equipment and total assets by operating segment for a brief descriptionFiscal 2006, 2005 and 2004 (in thousands): Pawn and Buy-Here/ Cash Pay-Here Advance Automotive Total ------- ---------- ------- Year Ended December 31, 2006 ---------------------------- Revenues: Merchandise sales $126,436 $ 23,037 $149,473 Finance and service charges 114,839 1,348 116,187 Other 3,981 81 4,062 ------- ------- ------- 245,256 24,466 269,722 ------- ------- ------- Cost of the Company's business.revenues: Cost of goods sold 73,731 10,498 84,229 Credit loss provision 15,326 6,137 21,463 Other 440 - 440 ------- ------- ------- 89,497 16,635 106,132 ------- ------- ------- Net revenues 155,759 7,831 163,590 ------- ------- ------- Expenses and other income: Store operating expenses 78,228 2,861 81,089 Store depreciation and amortization 7,163 17 7,180 ------- ------- ------- 85,391 2,878 88,269 ------- ------- ------- Net store contribution $ 70,368 $ 4,953 $ 75,321 ======= ======= ======= Expenditures on property and equipment $ 14,512 $ 204 $ 14,716 ======= ======= ======= As of December 31, 2006 ----------------------- Total assets $195,478 $ 38,364 $233,842 ======= ======= ======= Pawn and Buy-Here/ Cash Pay-Here Advance Automotive Total ------- ---------- ------- Year Ended December 31, 2005 ---------------------------- Revenues: Merchandise sales $102,139 $ - $102,139 Finance and service charges 101,701 - 101,701 Other 3,935 - 3,935 ------- ------- ------- 207,775 - 207,775 ------- ------- ------- Cost of revenues: Cost of goods sold 61,659 - 61,659 Credit loss provision 13,808 - 13,808 Other 301 - 301 ------- ------- ------- 75,768 - 75,768 ------- ------- ------- Net revenues 132,007 - 132,007 ------- ------- ------- Expenses and other income: Store operating expenses 67,430 - 67,430 Store depreciation and amortization 5,206 - 5,206 ------- ------- ------- 72,636 - 72,636 ------- ------- ------- Net store contribution $ 59,371 $ - $ 59,371 ======= ======= ======= Expenditures on property and equipment $ 11,993 $ - $ 11,993 ======= ======= ======= As of December 31, 2005 ----------------------- Total assets $185,954 $ - $185,954 ======= ======= ======= Pawn and Buy-Here/ Cash Pay-Here Advance Automotive Total ------- ---------- ------- Year Ended December 31, 2004 ---------------------------- Revenues: Merchandise sales $ 86,745 $ - $ 86,745 Finance and service charges 88,786 - 88,786 Other 4,282 - 4,282 ------- ------- ------- 179,813 - 179,813 ------- ------- ------- Cost of revenues: Cost of goods sold 52,056 - 52,056 Credit loss provision 11,559 - 11,559 Other 252 - 252 ------- ------- ------- 63,867 - 63,867 ------- ------- ------- Net revenues 115,946 - 115,946 ------- ------- ------- Expenses and other income: Store operating expenses 61,063 - 61,063 Store depreciation and amortization 3,849 - 3,849 ------- ------- ------- 64,912 - 64,912 ------- ------- ------- Net store contribution $ 51,034 $ - $ 51,034 ======= ======= ======= Expenditures on property and equipment $ 7,131 $ - $ 7,131 ======= ======= ======= As of December 31, 2004 ----------------------- Total assets $162,343 $ - $162,343 ======= ======= ======= The following table reconciles net store contribution, as presented above, to net income for each period presented (in thousands): Year Ended December 31, ----------------------------- 2006 2005 2004 ------- ------- ------- Total net store contibution for reportable segments $ 75,321 $ 59,371 $ 51,034 Administrative depreciation and amortization (861) (598) (324) Administrative expenses (24,671) (19,412) (17,837) Interest expense (916) - (73) Interest income 727 317 67 Provision for income taxes (17,856) (14,295) (12,161) ------- ------- ------- Net income $ 31,744 $ 25,383 $ 20,706 ======= ======= ======= NOTE 15 - GEOGRAPHIC AREAS The following table shows revenues, selected current assets and long-livedlong- lived assets (all non-current assets except goodwill) by geographic area (in thousands): Year Ended December 31, ----------------------------- 2006 2005 2004 2003 ------- ------- ------- Revenues: United States $193,895 $154,649 $145,386 $126,707 Mexico 75,827 53,126 34,427 18,761 ------- ------- ------- $ 269,722 $207,775 $179,813 $145,468 ======= ======= ======= PawnCustomer receivables: United States $ 18,60363,155 $ 16,70725,091 $ 15,69532,172 Mexico 11,109 8,711 6,722 4,342 ------- ------- ------- $ 27,31474,264 $ 23,42933,802 $ 20,037 ======= ======= ======= Short-term advance receivables: United States $ 6,488 $ 15,465 $ 13,759 Mexico - - - ------- ------- ------- $ 6,488 $ 15,465 $ 13,75938,894 ======= ======= ======= Inventories: United States $ 20,002 $ 14,751 $ 13,393 $ 13,042 Mexico 8,759 7,236 4,251 2,546 ------- ------- ------- $ 28,761 $ 21,987 $ 17,644 $ 15,588 ======= ======= ======= Long-lived assets: United States $ 16,804 $ 13,689 $ 11,183 $ 11,391 Mexico 15,067 10,892 6,992 3,710 ------- ------- ------- $ 31,871 $ 24,581 $ 18,175 $ 15,101 ======= ======= ======= NOTE 1416 - QUARTERLY FINANCIAL DATA (UNAUDITED) Summarized quarterly financial data (in thousands, except per share data) for the fiscal years ended December 31, 20052006 and 2004,2005, are set forth below. The Company's operations are subject to seasonal fluctuations. Quarter Ended ------------------------------------------------ March 31 June 30 September 30 December 31 -------- ------- ------------ ----------- 2006 ---- Total revenues $ 55,700 $ 56,375 $ 69,472 $ 88,175 Cost of revenues 18,394 20,868 27,692 39,178 Net revenues 37,306 35,507 41,780 48,997 Total expenses and other income 25,309 25,278 29,285 34,118 Net income 7,622 6,495 7,935 9,692 Diluted net income per share 0.23 0.20 0.25 0.30 Diluted weighted average shares 33,797 33,209 32,283 32,785 2005 ---- Total revenues $ 46,999 $ 46,328 $ 54,307 $ 60,141 Cost of revenues 16,257 16,446 19,964 23,101 Gross profitNet revenues 30,742 29,882 34,343 37,040 Total expenses and other income 21,185 21,656 24,312 25,176 Net income 6,069 5,223 6,370 7,721 Diluted net income per share (1) 0.18 0.16 0.19 0.23 Diluted weighted average shares (1) 34,025 32,834 32,866 33,174 2004 ---- Total revenues $ 41,850 $ 40,318 $ 46,544 $ 51,101 Cost of revenues 13,532 13,730 17,660 18,945 Gross profit 28,318 26,588 28,884 32,156 Total expenses and other income 20,139 19,813 20,641 22,486 Net income 5,178 4,246 5,190 6,092 Diluted net income per share (1) 0.15 0.12 0.15 0.18 Diluted weighted average shares (1) 34,159 34,587 33,660 33,863 (1) Amounts have been retroactively adjusted to reflect a two-for-one stock split in the form of a stock dividend to each stockholder of record as of February 6, 2006.