‘I’m not a predatory lender’: Derek Fisher goes from the NBA to player loans | Sport

Derek Fisher began the month defending his credentials as the newly appointed head coach of the WNBA’s Los Angeles Sparks. Fisher’s December continued with the former basketball star denying he is a legal loan shark.

It was revealed last week that the five-time NBA champion and former coach of the New York Knicks is joining Luxury Asset Capital, a boutique lender and posh pawnbroker for clients who are loaded but not liquid. The company is launching a sports and entertainment division that seeks to woo athletes, offering short-term loans of about $50,000 to $5m using assets such as contracts, pensions, cars, watches, fine art and jewelry as collateral.

Another former NBA player, Baron Davis, scorned Fisher’s decision to become an executive vice-president at the firm. “Athletes going broke… let’s make money off of that,” he wrote on Twitter.

Baron Davis
(@BaronDavis)

Derek Fisher sold us out in the CBA now he selling us out again. Athletes going broke .. let’s make money off of that. #Slapyourself #buster #sellout #BANsyndrome https://t.co/twVJDGBoN7

December 13, 2018

With the average NBA salary approaching $7.5m and MLB’s minimum at $545,000 this year, it seems implausible that leading sportspeople would turn to an industry that typically makes headlines for the negative effects of predatory lenders offering credit to low-income individuals at wince-inducing interest rates.

But a 2009 Sports Illustrated article cited some striking statistics: “By the time they have been retired for two years, 78% of former NFL players have gone bankrupt or are under financial stress because of joblessness or divorce. Within five years of retirement, an estimated 60% of former NBA players are broke. Numerous retired MLB players have been similarly ruined.”

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