China or Bust: Sooner or Later, Expect a Storm

China or Bust: Sooner, or Later, Expect a Storm

China or Bust: Sooner, or Later, Expect a Storm

The shift to a consumer-driven economy continues in China, as credit card debt grew six-fold since 2012. S&P Global Ratings expects 20% growth, year over year, through 2022, the South China Morning Post reports.

An area of stress is credit bureau reporting. Mature markets, particularly in Australia, Canada, the U.K., and the U.S. rely on credit bureau files and FICO Scores for credit decisioning. Developing economies have less experience and have not been tested under stress. The global financial crisis, slightly more than a decade ago, is a reference point, but remember that the Asian credit boom came afterward.

Seasoned issuers know the cyclical nature of consumer credit and build their business around the nuances of boom and bust.

Markets vary. Mature economies are used to debt. As a culture, our parents and grandparents had mortgages and auto loans. Our parents grew up with the novelty of credit cards. Our kids have student loans. Our economy is built on the expectation that people will spend more than they have.

Not so in developing economies. In many instances, credit is new. For some economies, credit is hard to understand but very easy to get.

The heightened concern about household debt becomes important as consumer purchasing becomes a driver of gross domestic product.

The concern is what happens when the economy in developing economies shifts.  In mature economies, from Sidney to Toronto, London, and Chicago, credit card issuers are used to the opportunity and risks each economic cycle brings. This allows you to look risk in the eyes, as the economy shifts through a cycle of expansion, peak, contraction, and trough. Baseline credit card loss rates of 3.5% may peak at 10%, but a good credit manager knows it is not permanent.

But the buzz-kill of regulators and central banks is important to consider:

The takeaway: growth will continue, but steady controls are important when the economy shifts. It will recover (sooner or later). By then, developing economies will be one step closer to maturity.

Overview by Brian Riley, Director, Credit Advisory Service at Mercator Advisory Group

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