COVID-19 Round II: U.K. Braces Credit Cards for the Next Wave, What about U.S.?

COVID-19 Round II: U.K. Braces Credit Cards for the Next Wave, What about U.S.?

COVID-19 Round II: U.K. Braces Credit Cards for the Next Wave, What about U.S.?

With continued uncertainty on COVID-19, the U.K.’s Financial Consumer Authority announced an update in response to climbing COVID-19 patientsU.S. Citizens may need to wait for election results before seeing relief. Yahoo News reports:

But, the suggestion to not contact creditors implies call centers are already experiencing call volume angst.

Meanwhile, in the United States, some reporting lags. For example, the Federal Reserve Report to Congress on the Profitability of Credit Cards, “An annual report by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, submitted to the Congress according to section 8 of the Fair Credit and Charge Card Disclosure Act of 1988,” which has been published between July and August since 1997 has not been reported for 2020 yet. This report’s absence indicates a shift at the U.S. Federal Reserve, or perhaps an implication of reduced credit card profitability.

The Fed’s latest macroeconomic numbers indicate a slow, steady rise in the consumer price index (CPI) and a September 2020 unemployment rate at 7.9%, substantially better than April 2020’s dismal 14.7% rate.

Challenges in the U.S. credit card market continue; the last reported metric for credit card delinquency was on August 25, 2020, for Q2 2020, where delinquency volumes fell to 2.42%, from Q1 in 2020. The improvement was likely due to payment deferments. Expect Q3 reporting around Thanksgiving. By then, the election results will probably be the next indicator of where the U.S. credit card market may go. Until then, watch out for the next wave here in the U.S.

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

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