Credit Card Gloom and Doom: It Depends Whom You Ask

Credit Card Gloom and Doom: It Depends Whom You Ask

Credit Card Gloom and Doom: It Depends Whom You Ask

Today’s WSJ has an optimistic view of consumer credit amidst the current recession. It appears a bit too rosy. Is it that consumers are borrowing less, or is it that lenders are lending less? That is the real question. According to the Federal Reserve, 38.5% of consumer lenders reported tightening standards in credit issuance in Q2 2020, up from 13.6% in Q2 2020

The article cites debt from Equifax, similar to what the Fed presents in its G-19 report. The indication is that revolving credit is decreasing, from the trillion-dollar mark to the $800 billion range. Note this is the same trend experienced during the Great Recession.

And, while the WSJ points out:

We say that the economy is being propped up by the funds, which will not last. The $600 benefit ended in July, and a replacement is still in the works. When it returns, it will be less generous. The WSJ reported on “Fed Chief Jerome Powell” that the economy is on an “Extraordinarily Uncertain Path.”

Small business bankruptcies are expected to surge. If you ask N.Y. Times, you will find headlines like “Hiring Outlook remains Dim with ‘Scarring in the Economy.’”

The biggest driver in consumer credit is how much debt goes to charge-off.  That is one of the driving factors for net profit in the business. The latest numbers, published by the Fed on June 15, 2020, for Q1 2020 indicate a healthy loss rate of 3.61% for top banks, which is only slightly higher than the previous period.  Smaller banks, however, are twice that rate at 7.41%. 

Then look at other factors like rent payments. Here, the San Francisco Chronicle notes that “Rent is coming due in California: Two Weeks to Avoid Complete Catastrophe.”

I’d say the WSJ is probably too optimistic on this topic. Look at loan loss reserves- that is where everything comes out in the wash. For that, I suggest reading Standard and Poor’s market view, which carries the headline “U.S. Bank Loan Loss Projections Tower Over Allowance Levels.”

We still need another stimulus package, but the long-range concern is how economies can handle it. According to Statista, the U.S. now has 13.2% of its GDP committed to COVID. That certainly is a record for the United States, but other countries are worse. Canada is at 15%, and Japan is a whopping 21.1%. …Watch those loan-loss reserves; that is where the risk sits.

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

Exit mobile version