U.S. credit card delinquencies at record high!
NEW YORK - February 4 2009 - U.S. credit card delinquencies hit a record high in January, and further deterioration is likely as the economy slows down and unemployment rises, according to Fitch Ratings.
Payments at least 60 days late rose almost half a percentage point last month to a record 3.75 per cent, said Fitch. Credit card lenders also wrote off loans to delinquent borrowers at close to record levels, and such “charge-offs” were expected to breach records in the coming months.
Michael Dean, managing director at Fitch, said, "U.S. consumers continue to struggle in the face of mounting pressures on multiple fronts from employment to housing to net worth."
Late payments on credit cards crept higher throughout 2008, said Fitch, but signs of borrower stress rose in the fourth quarter as late payments surged by 18 per cent. Charge-off rates in January were 40 per cent higher than a year ago at 7.5 per cent and were expected to approach 9 per cent during the second half of 2009.
Late payments and defaults on credit cards have been closely linked with levels of unemployment, which have risen dramatically. Non-farm employment fell 524,000 in December, contributing to the biggest decline in payrolls on a three-month moving average since 1945. The unemployment rate jumped to a 15-year high of 7.2 per cent, from 6.8 per cent in November.