Los Angeles Times

U.S. household debt tops ’08 peak

But this time around Americans are handling their borrowing better.

- By Jim Puzzangher­a

WASHINGTON — The recovery from the Great Recession has hit a milestone: Total household debt climbed to $12.73 trillion in the first quarter to top the peak reached in 2008 before the housing market crash and severe economic downturn led to a historic reduction, according to government data released Wednesday.

But this time, Americans are doing much better handling their mortgages, credit cards, auto loans and other borrowing, the data from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York showed.

Consumers were delinquent on 4.8% of total debt, a marked improvemen­t from the 11.9% of debt that was at least 30 days late at the end of 2009.

Rising household debt — up from $12.58 trillion in the fourth quarter of last year — can indicate that Americans are confident in their jobs and the overall economy.

But, as it did in the years leading up to the Great Recession, the increased borrowing also could signal lower loan standards, predatory lending and eager consumers getting overextend­ed.

“This record debt level is neither a reason to celebrate nor a cause for alarm,” said Donghoon Lee, research officer at the New York Fed.

“Borrowers look quite different today,” he said — older and more creditwort­hy than a decade ago.

But there are some potential warning signs in the latest data. Auto loan and credit card delinquenc­ies have started trending up in recent months, and student loan delinquenc­y rates “remain stubbornly high.”

Here are the key takeaways from the Fed’s quarterly report on household debt

and credit.

A long climb back

In the fourth quarter of 2008, total household debt hit $12.68 trillion. It took “an unusually long time from a historical perspectiv­e” for debt to get back to that level, Fed researcher­s said.

The data are not adjusted for inflation or population growth, so it generally had been rising since tracking of it began in the 1940s.

But borrowing increased sharply during the real estate boom in the mid-2000s. When the housing market crashed, leading to the Great Recession and the 2008 financial crisis, total debt fell off dramatical­ly.

Some of the decline was involuntar­y as a wave of foreclosur­es and other loan defaults hit unemployed and overextend­ed consumers. But some of it was voluntary as Americans tried to adjust to the struggling economy by reducing their borrowing.

From the peak in 2008, household debt sank 12% to its low point in the second quarter of 2013.

Since then, debt has risen 14% as the economy slowly recovered.

Mortgage debt

Growth in new mortgages slowed in the first quarter, with originatio­n balances of $491 billion, down from $617 billion in last year’s fourth quarter, the report said.

Mortgages now are a much smaller percentage of total household debt than in 2008, the Fed said.

At the previous peak, mortgage debt accounted for 73% of the total. The figure now is down to 68%, in part because of tougher lending standards mandated by federal regulators.

At the same time, auto and student loans have increased their shares while credit cards have remained about the same.

In the first quarter, student loans accounted for 10.6% of household debt, more than double the 2008 figure. Auto loans accounted for 9.2%, up from 6.4%.

Delinquenc­y rates

Household debt has been increasing­ly shifting toward older and more creditwort­hy borrowers, Fed researcher­s said.

The Fed said changing borrowing patterns have led to very low delinquenc­y rates for most debt.

One measure, debt at least 90 days past due, was 3.4% in the first quarter of the year. That was up slightly from the fourth quarter of last year but still down significan­tly from the recent high of 8.7% in the first quarter of 2010.

“While most delinquenc­y flows have improved markedly since the Great Recession and remain low overall, there are divergent trends among debt types,” Lee said.

Delinquenc­y measures for auto loans and credit cards are trending up, he said. Student loan delinquenc­ies remain high.

The percentage of auto loans at least 90 days overdue increased to 3.8% in the first quarter, the highest in four years.

In response, banks have been tightening their auto lending, particular­ly for consumers with lower credit scores.

After a record year for auto loans in 2016, new auto loans declined in the first quarter, to $132.4 billion from $142 billion the previous quarter. It was the second straight quarterly decline.

The report also broke down data for the largest states and those hit hardest by the Great Recession, including California, Arizona, Nevada and Florida.

California is doing the best of those states, with just 2.3% of debt at least 90 days delinquent.

Florida is doing the worst, with 4.8% of debt at least 90 days delinquent. Nevada’s figure was 3.8% in the first quarter, and Arizona’s was 3.4%.

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