The Columbus Dispatch

Near-record credit card debt bolsters banks

- By Renae Merle The Washington Post

Americans have accumulate­d near-record levels of credit card debt over the past year as card companies have increased interest rates and fees.

The booming market is helping drive record banking industry profits but could become increasing­ly costly for consumers who don’t pay off their bill every month or miss a payment, industry experts say.

Jpmorgan Chase, the country’s largest bank by assets, and Citigroup reported that credit card sales were up 10% and 5%, respective­ly, in the third quarter. Profits at Visa were up 17% in its most recent fiscal year, while Mastercard reported an 11% profit jump in its most recent quarter.

“People like their credit cards. They use their credit cards far more than they use their debit cards,” Jamie Dimon, chief executive of Jpmorgan Chase, said in July. “I don’t remember the last time I used my debit card.”

To be sure, despite increasing debt loads, delinquenc­y rates remain relatively low. About 6% of consumers were late on a payment this year compared with 15% in 2009, according to Wallethub. And consumers have yet to balk at the relatively high interest rates, industry experts say.

Credit card debt as a share of disposable income has been flat for the past six years, and many consumers pay off their bill every month, the American Bankers Associatio­n said in a November report. “Consumers appear to be well-positioned to meet their financial obligation­s in the months ahead,” Dan Smith of the ABA said in a statement.

The industry has thrived despite the 2009 Credit Card Accountabi­lity, Responsibi­lity and Disclosure (CARD) Act, sweeping legislatio­n that, among other things, limited the number of fees consumers could be charged. But card companies are again facing scrutiny from Democrats on Capitol Hill. Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-VT., who is running for the Democratic nomination for president, and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-cortez, D-N.Y., introduced legislatio­n in 2019 to cap credit card interest rates at 15%, a steep reduction from current levels.

The proposal met immediate resistance from the banking industry, which brought in $113 billion in interest and fees from credit cards last year, up 35% since 2012, according to S&P Global Market Intelligen­ce.

A record 182 million

Americans have credit cards compared with 147.5 million in 2010, according to Transunion, and are carrying more than $1 trillion in debt. Consumers added $80 billion to their tabs in 2019, according to projection­s from Wallethub, with the average credit card debt per household hitting $8,701 during the third quarter, up 4% compared with the same period in 2018.

“The credit card business is very profitable, and it sometimes props up parts of their business,” said Ted Rossman, an industry analyst for Creditcard­s. com. And “credit cards remain very popular, actually increasing­ly popular.”

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