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Lower income consumers face loan stress

- REUTERS

US borrowers on lower incomes are increasing­ly struggling to keep up with their loan payments, according to recent data and bank executives, prompting banks to become more cautious about dishing out credit cards and car loans.

A growing number of Americans have seen their savings dwindle as rising prices squeeze budgets while interest rates stay high, bankers and economists said. The deteriorat­ion in household finances for those earning less than US$45,000 contrasts with financial resilience among those on higher incomes.

Austan Goolsbee, Chicago Federal Reserve Bank President, said last week that consumer delinquenc­ies were one of the most concerning economic data points at the moment.

"If the delinquenc­y rate of consumer loans starts rising, that is often a leading indicator things are about to get worse," he said.

First-time and low-income borrowers are experienci­ng higher default rates on their loans than people with larger incomes, said Arijit Roy, who runs the consumer business at US Bancorp.

At Bank of America, net chargeoffs, or debts that are unlikely to be recovered, rose to $1.5 billion in the first quarter from $807 million a year earlier, mainly from credit cards, the bank reported yesterday. Rival Jpmorgan Chase's said its charge-offs nearly doubled to $2 billion in the same quarter, while they also increased at Citigroup and Wells Fargo.

Bank of America is seeing "cracks" in the finances of borrowers with below-prime credit scores whose household spending is affected by higher interest rates and inflation, Chief Financial Officer Alastair Borthwick told analysts on an earnings call.

But its customers typically have higher credit scores, and their finances are holding up well, he added.

Capital One, Old National Bank, and First Mortgage Direct are among the banks who serve more subprime customers with credit

scores in the roughly 300 to 600 range, according to Bankrate.

The lenders did not immediatel­y respond to a request seeking comment.

While lenders earn money from interest payments, they seek to avoid situations in which customers fall so far behind on loans that they have to be written off.

"Banks are trying to come up with early-warning signals for customers about their bill payments, offering debt counseling and educating the customers more so that they can stay on track," said Tom Dent, senior vice president at the Consumer Bankers Associatio­n, an industry group.

Lending caution

The burgeoning strains have prompted lenders to become more wary.

"During situations like these, many banks adopt a cautious outlook and begin to optimise their balance sheets by utilising pricing strategies," Roy said.

Loan volumes declined, and credit standards tightened further as banks raised borrowing costs in March, according to a survey from Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. The poll focused on lenders headquarte­red in Dallas, Texas, but typically follows national trends.

Loan officers polled separately by the Federal Reserve also said they were tightening lending standards, including for credit cards and auto loans, according to a quarterly survey, opens new tab in January.

A significan­t number of banks expected standards for credit cards to become even tougher.

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The loan growth – a key source of income – will be muted for conservati­ve lenders, executives said.

Meanwhile, recent economic data have bolstered expectatio­ns that the Fed will not cut interest rates until September. The elevated borrowing costs could further exacerbate strains for stretched borrowers.

But banking giants said most consumers were in good shape.

Jpmorgan CEO Jamie Dimon told analysts this month that Americans were still spending, although he noted those on lower incomes had largely used up their excess money.

"We are okay right now," Dimon said. "It does not mean we're okay down the road."

Credit cards were the most notable area of weakness, while defaults on buy-now, pay-later loans were also rising, said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Analytics.

"It is a tale of two consumers," he said. "Back in the financial crisis, people were defaulting primarily on their mortgages but now it's credit cards that are unsecured and have the highest rate of interest."

Still, credit card and auto delinquenc­y rates appear to be peaking, Moody's said in a report earlier this month.

US household debt has surged to an all-time high, and Americans have been borrowing more on credit cards, with balances crossing the $1 trillion mark for the first time last year.

Pandemic stimulus programmes had burnished finances for many people who got credit cards, said Brendan Coughlin, head of consumer banking at Citizens Financial. But financial buffers have shrunk as Americans burned through stimulus payments and loan forbearanc­e programmes ended, leaving many consumers overextend­ed.

"Credit scores were artificial­ly inflated with increased savings and lower spending," said Coughlin. Credit card delinquenc­ies are a key indicator to watch because they are "a representa­tion of people living beyond their means," he added.

Americans saved 3.6 per cent of their disposable income in February, down from 4.7 per cent a year earlier, according to US Bureau of Economic Analysis data.

Overall consumer delinquenc­ies stood at 0.98 per cent in February across loan categories including credit cards, auto loans and mortgages, according to data from Vantagesco­re, a credit score modeling company. It highlighte­d that the figure has been rising over the last few months.

Consumers on low incomes, which it defines as less than $45,000 a year, had greater financial stresses, and the group of US borrowers with the highest credit scores is shrinking, the data showed.

 ?? AFP/VNA Photo ?? People walk on street at San Rafael, California.
AFP/VNA Photo People walk on street at San Rafael, California.

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