Consumer Delinquencies Rise in Third Quarter
Delinquencies in closed-end loans rose during the third quarter of 2016,
according to the ABA Consumer Credit Delinquency Bulletin released
today. The report noted that delinquencies rose in five of the 11
individual loan categories and that delinquencies remain near historical
lows. The composite ratio, which tracks delinquencies in eight
closed-end installment loan categories, rose by six basis points to 1.41
percent of all accounts -- the same as the third quarter of 2015 and
well below the 15-year average of 2.2 percent.
Bank card
delinquencies rose the most, growing 26 basis points to 2.74 percent,
yet also remaining nearly 100 basis points below their 15-year average
as well. Delinquencies on property improvement loans rose three basis
points to 0.94 percent, while delinquencies in the other two
home-related categories -- home equity lines of credit and home equity
loans -- fell to 1.16 percent and 2.59 percent, respectively.
“Delinquency
rates have held near historical lows for an unusually long period due
in large part to consumers’ skillful financial management, but it was
inevitable that they would edge up eventually as part of the natural
credit cycle,” said ABA Chief Economist James Chessen. “It’s important
for consumers to remain cautious and maintain their discipline in
keeping debt at levels they can comfortably manage.” Read more.
--ABA Daily Newsbytes
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