Regional lenders and banks with big credit-card businesses continued to profit from borrowers who ran up credit balances at higher interest rates in the fourth quarter. But many tightened their lending standards and set aside more money to cover potential loan losses, signs that they don’t expect the good times to last, the Wall Street Journal reported. Capital One Financial Corp. set aside roughly $1 billion to cover potential loan losses in the fourth quarter, a 33% increase from the previous quarter. American Express Co. increased its reserves by more than 25%, setting aside nearly half a billion dollars. Both had drawn down those rainy-day funds a year earlier. Consumers have been a bright spot in the economy. They continue to spend at a solid clip in the face of higher inflation, though they cut back during the holidays and added to their savings. And unemployment remains at its lowest level in decades. But there are signs that some households are coming under pressure. Borrowers have put more purchases on credit cards, but they chipped away at balances at a slower rate. Delinquency rates on credit cards and consumer loans in the fourth quarter approached or hit levels they were at before the pandemic, when stimulus and lower spending on services allowed consumers to bulk up their savings and pay down debt. Delinquency rates have surpassed prepandemic levels in some corners of the consumer-lending business. At Ally Financial Inc., the percentage of car loans that were more than 60 days past due rose to 0.89% in the fourth quarter from 0.48% a year earlier. Discover Financial Services reported that more than 2% of its private student loans were 30 or more days delinquent, a half-percentage-point increase from a year earlier. Both of those rates were higher than in 2019.
Reprinted from American Bankruptcy Institute 1/31/2023
https://www.abi.org/newsroom/bankruptcy-headlines/banks-brace-for-more-consumers-to-fall-behind-on-their-loans