Equifax Data Show U.S. Consumer Payment Trends Continue to Deteriorate
22 December 2009 - 10:00PM
PR Newswire (US)
Bank card, home equity, mortgage delinquencies all up ATLANTA, Dec.
22 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Consumer delinquency rates for
bankcards, first mortgages and home equity lines of credit again
rose month-to-month in November, according to Equifax Inc.'s
(NYSE:EFX) monthly Credit Trend Report. Logo:
(http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20060224/CLF037LOGO ) Home
mortgages at least 30 days late reached another record of 7.91
percent in November (in total dollars), up from 7.76 percent in
October and 7.65 percent the previous month. This record rate is a
significant increase over the 5.83 percent rate of November 2008
and the 3.93 percent rate of November 2007. In addition, home
equity lines of credit (HELOC) available to consumers are now an
estimated $68 billion lower and the number of accounts is an
estimated 855,000 lower than the September 2008 peak of
approximately 14.5 million accounts. This represents an improvement
from October when outstandings were $77 billion lower and accounts
were lower by approximately 934,000. Delinquency rates have crept
up from 3.39 percent in October to 3.43 percent in November. These
rates far exceed the 2.95 percent rate of November 2008 and the
1.92 percent rate of November 2007. "The story of 2009 continues to
be one of consumer retrenchment and credit tightness as people
strive to pay down debt or are forced to abandon it, and lenders
more aggressively manage risk in their portfolios," said Dann
Adams, president of Equifax's U.S. Consumer Information Solutions.
U.S. consumers reduced their debt by more than five percent or $575
billion from a year ago. First mortgage debt dropped 5.4 percent;
credit cards by 7.3 percent and auto loans by 9.5 percent. The
declines put overall consumer debt at September 2007, pre-recession
levels of about $11 trillion. Bankcard issuers continued a
year-long trend of closing accounts and reducing credit lines. Card
risk management programs have accelerated since July of 2008,
reducing card credit lines by $803 billion and the number of
accounts by 93 million. Delinquency rates for bankcards picked up
notably since the end of 2008 in tandem with rising unemployment.
The November 2009 60-days-past-due rate of 4.62 percent is almost a
full percent higher than the November 2008 rate of 3.76 percent.
However, the rate still remains below the peak of 4.79 percent in
May 2009. In addition, the number of bankcard accounts opened in
September -- 2.4 million -- was 45 percent lower than September
2008. Year-to-date, the number of new accounts is down 46 percent
from the same period in 2008. Also, lenders are being more
selective about who they give credit to as the percent of cards
issued to those with credit scores greater than 740 grew from about
30 percent in 2007 to almost 51 percent so far this year. With U.S.
home prices declining, originations for home equity lines of credit
are also declining. In September of this year (the most recent
month that data is available) originations were 75,600, 36% below
the September 2008 total of 117,800. Year-to-date 2009 new home
equity lines opened -- 761,000 -- were 47 percent below 2008
year-to-date totals of 1.5 million. This continues a trend from
2008 when total originations were 1.7 million lines, 41% below the
total for 2007 (2.9 million lines). Furthermore, home equity lines
have primarily been issued to lower-risk consumers. Eighty-one
percent of the consumers who received HELOCs in September 2009 were
considered low-risk (Equifax Risk Scores of 740 and above) an
increase from 66% in September of 2007. In conjunction with
declining home prices and home equity, average home equity lines
are 25% lower over the past two years, declining from approximately
$105,000 to $79,000 today. "The contraction in home equity lines is
a reflection of the credit crunch both consumers and small
businesses are facing," said Adams. "Restrictions in this
traditional source of financing make finding credit harder than
ever." Regionally, home equity line originations have diminished in
states where home price values have been the most volatile, notably
California and Florida. California comprised almost 20% of line
originations two years ago with nearly 38,000 originations in
September 2007 but dropped to second with about 7% or 5182
originations in September 2009. Florida, once the second top state
by originations has dropped to ninth. The dramatic impact of these
shifts is illustrated by new credit lines available in California
declining from $6 billion in September 2007 to well under $1
billion today. Data for the Credit Trends Monitor Report is sourced
from Equifax's nearly 200 million files of US consumers using
credit. About Equifax (http://www.equifax.com/) Equifax empowers
businesses and consumers with information they can trust. A global
leader in information solutions, we leverage one of the largest
sources of consumer and commercial data, along with advanced
analytics and proprietary technology, to create customized insights
that enrich both the performance of businesses and the lives of
consumers. With a strong heritage of innovation and leadership,
Equifax continuously delivers innovative solutions with the highest
integrity and reliability. Businesses -- large and small -- rely on
us for consumer and business credit intelligence, portfolio
management, fraud detection, decisioning technology, marketing
tools, and much more. We empower individual consumers to manage
their personal credit information, protect their identity, and
maximize their financial well-being. Headquartered in Atlanta,
Georgia, Equifax Inc. operates in the U.S. and 14 other countries
throughout North America, Latin America and Europe. Equifax is a
member of Standard & Poor's (S&P) 500® Index. Our common
stock is traded on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol
EFX.
http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20060224/CLF037LOGODATASOURCE:
Equifax Inc. CONTACT: Tim Klein, +1-404-885-8555, , or Jennifer
Costello, +1-404-885-8907, , both of Equifax Web Site:
http://www.equifax.com/
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