A Kaulkin Ginsberg Publication
LoneStar
11/23/2009

Sector-Specific Trends Impacting Credit Card ARM: Mortgage

May 22, 2007
 

Many credit sectors in the US are experiencing some special issues relating to accounts receivable. insideARM.com is exploring the impact these issues may have on the broadest ARM segment: credit cards.

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According to the Mortgage Bankers Association, delinquencies on mortgages for single-family homes – specifically defined as “one-to-four-unit residential properties” -- stood at 4.95 percent in the fourth quarter of 2006, the latest period for which data is available.  This number comes from MBA’s National Delinquency Survey, a fairly comprehensive survey that covers 43.5 million total home loans.  MBA breaks down that loan total as: 33.3 million prime loans, 6 million subprime loans and 4 million government (FHA and VA) loans.  Q4 2006’s total delinquency number reflects an increase in delinquencies across all loan types, however.  Not even prime loans are immune to the recent surge in late payments.  In fact, drilling down into MBA’s numbers yields some fascinating results.

In the last quarter of 2006, 2.57 percent of prime loans were delinquent, compared to 2.44 percent in the previous quarter.  The delinquency rate for subprime loans was a shocking 13.33 percent, up from 12.56 percent.  And specifically, subprime adjustable rate mortgage had a 14.44 percent delinquency rate, the highest overall delinquency rate for any segment, and the largest increase of any segment (in Q3, the rate was 13.22 percent).

So subprime mortgages, and specifically subprime adjustable mortgages, are going delinquent in large numbers.  How does that affect credit card payments, though?

According to the American Bankers Association, the credit card delinquency rate stood at 4.56 percent in the fourth quarter, holding steady – actually, improving slightly – from the third quarter’s figure of 4.57 percent.  But while there has been some recent slight improvement in credit card delinquencies, the numbers are still at near-record levels.  According to the ABA, the second quarter of 2005 saw the highest rate of credit card delinquencies since the organization began tracking the statistic in 1972.  That rate stood at 4.81 percent.  But the ABA claims that gas prices, more than any other input, are to blame for the rise and fall of credit card delinquencies.

The Federal Reserve has the largest repository of statistical information on consumer credit in the country.  They track all kinds of metrics dealing with credit in the U.S., including credit card delinquencies and charge-off rates at commercial banks.  According to their numbers, home loan delinquencies are trending upward, as are credit card delinquencies.  But as with the ABA’s numbers, there is not a hard correlation between mortgage delinquencies and credit card delinquencies, and more to the point, credit card charge-off rates.

But how do total delinquencies at the bank level correlate to the contingency ARM market?  Remember, no matter how the actual rate fluctuates, the total outstanding totals for credit card debt increase on a monthly basis.  So even if the delinquency and charge-off rates of credit card debt fall slightly in a given quarter, the total pie from which those totals come is growing, which naturally translates to more total accounts and dollars charged-off, regardless of the rate.

The more immediate threat the current mortgage mini-crisis poses to credit card collectors could be in the form of willingness to pay once the debt has been assigned to contingency collectors or sold to debt purchasers.  Last week, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke told bankers that he did not believe mortgage defaults and foreclosures would drag down the overall economy, and he vowed that a crackdown was coming on predatory mortgage lending.  Reassuring words, to be sure.  But he also cautioned that mortgage delinquencies and foreclosures would increase significantly over the rest of this year and into 2008.  If that is the case, debtors could increasingly find themselves without the ability to pay third-party debt collectors looking to recover credit card debt.  Also more importantly, even with the new stricter bankruptcy laws in place, many consumers could opt for the bankruptcy option in increasing numbers over the next couple of years.

 

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