A Kaulkin Ginsberg Publication
Interrior Concepts
11/21/2009

Consumer Credit Outstanding Continued Nosedive in June

August 10, 2009
 

Consumers are spending less and banks are being tighter with credit. The forces conspired to drive consumer credit down further in the second quarter, a trend that has been in place since last year.

Digg!
What's this?

American consumers and banks teamed up to drive down total consumer credit outstanding in June and the second quarter, according to numbers released by the Federal Reserve late Friday. It was the third straight quarter of significant declines in consumer credit, especially among credit card debt.

The Fed said that consumer credit outstanding contracted at a 4.9 percent annual rate in June, or by $10.3 billion. It was the fifth straight monthly decline. The government report, which tracks all consumer debt not backed by real estate and commonly called the G.19, showed declines roughly double of what analysts were expecting.

CallThru IP Telephony System

Debtmaster Collection Software strong

Combining the best features of Voice Broadcasting, Power Dialing, Call Recording, and more...

Comtronic Systems...

Revolving credit, principally credit card accounts, led the declines, dropping at an annual rate of 6.8 percent. Non-revolving debt – like that found in auto, student and personal loans – contracted at an annual rate of 3.8 percent in June.

For the second quarter, revolving credit decreased at an annual rate of 8.2 percent. Over the past three quarters, revolving credit has declined 7.86 percent. Overall consumer credit has declined 4 percent.

Both consumers and banks have contributed to the declines. As unemployment has rapidly expanded since the end of the third quarter of 2008, Americans have cut back on their spending and increased their savings rate. At the same time, banks have slashed available credit to consumers and small businesses. Credit scores have also been readjusted to put more emphasis on outstanding credit balances, giving consumers further incentive to pay off debt.

Analysts do expect a significant uptick in consumer credit for July, as the impact of the government’s “Cash for Clunkers” program is felt in non-revolving credit.

At the end of June, total consumer credit outstanding was $2,502 billion, down from its peak of $2,579 billion at the end of the third quarter of 2008. Credit card debt outstanding accounted for $917 billion, down from its all-time high of $973.5 billion at the end of September 2008.

 

 

 

 

Get Hired - jobsInsideARM.comHiring? Post a job - jobsInsideARM.com

Comments

Comment from nvassarx on August 10, 2009 at 7:52PM EST

Hello, wake up!!! NO jobs, NO credit====amount charged goes down!! With so much of everything being very expensive when you PAY cash, you have no choice but to NOT buy=====Savings UNTIL you want to buy! OR change your mind. Wow, pay credit card bill or buy food???? FOOD...great answer.

Comment from Nvassarx on August 25, 2009 at 10:47PM EST

Yes the new credit scores are such a scam!!! Mine has about ## chargeoffs for $$$,$$$. This added dollar amount that i owe has brought my score down a little, but not as bad as the Inquiries!! Good thing is that my ability to pay debt is now at 70%% and not 30%%

Care to Comment?

(Please read our comments policy first.)

From:
Show my identity with comment

Leave this field empty
Interested in more stories like this?
Tell us what topics you're interested in and we'll keep you posted. Enter your email address below.
EPP
Interior Concepts
Autoscribe
Interior Concepts
  • DAKCS
  • Interior Concepts
  • URS
  • LoneStar
  • Interactive Data

Log In

Already registered? Log in here.





Forgot your password?

Register for FREE with insideARM

Create an account with insideARM and get access to our FREE newsletters and industry reports.








 

Check all | Uncheck all

Daily news and analysis
* Recommended *
Credit cards
Healthcare
Government/Municipal
Student loans
Mortgage
Auto finance
Collection agency operations
Collection technology
Debt purchasing
Recovery management
Hiring/Staffing
Job opportunities
Leave this field empty
 

You are already registered!

The email address you've entered is already in our database, meaning you've previously registered on insideARM.com.

All you have to do is log in using the form on the left.