The data:Consumers again demonstrated resilience in the New York Federal Reserve’s most recent Quarterly Report on Household Debt and Credit.
However, much-watchedstudent loan delinquencies rocketed up to 14.41% for balances 30+ days past due, the highest since the New York Fed started tracking the figure in Q1 2004.
How we got here:Consumers’ ability to weather economic uncertainty has been put to the test amid signs ofreigniting inflation, weak tonegative job growth, anddour consumer sentiment.
But the limited data available amid the federal shutdown offers glimmers of tempered optimism.
What this means for issuers: For three years lenders have largely stayed on the sidelines when it came to extending credit to average consumers—the averageBank of America credit cardholder’s FICO score was 777 as of Q1 2025.
Banks have already started to shift their lending behavior, but it may be too late.
If economic anxieties persist, consumers are less likely to seek out credit products, trading down to debit cards or putting off purchases entirely. Demand for credit cards was negative for four of the last five quarters, per the senior loan officer survey.
Banks were reacting to an explosion in delinquencies in 2022 and 2023, but they may have overcorrected—giving an opening to BNPL providers who offer lending with looser underwriting or new challengers likerewards debit cards issued by fintechs.
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