Overall,
delinquency rates indicate
better behavior
By Steve Cocheo, executive editor & digital content
manager
TransUnion has released three key
studies in November, and trends seen are instructive to bank lenders:
- Home lending: The
national mortgage delinquency rate fell for the third consecutive quarter, the
firm reported, settling at 5.41% in the third quarter versus 5.49% in the
second quarter and versus 5.88% in the third quarter 2011. Trans Union predicts
that the delinquency rate will fall in the final quarter as well, though not as
significantly--perhaps to the 5.25%-5.35% range.
While this is good news in that
it's showing improvement, TransUnion's Tim Martin, group vice-president of U.S.
Housing, points out that the delinquency rate remains much higher, post-crisis,
than the 1%-2% delinquency rate generally seen in more normal times.
The survey didn't cover the period
in which Hurricane Sandy struck, but Martin says that such developments, while
significant in the short term, tend to move activity overall, rather than
changing it significantly. Disasters like Sandy tend to push things forward or
pull them back, in other words, but the net remains more or less the same.
Exercising a greater long-term
influence regionally are the economies of Florida and Nevada, for instance,
where, while conditions have improved, they still remain depressed compared to
many other parts of the country. Both states remain in double digits, in
delinquencies, with Florida coming in at 13.09% and Nevada at 10.93% for the
third quarter. Still, both states demonstrated improvement over last year's
delinquency levels, as did Arizona and California, among states hardest hit by
recession. The latter two states saw the best improvement in delinquency
levels, third quarter compared to third quarter.
In the big picture, 22 states
improved their delinquency ratios over the second quarter, and 42 showed better
results compared to the third quarter of 2011.
Not all states showed improvements.
Eight states and Washington, D.C., showed higher delinquencies third quarter
over third quarter. Washington turned in the highest rise in delinquencies over
this period.
TransUnion defines mortgage
delinquency as 60 days or more past due.
- Credit card lending: While delinquencies in this area rose
nationally, TransUnion expert Ezra Becker points out that the rates are still
in a better neighborhood than they have been in recent years. TransUnion's
ongoing research has demonstrated that people have grown stricter with their
card debt, anxious to keep their lines open so they can have them available
should their personal prospects turn sour.
Nationally, the credit card
delinquency rate rose a bit, to 0.75% in the third quarter compared to 0.63% in
the second quarter of 2012 and 0.71% in the third quarter of 2011.
"Credit card delinquencies are
following a pattern similar to what we observed in 2011, with declines in the
first two quarters of the year followed by an increase in the third," says
Becker, who is the company's vice-president of research and consulting.
Becker says the seasonal
consistency is encouraging, reflecting a return to credit usage while remaining
within control.
"Credit card debt trends in 2012
are mirroring 2011," says Becker. This is a pattern of a decrease in the first
quarter followed by two increases over the next six months.
"With both delinquencies and debt
levels remaining quite low relative to historical norms, we are confident in
the continued stability of credit card usage patterns in the short term," says
Becker. He points out that 2011's delinquency levels were the lowest in many
years, and that currently delinquencies, which TransUnion defines for cards as
90 days or more past due, are about half what they had deteriorated to.
Becker also makes this observation,
which continues a trend seen in earlier work: "Non-prime borrowers continue to
gain more access to credit. In conjunction with the growth in the overall
number of card originations in the last few years, it means that the credit
card pie is bigger, and non-prime consumers are getting a bigger slice of that
pie. It is possible that the slight increase in delinquencies year over year
can be attributed in part to the increased share among nonprime borrowers of new
accounts, but even so these delinquency numbers are not a cause for concern.
We've found that consumers continue to value their credit cards more than ever
and will likely do so at least until unemployment further abates."
- Auto lending: The
national auto loan delinquency rate--defined as borrowers 60 or more days past
due--increased to 0.38% in the third quarter from the 0.33% in the second
quarter and 0.47% of the third quarter of 2011. Due to an improving economy and
improving demand for cars, TransUnion believes delinquency rates will either
remain the same or improve by a few basis points.
"Since TransUnion began tracking
the auto loan delinquency rate in 1999, we have observed a seasonal increase in
this variable every year between the second and third quarters," says Peter
Turek, automotive vice-president at the firm. "This has occurred even with auto
loan delinquencies dropping 56% since the recession high of 0.86% set in the
fourth quarter of 2008. Seasonal factors include consumers balancing increased
spending due to back-to-school needs and holiday purchases."
[This article was posted on November 30, 2012, on the website of
ABA Banking Journal, www.ababj.com, and is copyright 2012 by the
American Bankers Association.]
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