Credit Card Defaults Rise Again in December

 

NEW YORK -- U.S. consumers fell further behind in paying off credit cards last month, a trend that's expected to worsen this year amid growing unemployment, Fitch Ratings said Wednesday.

An index of charge-offs on so-called prime credit card portfolios rose in December to its highest level in four years, while the rate at which cardholders repaid outstanding balances slowed to its lowest since mid-2004, Fitch said.

Charge-offs are loans written off as not being repaid.

Fitch said its prime charge-off index in December grew to 6.84%, rising 31% higher than a year earlier. Fitch forecasts the rate will reach 8% this year as job losses spread.

Charge-offs by retailers for store-issued cards surged last month to a three-year high of 10.5%. Fitch said the latest figure is 49% higher than the retailer charge-off index in December 2007. Fitch expects the rate to surpass 12% by midyear.

The charge-off rate measures the amount of balances written off as uncollectable as an annualized%age of total loans outstanding.

In December, an index that tracks repayment of outstanding card balances recorded its sharpest one-month drop on record, dropping to about 16% from more than 18% the previous month, Fitch said.

"Consumers continue to struggle amid a rapidly deteriorating employment situation and from declining property values and other measures of wealth," said Mike Dean, a managing director with Fitch.

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