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Not surprisingly, bank card delinquency rates remained the highest in the states hardest hit by the mortgage meltdown: Nevada, Florida, Arizona and California. North and South Dakota and Alaska, the states with the lowest rate of mortgage delinquencies, are also the states with the lowest credit card delinquencies, TransUnion data showed. TransUnion, which samples 27 million consumer records to produce its data, expects the rate of credit card delinquencies to rise for the rest of the year, ultimately reaching about 1.7 percent. Depending on the impact of economic stimulus programs and the effects of unemployment, TransUnion said the rate of increase could taper off early next year, but the peak is not likely to be reached until late 2010 or early 2011.
It's too early to tell how changes in credit card regulations and the responses by lenders to the new law will affect payment rates, Becker said. Another unknown is what will happen when credit becomes more available. Becker said the number of new cards issued during the first quarter plunged 49 percent from last year. At the same time, there were also widespread moves by banks to cut available credit on existing cards in an effort to manage risk. "There is a pent up demand for credit," Becker said. He expects some lenders will start issuing more cards as soon as statistics show the economy is recovering from the recession. And even if some banks cut the number of accounts they open, Becker said, "other lenders, we believe, will step into that vacuum."
[Associated
Press;
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