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Also goosing bank bottom lines: Card holders are using their credit cards more. That trend is now clear, after 51 percent of the U.S. card market has reported its second-quarter results, said Morgan Stanley analyst Glenn Fodor. Citigroup said purchase volume rose 1.5 percent. JPMorgan Chase's customers spent 10 percent more using their cards. Discover said sales volume on its namesake cards rose 9 percent. Bank of America and American Express Co. are slated to report next week, and both are expected to show similar gains in spending. The Federal Reserve said total balances on revolving credit, which is mostly cards, rose slightly in May to $793.13 billion. That's still nearly 19 percent below the peak balances of $973.64 billion in August 2008, but reflected an uptick in spending after months of belt-tightening by consumers. What's less clear is if the higher spending will continue. Borrowing is typically a sign of confidence in the economy, and the weak jobs market and higher unemployment last month may discourage further spending. And even when the recovery gains steam, few economists say they expect consumers to pile on debt again after spending the last two years paying it down.
[Associated
Press;
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