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		Inflation begins to strain finances of young, low-income Americans
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		 [August 01, 2022]  By 
		Elizabeth Dilts Marshall 
 NEW YORK (Reuters) - As high inflation 
		forces Americans to spend more on gas and bills, young and low-income 
		consumers are starting to feel financial pressure.
 
 Generation Z consumers and those with low credit scores are falling 
		behind on credit card and auto loan bills and accumulating credit card 
		debt at a pace not seen since before the pandemic.
 
 For instance, credit card balances for people ages 25 and younger rose 
		by 30% in the second quarter from a year earlier, compared with an 
		increase of just 11% among the broader population, according to a random 
		sampling of 12.5 million U.S. credit files compiled by credit score 
		company VantageScore. Balances for non-prime borrowers, or people with 
		credit scores below 660, rose by nearly 25% over the same period.
 
		
		 
		For months, things have been looking good for U.S. consumers, their bank 
		accounts padded by government stimulus, student loan forbearance and 
		pandemic-era savings. Bank executives have consistently said consumers 
		have healthy financial cushions and are spending money despite high 
		inflation and the slowing economy.Now there are signs that some 
		Americans have overextended their finances from traveling and dining out 
		while paying down less debt on their credit cards, said Silvio Tavares, 
		head of VantageScore. That contrasts with consumers' tendencies to pay 
		off loans and be more frugal during the first year of the pandemic, 
		according to Fed data. "The consumer is strong, their balance sheets are 
		strong, and their repayment history on debt is strong relative to 
		historical averages," Tavares said. "However, there are areas of 
		concern. Number one among them is consumers are adding leverage."Federal 
		Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell has said the clock is running out to 
		bring down inflation, which is hovering at levels not seen since the 
		1980s.
 Data out on Thursday showed U.S. consumer spending grew at its slowest 
		pace in two years, as the economy unexpectedly contracted in the second 
		quarter.
 
 Those surging prices are causing consumers to cut back on discretionary 
		spending, according to retail and consumer companies like Walmart Inc 
		and Tide-maker Procter & Gamble Co, which lowered sales growth forecasts 
		over the past week.
 
		
		 
		Rapidly accelerating prices could exacerbate financial strains among 
		young people and borrowers with low credit scores, Tavares said. Among 
		non-prime borrowers, the percentage of credit card and auto loans that 
		were more than 30 days past due also rose, VantageScore found. Credit 
		card delinquency rates are now back to their pre-pandemic levels for 
		young people and non-prime borrowers, the data showed.
 While the delinquency rates are not yet a cause for concern, "it's 
		definitely something to watch," Tavares said.
 
 "You can get a bit of a canary in a coal mine effect. If it happens with 
		one group, sometimes it can spread to another group."
 
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			A shopper wearing a face mask is pictured at a Dollar Tree store in 
			Pasadena, California, U.S., June 11, 2020. REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni 
            
			 
TransUnion, one of the big three consumer credit ratings agencies, estimates 
credit card delinquency rates could rise to 8.4% in the first quarter of 2023, 
up from 8% in the first quarter this year, if inflation remains high.
 The average debt held by a non-prime customer was $22,988 in the first quarter 
of 2022, excluding mortgages, according to TransUnion. That is up from $22,461 a 
year earlier, and $22,970 in the first quarter of 2020, before the pandemic 
began in the United States.
 
Auto loans make up a significant chunk of that debt, as demand for vehicles 
soared in 2021 in the United States, pushing up the price and duration of loans 
for cars.
 An executive at one large U.S.-based auto lender that works with many non-prime 
consumers said that demand has upended the maxim that a car loses value as soon 
as it leaves the dealer.
 
 Customers who become 90-days delinquent are more frequently paying off their 
loan in full, said the executive, who asked not to be named discussing 
non-public information. That indicates borrowers are taking advantage of high 
car values to sell their car, rather than see it get repossessed.
 
 For now, delinquencies on auto loans are still lower than before the pandemic, 
the executive said.
 
 "We think things are going to get back to normal--we all expected that--but will 
they get worse than normal? That's the question."
 
 
 
CREDIT QUALITY
 
 Another idiosyncrasy of the current U.S. economy is that the average credit 
score has risen over the pandemic, a result of consumers spending less and 
paying down debt.
 
 VantageScore's average score was 697 at the end of June, 13 points higher than 
in January 2020.
 
 GRAPHIC-U.S. credit scores remain strong: https://tmsnrt.rs/3oGRvvt
 
 Bank of America, the second-largest U.S. bank by assets, recently said the 
average credit score of its customers was 771.
 
 For the youngest and lowest-income consumers who more quickly feel the impacts 
of price shocks from inflation, those credit gains may be tenuous if they 
continue accumulating credit card debt, experts said.
 
 "Any new customers--or customers new to credit--are riskier," said Moshe 
Orenbuch, an analyst at Credit Suisse who studies banks' loan portfolios. "A lot 
of that growth (in debt) is replacing balances people paid down in the early 
part of COVID."
 
 (Reporting by Elizabeth Dilts Marshall; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
 
				 
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