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Credit Card Spending is Much Weaker Than it Looks, But Does it Portend Recession?

Consumer credit details from the Fed, chart by Mish

Please consider the Fed’s Consumer Credit G.19 Report for December 2022.

In 2022, consumer credit increased 7.8 percent, with revolving and nonrevolving credit increasing 14.8 percent and 5.6 percent, respectively. During the fourth quarter, consumer credit increased at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 6.5 percent, while in December it increased at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 2.9 percent.

The federal government originates consumer credit solely in the form of nonrevolving student loans through the Department of Education. 

There has been a lot of discussion on the surge in credit card debt so let’s dive in further.

Real Consumer Credit in Billions of Dollars

Real consumer credit a Mish calculation based off the PCE chain index, 2012=100

Real revolving consumer credit peaked at $1.086 trillion in February of 2008, one month into recession and has never been higher since. 

Revolving Consumer Credit Nominal vs Real Detail 

Revolving consumer credit Real vs Nominal

Consumers have been on a credit card binge but more so in nominal terms than real (inflation-adjusted) terms.

Nonetheless, the binge is important. Consumers pay interest fees on a nominal, not real basis. 

The sharp rate of acceleration suggests consumers are struggling with finances. 

Very Lagging Indicator

Take a look at the preceding chart for when revolving credit peaks in each cycle.

Credit peaks tend to happen in recessions, not ahead of recessions. 

Months Between Revolving Credit Peak and Recession 

Negative numbers indicate revolving debt kept rising after a recession started.

Prior to 1990 credit card debt was minimal and often rose during an entire recession, so I excluded prior recessions.

During the Great Recession, nominal credit card spending rose for six months at the start of the recession. 

There was a lag time in 2020 only because of the suddenness of the Covid pandemic.

Does Revolving Credit Portend Recession?

Revolving credit is such a lagging indicator it portends nothing, at least by itself.

But given the historic lags, data is not inconsistent with the idea that a recession has already started.

Also note that real revolving credit is still rising while real spending has declined for two months. This indicates credit stress and consumers struggling to maintain lifestyles, increasingly relying on credit cards to do so.

Month-Over-Month Retail Sales 

  • Food Service: -0.9 percent
  • Food Stores: +0.0 percent
  • Gas Stations: -4.6 Percent
  • General Merchandise: -0.8 Percent
  • Excluding Motor Vehicles and Gas: -0.7 Percent
  • Excluding Motor Vehicles: -1.1 Percent
  • Nonstore (Think Amazon): -1.1 Percent
  • Motor Vehicles: -1.2 Percent
  • Department Stores: -6.6 Percent

For further discussion, please see December Was Another Retail Sales Disaster, Even Worse With Negative Revisions

Spending Brick Wall 

Consumer spending hit a brick wall in the US, EU, UK and Australia. 

Industrial Production Recession Lead Times

On January 18, 2023, I commented Signs Say Industrial Production Has Peaked and so a Recession is Imminent

I highly doubt we have ever seen conditions where retail sales, industrial production, and housing starts and sales have been this miserable where the economy was not already in recession.

For further discussion, please see Welcome to the Global Recession, It Began in December Last Year

This post originated at MishTalk.Com.

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10 Comments
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8dots
8dots
3 years ago
Delinquency rate on c/c 2%
Casual_Observer2020
Casual_Observer2020
3 years ago
Thetenyear
Thetenyear
3 years ago
Mish, how much credit card spending is for current purchases vs interest on prior purchases? Would be interesting to see that broken out. I would imagine that the share of spending on interest relative to current purchases spikes during times of economic stress. Perhaps it provides an early warning.
Mish
Mish
3 years ago
Reply to  Thetenyear
good question – don’t know
MJS357
MJS357
3 years ago
Reply to  Mish
Piling on…the majority of my friends and relatives now use a CC to purchase EVERYTHING and pay bills with them if permitted. Most, pay off the valance every month collecting reward points for $1-$3,000 worth of monthly purchases/bills. I did not know anyone doing this prior to 2008. I’ve been doing it since 2017.
Maybe these numbers are slewed…IDK.
Portlander2
Portlander2
3 years ago
What does the consumer credit legend “Non-Revolving Gov’t NSA” mean (see first chart)? That line overtook total revolving in 2015. This may deserve some commentary as well.
Mish
Mish
3 years ago
Reply to  Portlander2
The federal government originates consumer credit solely in the form of nonrevolving student loans through the Department of Education (DoEd).
xbizo
xbizo
3 years ago
I think the credit card rise is a response to households falling behind the inflation fight as you implied. The rebound inflation from last spring is big. Now it is time for annual price increases, which are at least 10%. On top of that, meat and fish prices are up 50% in just the last quarter. Restaurant price up 40% from last year. Natural gas up 150%. The government numbers are backward-looking and won’t have this inflation in them for months.
Inflation has been understated for decades, but we got used to that. With inflation so much higher, the measuring stick has changed. We need a survey of businesses to count the number of widgets going out the door, the number of dinners served and see if they are down from 2022 and 2019. Maybe that kind of survey is in there already. But counting units delivered, not revenue is the reality check and tells us if real GDP is falling or not. Personally, I think with where inflation appears to be, revenues and profit margins are up a lot but real GDP is down and falling.
The savings cliff for households looks like it will be hit in the third quarter. Businesses still have nice levels of working capital, and we won’t have a bunch of business failures as it looks now. Employment should hold up all year.
So. Low bankruptcy rate. Fake numbers showing positive GDP. NBER does not call a recession. In fact the reported numbers make it look like one of the strongest economies ever.
Yooper
Yooper
3 years ago
Reply to  xbizo
We need a survey of businesses to count the number of widgets going out
the door, the number of dinners served and see if they are down from
2022 and 2019.
Interesting point… The small businesses I’m working with are increasing prices not because of supply chain, labor, or material cost increases (although a factor), but because business is down, and they’re jacking up their prices to make ends meet with the lower volumes.
Thetenyear
Thetenyear
3 years ago
Reply to  Yooper
Agree. Unit sales would strip out the distortion of inflation.

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