Consumer Credit Surges to a New Record High Led by Credit Card Debt

Consumer Credit numbers from the Fed, chart by Mish.

Consumer Credit numbers for April are from the Fed’s G.19 Consumer Credit report.

This post was my first cross-post at Deep Knowledge Investments

Nominal Growth Synopsis

  • Total Credit: +$23.01 Billion to $4.86 Trillion, a new high
  • Revolving Credit: +$13.48 Billion to $1.24 Trillion, a new high
  • Nonrevolving Credit: +$9.53 Billion to $1.24 Trillion, a new high

Nonrevolving Government Credit (student loans) is best viewed as essentially unchanged for three months.

Revolving Consumer Credit in Billions of Dollars 

Consumer Credit numbers from the Fed, calculation and chart by Mish.

Real vs Nominal Revolving Credit

  • In nominal terms revolving credit surged to $1.24 trillion.
  • In real (inflation-adjusted) terms, credit card debt is $980 billion. That is below the per-pandemic high of $990 billion, and also below the 2008 high of $1.09 trillion.
  • It’s real spending that drives GDP. 

Nominal, as well as real, the slope of revolving credit is steep and unsustainable. It’s also a sign of consumer stress. 

Nonrevolving Consumer Credit in Billions of Dollars 

Consumer Credit numbers from the Fed, calculation and chart by Mish.

Real vs Nominal Revolving Credit

  • In nominal term nonrevolving credit surged to $3.62 trillion. a new high.
  • In real (inflation-adjusted) terms, nonrevolving credit is $2.85 trillion. That is only 1.4 percent above the pre-pandemic $2.81 trillion. 

Who Has Spending Cash?

Anybody with an existing mortgage prior to 2022 was able to refinance at or below 3.0 percent has extra hundreds of dollars to spend, every month, even if they overpaid for their houses. Inflation has eaten up some of that refinance dividend, but it has certainly cushioned the blow. 

Renters and those who more recently took out a mortgage are hit by higher mortgage or rent prices in addition to rising food prices, insurance costs, etc. 

For those whose wages have not kept up with the price of rent and food (nearly everyone), credit cards or tapping savings is the only way to maintain lifestyles.

Three Classes of Zombies 

  • Corporate Zombies are firms that are unable to generate enough profits to cover debt-servicing costs and that need to borrow to stay alive.
  • Consumer Zombies are those who want to move but cannot because they do not want to or cannot afford to trade their 3.0 percent mortgage for a 7.0 percent mortgage. 
  • Consumer Zombies also include those trapped in rental units with no hope of escape. 

The Starter Home Is No More

Zombie renters dream of homeownership but are priced out of secondary cities they might’ve flocked to years ago.

For discussion, please see The Starter Home Is No More, Even in Second Tier Markets

Case-Shiller Top City Home Prices Decline From Year Ago for the First Time Since May 2012

Case-Shiller and CPI data via the St. Louis Fed, chart by Mish. 

OER stands for Owners’ Equivalent Rent, the price a homeowner would pay to rent their own house, unfurnished, without utilities. 

On May 30, I noted Case-Shiller Top City Home Prices Decline From Year Ago for the First Time Since May 2012

However, the decline is but a drop in the bucket compared to price increases since 2011.

Meanwhile, the average mortgage rate is 6.94 percent according to Mortgage News Daily.

Winners and Losers

The Fed created this set of winners and losers, and it did so on purpose to increase inflation. Now the Fed does not know what to do with the inflation mess it created.

Housing generally leads the economy into or out of recession. Think of all the appliances, carpet, cabinets, and landscaping that happen when people buy homes. Also think of household formation and plunging birth rates.

The Fed cannot afford to stimulate housing out of fear of stoking more inflation. And it has stranded three classes of zombies in the wake. 

So don’t expect much more than weak, near-recession GDP, if that, for quite some time. It’s payback for three rounds of mostly unwarranted fiscal stimulus on top of serial bubble-blowing Fed policy.

Deep Knowledge Investing

This post was my first cross-post at Deep Knowledge Investments. Here are some kind words from founder Gary Brode.

I’m pleased to announce that this week, acclaimed economics writer, Mish Shedlock, has joined the Deep Knowledge Investing Board of Advisors. Mish is a great thinker, detailed researcher, and clear writer. He’s offered DKI readers this guest post detailing the recent increase in consumer credit usage. His commentary on the beginning of a decline in still-too-high housing prices is timely as are his comments on Federal Reserve culpability for multiple asset bubbles.

As noted in Big Changes and Improvements Coming Up at MishTalk Next Week, Mr. Brode will be posting investment ideas here. 

Thanks Gary,

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23 Comments
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Alice Davis
2 years ago

Amazing post! Reading your opinions on this topic was a lot of fun. In addition to providing insightful input, you clearly and simply presented the data.

LawrenceBird
LawrenceBird
2 years ago
If you are going to go the route of adjusting for inflation then you should also adjust for population and report on a per capita basis.
Christoball
Christoball
2 years ago
The Dollar is a unit of measurement such as inches, quarts, yards, ounces, pounds etc. Imagine going to someone and saying “I would like 3 quarts” or “I would like 9 feet”. without specifying the particulars. When someone says “That will be 10 dollars”, the correct response could be “Dollars of What” ? Universal solvents such as Credit Cards and Reserve Notes have seen their relative value decrease with a highly indebted economy.
Hard times create prudent men, prudent men create good times, good times create careless men, and careless men create hard times
Jack
Jack
2 years ago
Reply to  Christoball
I say we are transitioning quickly from phase 3 to phase 4. Hold on.
Christoball
Christoball
2 years ago
Reply to  Jack
Yep……The original quote said strong men, which to me seemed a little boastful and narrow in scope. When people brag about being strong, I have to remind them that “Smell Isn’t Everything”
Casual_Observer2020
Casual_Observer2020
2 years ago
Credit card debt is in line with what’s happening in the travel industry.
RonJ
RonJ
2 years ago
On that top chart, total credit is getting to look rather parabolicky. The government is planning to add 4 trillion in new debt spending, so that consumers have the means take on even more debt, driving the consumer debt parabolic even higher.
Ponzi never had it so good.
MPO45v2
MPO45v2
2 years ago
Reply to  RonJ
Credit cards charge prime+15% so many credit cards now have rates of 21% to 30% and I don’t see how this is sustainable. Student loans repayments are back on and auto loans are also ballooning. The mother of all crashes will come soon enough.
RonJ
RonJ
2 years ago
Reply to  MPO45v2
By nature, parabolic moves are not sustainable. They do however defy gravity before they crash, appearing to move virtually straight up on a chart, before they do collapse. A doubling of 1 trillion, is 2 trillion. A doubling of 30 trillion, is 60 trillion. Plotted on a chart, 1 to 2 trillion looks little more than a flat line. 30 to 60, or maybe its 60 to 120, winds up looking like it is going straight up. Human nature doesn’t change. We have had 3 bubbles, one directly after the other. Just the venue changed. A story the other day on Zero Hedge, is already comparing the AI driven Nasdaq, to the lead up into the 2000 blow off top. Breadth is now the worst since then, for one. Chat GPT could soon be everyone’s stock advisor. “Chat, what do you think of ticker symbol…?”
Roadrunner12
Roadrunner12
2 years ago
Reply to  RonJ
Interesting youtube video by Maneco64
Dollar Running Out of Time As Congress Writes a Blank Check. – YouTube
Going from memory so might not be 100% accurate but the video stated that if the CBO is as wrong in future predictions of government revenues and spending as it has been in the past and assuming 8.9% interest, in 2033, all government revenues will not even be enough to pay the interest on the government debt.
In any event that is the trajectory the US is on with just interest payments increasing as a % of revenues. One can speculate as to when and how the response is when the interest payments with respect to revenues reach, 40, 50, 60, 70 %. Picture if you will say interest payments reach 50% of revenues? It will not take the moment of reaching 100% for STHF.
PreCambrian
PreCambrian
2 years ago
Best of luck in your new endeavor.
Bhakta
Bhakta
2 years ago
Mish, do you see it as the central banks are step by step putting most into the category of debt slaves or serfs, while a few sit on top. Is it a return to the ancient feudal system of haves and have nots?
I see no way out of the debt crisis, as the central banks must inflate always to keep their system afloat.
Perplexed Pete
Perplexed Pete
2 years ago
Reply to  Bhakta
It isn’t central banks; We have been forced into involuntary servitude to PRIVATE BANKS.
Government forces us at gun point to use dollars. We must have dollars to pay for taxes, fines, fees, and licenses. Refusal to use dollars guarantees extreme poverty and/or imprisonment.
But government does not create any dollars. ONLY private banks create new dollars. Private banks create new, digital dollars AFTER the borrower signs the loan contract. This is 100% new money that did not exist before the borrower arrived. Almost the entire money supply is created by private banks. When banks issue loans, new money is created. When the loan principal is repaid, this money vanishes from existence.
It is mathematically impossible to repay all of the bank loans. Why? Because banks only create the loan principal when lending, but never the additional interest that is due. Therefore, the total amount due to banks (Principal + interest) is always much larger than the money supply. To avoid default, imprisonment and poverty, people are forced to borrow more and more money from private banks. This debt trap is endless.
The only way to end this debt enslavement scam:
1) Zero-out ALL bank debt including all mortgages, car loans, business loans, consumer loans and government debt (debt jubilee)
2) Abolish bank-created money
3) Abolish the requirement to pay taxes, fines, fees and licenses with bank-created money
4) Transition to a system of debt-free, interest-free money.
Proofs at bank LIES dot ORG
Jack
Jack
2 years ago
Any plan for using generative AI in future articles?
Zardoz
Zardoz
2 years ago
Reply to  Jack

AI is great for generating BS and things we already know. I don’t think it would be useful here.

Jack
Jack
2 years ago
Reply to  Zardoz
Agree. A lot of similar content generators are now using generative AI – spending a fraction of the time with supposedly the same value added content.
babelthuap
babelthuap
2 years ago
It’s gonna be a hard candy Christmas for a lot of folks. I do find it interesting we have a military recruiting problem despite the military offering free college tuition to voters who want free college tuition. What gives? Oh, they don’t want to actually earn it. Seems to be a lot of that going on these days.
Six000mileyear
Six000mileyear
2 years ago
And the non-revolving government category shows a rounding over, which implies fewer are enrolling in college. Some union members are about to find out how little job safety they have from budget cuts.
Bookoodinkydow
Bookoodinkydow
2 years ago
As long as the Biden administration continues to encourage MILLIONS of welfare seeking migrants, from across the world, we will continue to see inflationary pressures. Reckless spending and worse (war) will destroy a currency every time.
hhabana
hhabana
2 years ago
Reply to  Bookoodinkydow
I agree with you. The wars, the welfare and now the acceptance of social decay. There are liberal morons on this site that would argue against this.
Well, God invented alcohol to cheer you up and forget. Cheers.
Bookoodinkydow
Bookoodinkydow
2 years ago
Reply to  hhabana
You can have a welfare state or open borders. You cannot have both. To say we’re neck deep in social/moral decay would be an understatement. Cheers.
ThinkEconomically
ThinkEconomically
2 years ago
This article was spot on.
Bhakta
Bhakta
2 years ago
Mish is usually spot on.

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