Paying the COVID Piper: This Can Take (Many) Years to Flush Out

2020 and COVID Have Expanded Small Businesses’ Use of Banking Services:

2020 and COVID Have Expanded Small Businesses’ Use of Banking Services:

If you look at numbers published by the Federal Reserve, the credit card business had a fantastic year.  Delinquency rates for 4Q20 were a mere 2.12%, slightly higher than 3Q20, and near historic lows.

But, everyone knows that numbers can be misleading.  When you break out smaller banks, you can see the pain points, which indicate severe risk, with 5.09% delinquency.

That is why today’s read is important.  A paper published by Stanford University’s Business School’s Insights acknowledges the impact of various COVID countermeasures but questions “what’s next?”

The report abstract mentions: “The team used a detailed dataset from Equifax, the credit reporting agency, that covered 20 million borrowers. The data didn’t reveal people’s names, but it did provide credit scores, payment histories, delinquencies, deferrals, and borrowers’ geographic locations. From that, the researchers estimated the nationwide totals and the kinds of people who got help.”

The author, Stanford’s Amit Seru, was aided by researchers at USC, Northwestern, and Columbia summarized the research in gloomy terms:

As this happens, forbearances expire, markets as large as California face employment issues, environmental challenges, and long-term concerns about taxes, schools, and credit availability.

The delinquency issue will flush out.  Expect 3Q21 to be a tipping point.  And, it will not be pretty.

Overview by Brian Riley, Director, Credit Advisory Service at Mercator Advisory Group

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