Americans continue to hold back on credit card spending as banks slash lines of credit and charge off card accounts at a record pace. The Federal Reserve reported another large dip in consumer credit for September.

The Fed said late Friday that overall consumer credit in the U.S. contracted at an annual rate of 7.2 percent in September, or by a total of $14.8 billion. Analysts had a contraction closer to $10 billion.

September marked the eighth straight month of consumer credit declines.

Credit card debt, called revolving debt in the Fed’s report, led the way once again. Revolving debt fell at a 13.3 percent annual rate or by $9.9 billion to $889 billion. The Fed slightly revised upward the reading from August to reflect an identical 13.3 percent annual contraction rate.

Since September 2008, Americans have shed $86.2 billion in credit card debt. Although many credit consumers restrained card spending, much of the mathematical credit for the plunge can be given to soaring charge off rates at banks (“Banks Charging Off Debt at a Higher Rate than in Great Depression,” Oct. 28).

The Fed said that the annual rate of decline for revolving credit was 10.0 percent in the third quarter of 2009. In the first and second quarters of the year, the annualized rate of decline was 9.6 percent and 9.7 percent, respectively.

Nonrevolving consumer credit – like that found in auto, student or personal loans — dropped at an annual rate of 3.7 percent in September, or nearly $15 billion.

Total consumer credit outstanding in the U.S. stood at $2.455 trillion at the end of September, down from its all-time high of $2.581 trillion in July 2008. The Fed’s report does not include debt backed by real estate.

 

 



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