|
$2 Trillion Reduction In Credit Card Lines
Coming Up
Credit is drying up everywhere.
Banks are now concerned (finally), about rising credit card
debt. They have every reason to be. The bankruptcy reform act
of 2005, which encouraged such reckless lending is now blowing
up in lenders' faces.
Banks and credit card companies wrote that bill. They got
everything they wanted. It goes to show you two things:
1) Be careful of what you ask, you might get it.
2) Greed kills.
Furthermore, I expect many of the debt slave provisions of the
bill to be undone after Obama is elected. That will increase
defaults. Even if an unwinding of that "reform" does not
happen, the writing is on the wall for lenders for the simple
reason "You cannot get blood out of a turnip".
Regardless of what the law says, unemployed people are not
going to be paying credit card bills. A second point is that
someone unemployed, with no income, will meet the strict
guidelines for wiping away all their debt.
I talked about this in
Bankruptcy Reform Act Finally Blows Sky High.
Banks have finally beginning to get the bleak message that
credit card defaults are going to soar. In response,
Banks are Trimming Limits for Many on Credit Cards.
The easy money that led Americans
to depend on credit cards to pay their bills is starting to
dry up. After fostering the explosive growth of consumer
debt in recent years, financial companies are reducing the
credit limits on cards held by millions of Americans, often
without warning.
Washington Mutual (WM) cut back the total credit lines
available to its cardholders by nearly 10 percent in the
first quarter of the year, according to an analysis of bank
regulatory data. HSBC Holdings, Target (TGT) and Wells Fargo
(WFC) each trimmed their credit card lines by about 3
percent.
Among those four lenders, that amounts to a reduction of
about $15 billion in three months. Over all, the amount of
available credit for the industry appears to be about flat,
with the three biggest issuers — Bank of America (BAC),
JPMorgan Chase (JPM) and Citigroup (C) — slightly increasing
their overall credit lines. But even they are trying to rein
in risky individual accounts.
“This downturn is the perfect storm where the consumer is
getting squeezed from all levels,” said Michael Taiano, a
credit card industry analyst at Sandler O’Neill. He projects
that credit card loss rates for lenders, now around 5.7
percent, could go as high as 10 percent in next 18 months.
That would be higher than the peak levels reached after the
2001 technology bust.
Meredith Whitney, an Oppenheimer banking analyst, said the
impact of the recent regulatory proposals on lender profits
could be so severe that she expected the industry to pull
back $2 trillion in outstanding credit lines by 2010. That
would be a 45 percent reduction in credit currently
available to consumers. Risky borrowers would be squeezed
the most.
Direct Bottom Line Hit
Every default is a direct hit to the bottom line. And 10%
chargeoffs would not be surprising in the least.
Furthermore, a reduction in credit lines by $2 trillion is not
peanuts. Credit is contracting folks. Yes, this is deflation
regardless of what energy and food prices are doing.
FDIC Bank Examiner Audits
From a source I consider reliable, I received this email the
other day: A good friend of
mine has a friend who is a Bank Examiner(BE) for the FDIC. The
BE says the message he takes into every exam is "You must
raise your loan loss reserves". This is delivered directly to
the Chairman, President and CFO of every bank visit, every
time. No Exceptions!
I asked for clarification and was told no exceptions,
literally means no exceptions. Note that an increase in loan
loss provisions means capital will need to be raised or fewer
loans will be issued, or both.
Zombification of Banks
Accelerates
As I said in
Regional Banks Spiral Towards Zero, I suspected Bank
United (BKUNA) was raising money at $1.90 because it was
told to. BKUNA was
down another 11.58% on Friday, to $1.68. I do not see how it
can survive even IF it raises the $400 million it is seeking.
Much of the credit on the books of banks is worthless. It will
be written off. There is nothing inflationary about this at
all. The zombification of banks that I mentioned in
Night of the Living Fed is now picking up steam. Consumers
are being increasingly zombified as well.
Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
|
Content provided as
general information only and should not be taken as investment
advice. All site content, including advertisements, shall not be
construed as a recommendation to buy or sell any security or
financial instrument, or to participate in any particular
trading or investment strategy. The ideas expressed on this site
are solely the opinions of the author(s) who may or may not have
a position in any company or advertiser referenced above. Any
action that you take as a result of information, analysis, or
advertisement on this site is ultimately your responsibility.
Consult your investment advisor before making any investment
decisions. |