Summary
- Revolving credit outstanding rebounds.
- Nonrevolving credit gain almost triples.
Consumer credit outstanding strengthened $25.5 billion (1.9% y/y) in July after rising $5.2 billion in June, revised from $8.9 billion, and increasing $11.7 billion in May, revised from $13.9 billion. It was the largest runup in loan balances since November 2022. A $10.2 billion increase had been expected in the Action Economics Forecast Survey. The ratio of consumer credit outstanding to disposable personal income stood basically unchanged at 24.3% in July, a ratio that has drifted lover the last two years.
Revolving credit outstanding, which includes credit cards, rose $10.6 billion in July (6.6% y/y) following a $0.4 billion decline in June and an $8.5 billion May rise. Revolving credit outstanding held by depository institutions rose 7.2% y/y, down from a high of 17.0% y/y growth in August 2022. Revolving credit held by finance companies fell 8.3% y/y while revolving credit held by credit unions rose 6.3% y/y in July, below the 16.4% y/y peak in February 2022.
Nonrevolving credit outstanding increased $14.8 billion (0.3% y/y) in July after increasing $5.6 billion in June and rising $3.2 billion in May. Nonrevolving credit held by banks fell a lessened 1.8% y/y while finance company credit rose 3.8% y/y. Credit union nonrevolving balances was fairly steady y/y, off from 20.3% y/y growth in January 2023. Federal government balances rose 0.2% y/y to $1.49 trillion.
The value of student loans outstanding totaled $1.75 trillion at the end of June, down 0.9% y/y, and there was $1.56 trillion in motor vehicle loans at the end of June, up 1.8% from a year earlier.
The consumer credit figures from the Federal Reserve Board are break-adjusted and calculated by Haver Analytics. The breaks in the series in 2005, 2010 and 2015 are the result of the incorporation of data from the Census and the Survey of Finance Companies, as well as changes in the seasonal adjustment methodology. The consumer credit data are available in Haver’s USECON database. The Action Economics forecast figures are contained in the AS1REPNA database.
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