16.9T of c̶c̶ household debt is around $80,000 per American adult. Not the best.
Even still, a lot of alarmist phrasing in this piece:
> During the fourth quarter of last year, mortgage originations dropped to 2019 levels
Wasn't real estate doing fairly well before the pandemic?
> While total delinquency levels remain below what was seen pre-pandemic - 2.5% of outstanding debt was in some stage of delinquency as of December versus 4.7% at the end of 2019
What's the underlying agenda here? None of this appears deeply concerning to me.
Edit: @eyphka I estimated there are approximately 300m Americans, so that's what I divided by. Turns out there are actually only 200m American adults, though, so the figure is probably more like $7-8k/American taxpayer.
Edit #2: I was off by a factor of 10! 16.9T/200m = $80,000. Sorry.
Sadly that's not how it works for the average household. Unless average household earnings go up, inflation hurts as many household debts are variable rates.
In my opinion that average household is still a winner in long term as eventually rates will drop, average earnings will go up and the loan will already be devalued.
I think many Americans see consumer debt as a sign that households aren’t building wealth. It really depends on the type of debt and how it’s distributed amongst consumers.
Except that debt is not evenly distributed. Lots of people have zero CC debt, and many others have several tens of thousand dollars in debt. As interest rates climb it is expected that delinquencies will increase.
Debt to income and GDP has dropped a lot since the peak in 2007 before recession. There was big drop during pandemic as people used stimulus to pay off debt and maybe had less to spend money on. Debt has come back quickly but is more things returning to normal. The current amount of debt is abnormally low.
We downweighted it because it's one of those perennial repetitive stories that doesn't contain significant new information [1] and therefore can't support a substantively different discussion [2]. Threads that can be predicted from previous sequences are basically off topic here.
This is not to say that the topic is unimportant - of course it's important. But HN's criterion for being on topic is not importance, but interestingness.
Yep. A consequence of decades of low inflation is that most people still think in nominal terms. Otherwise they would be calling out journalists for these silly hesdlines
Yeah, but total household debt only grew 7%, which approximately tracks with inflation. Similarly, inflation is measured over a basket of goods, some of which grow in price more slowly than others -- not exclusively the goods paid for on credit cards.
Perhaps,but not surprising given the prevailing interest rate situation. I got multiple offers on my CCs to lower the APR to 0% for 12-18 months. At that point it's financially better to carry a balance, throw the cash in a HYSA and pay it off in 2024. My Own CC balance has grown by like 600%
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[ 0.18 ms ] story [ 87.6 ms ] threadEven still, a lot of alarmist phrasing in this piece:
> During the fourth quarter of last year, mortgage originations dropped to 2019 levels
Wasn't real estate doing fairly well before the pandemic?
> While total delinquency levels remain below what was seen pre-pandemic - 2.5% of outstanding debt was in some stage of delinquency as of December versus 4.7% at the end of 2019
What's the underlying agenda here? None of this appears deeply concerning to me.
Edit: @eyphka I estimated there are approximately 300m Americans, so that's what I divided by. Turns out there are actually only 200m American adults, though, so the figure is probably more like $7-8k/American taxpayer.
Edit #2: I was off by a factor of 10! 16.9T/200m = $80,000. Sorry.
Average U.S. household owes something close to six figures in debt ~ 7% growth in one year
Is one number revolving debt and the other all debt? Including mortgages the 165k sounds reasonable
Selling clicks. A decent number of Americans view debt as immoral, and will consume content implicitly rewarding financial piety.
[1] https://www.firstrepublic.com/insights-education/how-much-do....
$80k per American isn’t that crazy when you look at a mortgage or car note.
Total debt, not CC debt. The vast majority is mortgage debt, so "secured". According to TFA the uptick is due to increasing CC debt.
There's 100 million American households. $16.9e12/100e6 = $169,000.
Much more likely that lenders will change their standards. Loosening/lower specifically.
There is a lot of good data on FRED to look at instead of these alarmist local news stories.
This is not to say that the topic is unimportant - of course it's important. But HN's criterion for being on topic is not importance, but interestingness.
https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html
[1] https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=false&so...
[2] https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=false&so...