Consumer delinquencies in key home-related categories fell sharply in last year’s fourth quarter as home values steadily increased, according to results from the American Bankers Association’s Consumer Credit Delinquency Bulletin. Installment loan delinquencies remained near historical lows, matching the third quarter’s composite number.
Home-related delinquencies were down significantly in two out of three categories, with home equity loan and line delinquencies continuing a downward trend and approaching their 15-year averages for the first time since the recession. Home equity loan delinquencies fell 23 basis points to 2.68 percent of all accounts and home equity line delinquencies fell 13 basis points to 1.18 percent of all accounts. Property improvement loan delinquencies rose 5 basis points to 0.92 percent of all accounts.
“It’s been a long, rocky road, but home equity delinquencies have finally worked their way back to historical norms,” ABA Chief Economist James Chessen said. “The strong and consistent rise in home prices over the last three years has restored equity, which makes keeping loans current even more of a top priority for homeowners. With rising home equity and shrinking delinquencies becoming the status quo, banks are more willing to extend new home equity loans and lines to qualified borrowers.”
The composite ratio, which tracks delinquencies in eight closed-end installment loan categories, remained at 1.41 percent of all accounts in the fourth quarter. This figure is 13 basis points below the fourth quarter 2014 composite ratio and remains well below the 15-year average of 2.24 percent. The ABA report defines a delinquency as a late payment that is 30 days or more overdue.
Chessen said he anticipates continued consumer discipline and steady economic conditions will help keep delinquencies near historically low levels for the foreseeable future, according to the announcement.
“The national savings rate is at one of its healthiest points since the recession and trending upward, which means people are well-positioned to repay their debts,” he said. “Disciplined saving, along with steady job growth and climbing household wealth, signal that delinquency levels are likely stay near these historic lows for some time.”