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Entries categorized as ‘credit markets’

Progress Report: Credit Crunch: Credit Cards Could Be the Next Financial Disaster

March 4, 2008 · No Comments

The Progress Report published a special on credit card debt as the next financial disaster on Monday March 3rd:

http://www.americanprogressaction.org/progressreport/2008/03/pr20080303

The economy is undergoing a “slowdown” according to President Bush, a “recession” according to 61 percent of Americans. Regardless of the name, 83 percent of Americans rate the economy as only fair or poor, “and almost two thirds are pessimistic now and about the future.” One large source of economic stress is the credit crisis, which has spread from the subprime mortgage sector to the U.S. credit card market. “If America’s $14 trillion economy is a high-powered engine, credit is the motor oil that helps it run smoothly. When the lubricant is in short supply, the economy — like an engine — is more prone to knocks and stalling.” “The squeeze is reaching beyond Wall Street to Main Street, hitting everything from the availability of student loans to credit-card interest rates to the prices of municipal bonds in retirees’ portfolios.” Today, the Washington Post reports that college students will see higher costs for loans — and “some students may be denied private loans entirely” at community and for-profit schools — because of the credit crisis. Chairman of the Federal Reserve Ben Bernanke acknowledged last month that the credit crunch is fueling the economy’s downturn. “More expensive and less available credit seems likely to continue to be a source of restraint on economic growth,” he said.

Categories: credit card clarity · credit markets · middle class squeeze

Credit card debt could be the next subprime disaster

March 4, 2008 · No Comments

A new report says that against the backdrop of record-high numbers of home foreclosures, lenders are tightening mortgage lending standards, making it harder for families to maintain their consumption in the face of weakening income growth.

In its paper “House of Cards,” the Center for American Progress finds that credit card issuers present their all-too-convenient lending product as a much needed but inevitably dangerous pressure valve for cash-strapped borrowers. 

This could mean trouble for  financial markets and could add additional turmoil to the economy as more consumers file for bankruptcy, driving down the value of securitized credit card receivables.

More information at http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/2008/02/house_of_cards.html

Categories: credit card clarity · credit markets
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