Not rendering correctly? View this e-mail as a web page here.
‘Phantom Debt’ Is Piling Up
By Joel Litman, chief investment strategist, Altimetry
If you look at the average FICO score, the U.S. consumer is in great shape…
FICO is the most widely accepted consumer credit score… It’s used by 90% of the country’s top lenders to help them make decisions on loans. Basically, anyone with a credit card has a FICO score.
It typically ranges from 300 to 850, with anything below 580 considered “poor” and anything above 739 considered “very good” or “exceptional.”
According to the latest FICO report, the average score is 717. That’s smack in the middle of the “good” range… and just one point off the all-time-high average score.
That paints a picture of consumer resiliency… Yet, there are also clear signs that the consumer is doing not so great.
Consumer-staples companies like Target (TGT) and Starbucks (SBUX) are reporting poor earnings. Starbucks missed expectations for both revenue and earnings, with those figures down 2% and 15%, respectively, in the second quarter. And Target is still hurting from inflation… It also missed earnings expectations and warned investors not to expect better results in the next few quarters.
Consumer-staples companies are good indicators of consumer health because they sell products that consumers buy on a daily basis… So if they’re suffering, it’s a sign their customers are, too.
There’s a clear disconnect between today’s average FICO score and what these companies are reporting… and it’s because there’s a certain type of debt that credit-ratings agencies don’t include.
Credit ratings don’t tell the whole story…
Consumers are piling up on what’s called “phantom debt”… otherwise known as “buy now, pay later” (“BNPL”) loans.
These loans allow consumers to pay for a lot of online purchases in interest-free installments.
So instead of paying $100 up front for a pair of shoes online, you can divide your purchase into multiple equal payments over a few months.
The third of three major profit catalysts is poised to ignite a buying frenzy around one specific asset class. That’s why the senior analyst behind 80 triple- and quadruple-digit winners is calling this the strongest buy alert of his career to date. Click here to learn more.
He started out on the trading floor in 1966. He was there for the oil panic in ’73. He watched the market crash in ’87. He was trading the day the planes hit the World Trade Center. One of his tools is even hard coded into every Bloomberg terminal. And today, he’s sharing the single most valuable system he has ever built.
BNPL loans technically aren’t debt… but they’re a way for consumers to delay paying for goods.
And customers don’t have to get approved in the same way they do for an auto loan, so “debt” generated by BNPL purchases never shows up on your FICO score.
These loans are stacking even more obligations on people’s plates, and folks are starting to fall behind on their payments.
That said, while credit scores may not include BNPL purchases, these loans can’t hide from every metric…
Delinquency rates include all loans that are past due…
That makes them a much better indicator of consumer health.
They take into account mortgage balances, which increased by $190 billion in the last quarter… and total household debt, which rose by $184 billion.
Delinquency rates also include BNPL loans. And they’ve been on the rise as more and more folks have relied on these types of loans…
According to data by the New York Federal Reserve, 90-day-plus credit-card delinquency rates rose from 8% to nearly 11% in the last year.
These types of delinquencies are the most serious. And the fact that they’re rising signals that folks are holding off on paying their bills as long as possible… whether or not the credit agencies see it.
Moreover, auto and other severe loan delinquency rates are also rising. Overall, it’s just not a great look for the consumer.
And it’s clear that BNPL is contributing, as its market has been growing every year since 2020.
BNPL purchases totaled $33 billion in 2019… climbed to $300 billion in 2023… and are now expected to reach nearly $700 billion by 2028.
Recent Bloomberg News surveys also show that 43% of people are behind on their BNPL payments… and 28% of folks were late on other debt because of their BNPL payments.
So while the average FICO score may tell the story of a healthy consumer, keep in mind that those credit metrics don’t take into account phantom debt.
Consumers’ obligations are piling up. Credit-card delinquency rates are at the highest level in more than a decade. And that’s likely to limit consumer spending going forward.
Regards,
Joel Litman
June 10, 2024
A publication from
You have received this e-mail as part of your subscription to Altimetry Daily Authority. If you no longer want to receive e-mails from Altimetry Daily Authorityclick here.
Published by Altimetry.
You’re receiving this e-mail at peter.hovis@gmail.com. For questions about your account or to speak with customer service, call (800) 701-9346 (U.S.), 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. Eastern time or e-mail info@altimetry.com. Please note: The law prohibits us from giving personalized financial advice.
Any brokers mentioned constitute a partial list of available brokers and is for your information only. Altimetry does not recommend or endorse any brokers, dealers, or investment advisors.
Altimetry forbids its writers from having a financial interest in any security they recommend to our subscribers. All employees of Altimetry (and affiliated companies) must wait 24 hours after an investment recommendation is published online – or 72 hours after a direct mail publication is sent – before acting on that recommendation.
This work is based on SEC filings, current events, interviews, corporate press releases, and what we’ve learned as financial journalists. It may contain errors, and you shouldn’t make any investment decision based solely on what you read here. It’s your money and your responsibility.