Consumer credit defaults up for third straight month

Dallas experiences the largest increase in default rates

Consumer credit defaults up for third straight month

Defaults on consumer credit jumped six basis points in January, according to data from S&P Dow Jones Indices and Experian.

S&P/Experian Consumer Credit Default Indices’ composition rate rose to a reading of 1.02%.

The first-mortgage default rate climbed four basis points to 0.84%, while the bank-card default rate rose 33 basis points to 3.28%. The default rate for auto loans, on the other hand, fell three basis points to a reading of 0.99%.

Default rates in four of five major metropolitan statistical areas surveyed were up last month. Dallas saw the biggest increase at 1.07%, up nine basis points from the previous month. Chicago jumped eight basis points to 1.17%, Miami was seven basis points higher at 1.77%, and Los Angeles moved up six basis points to 0.86%.

New York was the only metro that posted a decline, down two basis points to 1.07%.

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