UPDATE:AmEx 30-Day Delinquencies 4.2% In July Vs 4.4% In June
August 17 2009 - 4:09PM
Dow Jones News
American Express Co. (AXP) said Monday that U.S. borrowers at
least a month behind their card payments decreased modestly to 4.2%
in July from 4.4% in June.
This continued decline in delinquencies, a key gauge of future
losses, is important because higher delinquencies force issuers to
squirrel away capital to reserve for potential losses; ultimately,
companies must write off loans if customers can't pay up. The
slowing pace of delinquencies is also noteworthy because it comes
at a time when seasonal factors - such as good behavior on the part
of borrowers fueled by tax refund checks - are behind the card
industry.
This monthly report card on the performance of credit-card
loans, including those packaged into bonds, comes amid heightened
scrutiny around credit as losses stemming from souring card loans
pile up.
Issuers of plastic, including Capital One Financial Corp. (COF),
JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM), Bank of America Corp. (BAC),
Citigroup Inc. (C), Discover Financial Services Inc. (DFS) and
American Express are also coping with sweeping legislation that
will bite into income. To fight the losses, card issuers are
scaling back on credit and getting tougher on whom they lend
to.
AmEx wrote off 9.2% of its card loans, including those packaged
into bonds. For the quarter ended June 30, the company wrote off
10% of its U.S. card loans, up from 8.5% in the first quarter and
5.3% a year ago.
The company said earlier this month that better than expected
bankruptcy trends contributed to the decline in write-offs.
Like other card issuers, AmEx is being hurt by cutbacks in
spending and customers who are falling behind on their bills in the
current economic slump. Unlike other card companies, AmEx both
issues cards and processes transactions. It issues both charge
cards requiring a monthly payoff and credit cards on which
customers can carry a balance.
An AmEx spokesman declined to comment on the company's July
credit card loans performance.
Another card issuer, Discover Financial, wrote off 8.43% of
credit card loans that have been packaged into bonds in July, down
from 8.75% in June; the 30-day delinquency rate was nearly flat at
1.38%.
Bank of America, at 13.81%, had the highest write-off rate in
July among the card issuers who released their credit-card data
Monday. This compares with a write-off rate of 13.86% in June.
Officials at these companies declined to comment on the monthly
reports.
Capital One said earlier Monday it wrote off 9.83% of its card
loans last month, compared with 9.73% in June, beating analysts'
estimates of higher losses. Its 30-day delinquencies increased to
4.83% in July from 4.77% in June, according to a regulatory filing
Monday.
-By Aparajita Saha-Bubna, Dow Jones Newswires; 617-654-6729;
aparajita.saha-bubna@dowjones.com