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Saturday, July 04, 2020

Banks' New Dilemma: They Cannot Tell Who Is A Good Risk

Are people paying their bills on time? Thanks to Covid regulations, there is no way to tell.

Banks Are Flying Blind

Businesses are not allowed to report to the credit agencies who is in mortgage, credit card, or auto loan forbearance plans.

So how do banks decide who is a good credit risk when they are Flying Blind?

“Without accurate information, their only option is to pull back on credit,” said Michael Abbott, head of banking for North America at consulting firm Accenture PLC. “Banks don’t know who is going to pay and who isn’t. It’s like flying blind into a credit storm.”

Banks started tightening their underwriting standards in March, when the first wave of coronavirus layoffs began.

By early April, 33% of banks that responded to the Federal Reserve’s senior loan officer survey said they had increased their minimum credit-score requirements for credit cards over the previous three months, up from 14% in January. Bank respondents tightened lending standards for all consumer-loan categories tracked by the survey.

Loan originations have fallen, a result both of the tightening and a decline in consumer demand. An estimated 79,000 personal loans were extended in the week ended May 10, compared with 226,000 in the week ended March 22, according to Equifax Inc. Auto loan and lease originations fell to 266,000 from 390,000 during the same period. General-purpose credit-card originations totaled 483,000, down from 856,000. In 2019, weekly card originations rarely fell below 1.2 million.

Some lenders pay for phone data to see who is calling the unemployment office. Other lenders are using natural disaster codes instead of late payment codes.

TransUnion is selling data on deferrals but supposedly it is against the law for lenders to use it.

Fair Isaac is rolling out a new index to inform lenders how likely the applicant is to withstand financial difficulties during the downturn.

More

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

I used to be able to overdraft my checking account at M&T Bank in the few days before my social security and pension checks were scheduled ($20 or less) but no more. They refused to honor a check that would have resulted in a. 75 overdraft. So yes things are tightening up.

Anonymous said...

Its BS
The whole thing is a racket against us.
My credit is in the high 800's
I paid off a car loan and my reward was they lowered my score 35 points.
No logic
I have no other debt




Anonymous said...

Makes sense, bet they are pushing for a soultion. Well what if? we could control every thing you see do hear buy sell. Duh stupid me we a can already, we do that just need a mark or chip as a way to track everyone