消费者信贷低于预期,学生贷款和汽车贷款放缓;信用卡年利率回升至历史最高点。
Consumer Credit Below Expectations On Slowdown In Student, Auto Loans; Credit Card APRs Back To All Time High

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/consumer-credit-below-expectations-slowdown-student-auto-loans-credit-card-aprs-back-all

## 消费者信用报告 - 十月摘要 根据美联储最新报告,十月份总消费者信用额度小幅上升91.78亿美元,达到创纪录的5.084万亿美元。 这低于九月份修正后的110亿美元增幅,也低于市场预期。 增幅由循环信用(信用卡,增加54.07亿美元至1.317万亿美元)和非循环信用(汽车/学生贷款,增加37.71亿美元至3.767万亿美元)共同驱动。 值得注意的是,由于还款暂停期结束,学生贷款余额在第三季度激增,达到1.841万亿美元。 尽管美联储最近降息,信用卡利率略有*上升*至22.83%,仍接近历史最高水平,与此同时,新车平均融资额也达到创纪录的41,000美元,平均售价为50,000美元。

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原文

After several months of wild swings, moments ago the Fed published the latest consumer credit report (G.19) and it was quite tame by recent volatile trends.

Total consumer credit rose by $9.178BN in October (which is more contemporaneous than more other data points we have received in recent weeks thanks to the govt shutdown), which was down from a downward revised $11.0BN in Sept ($13.09BN pre-revision), and below the $10.48BN median estimate. The latest monthly increase pushed the total to a new all-time high of $5.084 trillion. 

Looking at revolving credit (i.e., credit cards), the increase was $5.407BN to $1.317 trillion, the biggest monthly increase since July, if on the low side compared to the $8.7 billion average monthly increase from 2021 until the end of 2024.

Non-revolving credit (primarily auto and student loans), rose by $3.771BN, the lowest increase since February when we saw a decline of $2.4 billion. This increase brought the total nonrevolving credit to $3.767 trillion, a new record high.

While there was no detailed breakdown for October, the historical data showed that when broken down by components, student loans - now that the repayment moratorium is over - surged by $27.4 billion in Q3 to a record $1.841 trillion. As discussed previously, student loans have a magical capability of being abused for everything but college, which is why enterprising "students" binge on them any time they can to fund all their other purchases, except education-related. Meanwhile, car loans rose by a far more modest $4.0 billion to $1.564 trillion.

A few weeks ago Kelley Blue Book reported that the average new car price hit $50,000 for the first time ever. Well, as the next chart shows, there's a reason why: it's because the amount finance by new car loans also hit a new record high of $41K.

Finally, and this will come as a surprise to nobody, despite 1.50% in rate cuts by the Fed since last September, we can now confirm that rates on credit cards have gone... higher, as banks continue to bleed US consumers dry: at the start of 2025 the average rate on credit card accounts was 22.80%... and on Sept 30 the number was higher at 22.83%, just barely below the all time high of 23.37% set one year ago.

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