Credit Card Delinquency Rate
People pay rent before their credit card. When this rises, households are out of runway.
The Payment Priority Stack
Households pay bills in a predictable order when money runs short: rent first, utilities, car payment, then the credit card. The card is last because missing it hurts credit scores — a future-oriented concern. When credit card delinquencies rise anyway, households have already worked through everything else. There's no softer interpretation.
Hard Fact, Not Survey
You either paid the bill or you didn't. Unlike consumer sentiment surveys or unemployment figures, delinquency is a transaction record. Rising rates preceded the 2008 financial crisis and the 2020 crash. Falling rates reflect actual paydown, not reported optimism.
The Credit Cycle
When delinquencies rise, banks tighten lending standards. Tighter credit means less consumer spending. Less spending slows GDP. The Fed watches this sequence closely because delinquency stress is near the front of that chain — not the back.
THE SCORE, EVERY MONDAY.
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