CREDITWRENCH
Creditwrench teaches the secrets of the debt collection industry and how to defeat their abusive practices without lawyers. We know how to win!
Thursday, November 01, 2007

Recession Inevitable, Card Charge Offs to Rise: Analyst

November 1, 2007
A Morgan Stanley analyst paints a pretty dire picture of the U.S. economy and its impact on credit card issuers in a research note on Discover Financial.




The U.S. credit card industry will be hit by a widespread consumer credit recession due to the dead-on-its-feet housing market, credit tightening, rising unemployment, an overwhelming debt burden, and a return to a normal bankruptcy environment, an influential Morgan Stanley analyst writes this week.

Kenneth A. Posner uses his latest write up on the prospects for Discover Financial Services (NYSE: DFS) to predict a dire 2008 and 2009 for credit card issuers and consumers, noting that Morgan Stanley’s U.S. economists have forecast unemployment rates rising to at least 5.4 percent and possibly 6 percent. The U.S. Department of Labor reported an unemployment rate of 4.7 percent in September.

Experian: Collection Advantage

Pinpoint debtors with the ability to pay.

Free five-day trial via eSolutions.

Click for FREE offer…

Posner forecasts credit card issuers will see charge offs peaking at 6.5 percent in 2009, due to the disaster taking place in housing, U.S. consumers’ all-time-high debt service burden of 14.5 percent of disposable income, the 5 percent to 7 percent growth in revolving credit in the last 18 months (compared with the typical 2 percent to 4 percent), and bankruptcy filings that have increased 43 percent year-to-date.

Posner applies forecasts from Morgan Stanley’s U.S. economists and its large-cap bank research team to project the impact of a recession on Discover. In a summary of these experts’ projections, Posner writes, “While we cannot be sure what lies around the corner, a number of risk factors suggest that financial institutions will experience widespread deterioration in consumer credit quality.”

Following his predictions of gloom-and-doom for the economy, Posner rates Discover as Underweight-V, giving it a price target of $15 a share, down from its recent close of $20.14. Morgan Stanley uses the V to stand for More Volatile, with the stock indicating it has a more than 25 percent chance of a 25 percent price move up or down in a month.

Discover has its strengths, writes Posner, and could face the recession better than its card-issuing rivals. It is “more careful with credit,” so its charge offs will rise “to 5.5 percent by year-end 2008 and peak at 6.0 percent in 2009,” according to Posner. In contrast, Discover’s charge off rate was 3.7 percent in its fiscal third quarter, compared with a U.S. average of 4.4 percent as reported in the S&P Credit Card Quality Index.

It also appears to have fewer problem cardholders, with about 20 percent carrying subprime level credit scores, “compared to 30 percent at many other issuers.” In addition, it grew card managed receivables at a 6.3 percent rate in its fiscal second quarter, compared to an industry-wide growth rate of 6.9 percent, according to the Federal Reserve.

In addition to Discover, Posner follows American Express, Capital One, MasterCard, Nelnet, SLM Corp., and others.

I've been predicting that this would happen for about 2 years now. On top of the problems mentioned above, we have a much worse one that will most likely cause a collapse of the entire American economy. There is the fact that the government is now spending more than 70% of the money they spend. Confidence in the American dollar is rapidly deteriorating overseas and the value of the dollar against other world currencies such as the EURO. We are being forced into buying EUROS with which to buy oil because some producers will no longer accept dollars for payment of their oil and the price of oil is escalating rapidly as well. Foreign news sources are beginning to talk about an impending crash of the American economy. This inevitably means that we will go to bed one Friday night soon and wake up to find that when the banks reopen on Monday our money will have been devaluated by some huge percentage, at least 50% or more.

We will then be stuck with a high priced home, high priced cars we can no longer pay for and no money to pay for the fuel even if we could afford the payments on them. The American economy will be in a recession far worse than the one we suffered in 1929. Unemployment will hit record highs never before heard of.

That is the likely outcome and bleak future for America.