Consumer credit increased at a seasonally adjusted rate of 2.5% in July and 3.4% in June. Total outstanding credit increased to $4.98 trillion during the month.

Resolving credit, largely a reflection of credit card debt, increased at an annual rate of 9.2% to $1.270 trillion in July. Non-revolving credit increased at a 0.2% annual rate, and total non-revolving credit is now $3.714 trillion.

Federal government holdings of student loans continue to be the largest portion of non-revolving credit, comprising 40% of nonrevolving credit. Depository institutions and Finance companies are secondary and tertiary holders of non-revolving, with 24.8% and 18.5%, respectively, of outstanding non-revolving credit.

Read the Fed release.

Jigar Gohel

Source link

You May Also Like

Shares of NYCB fall more than 20% after bank discloses ‘internal controls’ issue, CEO change

A New York Community Bank stands in Brooklyn, New York City, on…

CNBC Daily Open: Debt ceiling detours and divisiveness

US President Joe Biden walks on the South Lawn of the White…

CNBC’s best high-yield savings accounts of 2022

Editor’s Note: APYs listed in this article are up-to-date as of the…

Tales from the Crypto: Base Backup, Blockchain Payments Secure Funding, Crypto-Friendly Alums – Finovate

This week in Tales from the Crypto we look at the boom-induced…