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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

U.S. consumers are still applying for credit cards despite higher rates

A customer inserts a credit card into a Square Inc. device while making a payment in San Francisco on March 2018.  (David Paul Morris/Bloomberg )
By Jonnelle Marte Bloomberg

U.S. consumers continued to seek out more credit cards this year even as the Federal Reserve aggressively lifted borrowing costs, a shift that cooled demand for mortgages, auto loans and other types of credit, according to research from the New York Fed.

Application rates for credit cards “remained robust” this year, reaching 27.1% in October, up from 26.5% a year earlier and above the pre-pandemic level of 26.3% in February 2020, according to the New York Fed’s most recent credit access survey released on Monday.

In contrast, application rates for credit overall declined slightly this year, following a rebound seen in 2021.

Demand is strongest from consumers with high credit scores, the study showed.

Application rates for people with credit scores over 760 were above pre-pandemic levels, while rates for consumers with credit scores below 680 were below pre-pandemic levels.

The Fed is attempting cool the economy and inflation by rapidly raising interest rates, which makes it more expensive for consumers and businesses to borrow money.

Policymakers lifted the target on their benchmark interest rate to a range of 3.75% – 4% this month, up from near zero levels in March.

The Fed’s rate moves are having a clear effect on the housing market, with mortgage rates near 7%, more than double the levels seen at the start of the year.

The shift priced out some homebuyers and significantly cooled demand for new mortgage loans.

Application rates for mortgage refinancing “plummeted” this year, reaching 8.9% in October 2022 from 21.4% in October 2021, the report showed.

Mortgage loan application rates overall declined to 6.7% in October 2022 from 8.5% in October 2021.

The report showed that some consumers are marginally more concerned about their future expenses.

The odds of being able to come up with $2,000 to cover a surprise expense in the next month dropped to an average 67.5% in 2022 from 68.2% last year.

But the anticipation of needing to find $2,000 to cover such an expense also declined to an average probability of 32% this year from 33.1% last year.