Source: Shutterstock.
The end of October found the lowest balances on credit cards in two years for credit unions and three years for banks, according to Fed data.
The Fed's G-19 Consumer Credit Report released Monday showed lenders of all types held $942.8 billion in credit card debt on Oct. 31, down 10.3% from a year earlier and the lowest balances since it stood at $936.5 billion in May 2017.
October was also another poor month for auto lending for credit unions, while the largest gains from a year earlier continued to come from first mortgages and unsecured personal loans, according to CUNA data.
A report Wednesday from the Mortgage Bankers Association showed the demand for refinance and purchase mortgages remained strong going into December.
Fed data showed credit card balances began falling in April, a month after COVID-19 was declared a pandemic, and have fallen each month since then.
The pattern, unlike the Great Recession, when monthly balances compared with a year earlier had median growth of 11.3% at credit unions and 7.5% at banks.
As of Oct. 31, credit unions held just over $61 billion in credit card debt, down 5.6% from October 2019 and the lowest since $60.5 billion in October 2018.
Banks held $844.1 billion in credit card debt in October, down 10.5% from a year earlier and the lowest since $837.7 billion in September 2017.
The reward for a slower descent in a shrinking pool is that credit unions' share has risen slightly in the past year. It was 6.5% in October, compared with 6.5% in September and 6.2% in October 2019.
Banks' share was 89.5% in October, compared with 89.6% in September and 89.7% in October 2019.
The Mortgage Bankers Association reported Monday that mortgage applications for the week ending Dec. 4 were 1.2% less than the previous week after adjustments for the Thanksgiving holiday.
Joel Kan, MBA's assistant vice president of economic and industry forecasting, said refinances accounted for 72% of applications in the week ending Dec. 4, up from 69.5% the previous week.
"Refinance activity increased last week in response to mortgage rates for 30-year, 15-year and FHA loans hitting their lowest levels in MBA's survey," Kan said.
"The ongoing refinance wave has continued through the fall, with activity last week up 89% from a year ago," Kan said. "The purchase market is also poised to finish 2020 on a strong note."
Those trends were reflected in CUNA's Monthly Credit Union Estimates. It showed credit unions held $512.5 billion in first mortgages on Oct. 31, up 10.4% from a year earlier. In the previous 12 months, from October 2018 to October 2019, first mortgages rose 8.9%.
Second liens fell 7.9% to $86.6 billion. They rose 4.7% in the previous 12 months.
Overall, lending growth over the past two years looks similar. CUNA found the nation's 5,336 credit unions held $1.19 trillion in total loans on Oct. 31, up 5.9% from a year earlier — down from 6.2% growth from October 2018 to October 2019.
Besides the shift away from credit cards, some of the changes are continuations of pre-pandemic trends — including slowing car lending and strengthening first mortgages.
Car lending has been generally slowing since 2015, with peak growth of 22.4% for new cars and 16.4% overall in February 2015.
New auto loans fell 3.3% to $143.6 billion in October. In the previous 12 months, from October 2018 to October 2019, they rose 0.7%. Used auto loans rose 4.6% to $242 billion in October. In the previous 12 months, they rose 4.5%.
New car loan balances began falling in December 2019, with the steepest 12-month drop being 4.1% for September. Used car lending growth peaked at 13% in April 2016.
CUNA's estimates showed credit unions had 125.7 million members in October, up 2.9% from October 2019. The previous 12-month growth was 3.6%. The Madison, Wis., trade group's report also showed:
- Loans per member grew 3% to $9,438 as of October. The previous 12-month growth was 2.5%.
- Savings per member grew 16.2% to $12,593. The previous 12-month growth was 4.2%.
- Assets grew 17.4% to $1.85 trillion in October. The previous 12-month growth was 7.6%.
- Savings grew 19.5% to $1.58 trillion. The previous 12-month growth was 7.9%.
- Capital grew 8.1% to $191.6 billion. The previous 12-month growth was 12.1%.
- Unsecured consumer term loans grew 10.7% to $51.7 billion. The previous 12-month growth was 8.1%.
- Fixed-rate first mortgages rose 14.7% to $389.1 billion in October. The previous 12-month growth was 11.7%.
- Adjustable-rate first mortgages rose 1.1% to $123.4 billion. They fell 0.3% in the previous 12 months.
- Second mortgages fell 17.2% to $29.7 billion. They rose 9.6% in the previous 12 months.
- Home equity lines of credit fell 2.2% to $56.9 billion. They rose 2.2% in the previous 12 months.
© 2025 ALM Global, LLC, All Rights Reserved. Request academic re-use from www.copyright.com. All other uses, submit a request to [email protected]. For more information visit Asset & Logo Licensing.