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Mortgage Delinquencies Are Exploding: What Smart Investors See Coming
Mortgage Delinquencies Are Exploding: What Smart Investors See Coming

Forbes

time13-07-2025

  • Business
  • Forbes

Mortgage Delinquencies Are Exploding: What Smart Investors See Coming

RICHMOND, CA - JUNE 13: A sign is posted in front of a foreclosed home for sale June 13, 2008 in ... More Richmond, California. Nationwide home foreclosures filings spiked nearly 50 percent in May compared to one year ago and up 7 percent from April of this year. 261,255 homes reported foreclosure-related filings in May, compared to 176,137 one year ago. (Photo by) The national delinquency rate is only 3.2% on paper. But things are different behind the scenes. VantageScore and Investopedia both say that what lenders are currently witnessing is true: early delinquencies are rising faster than any other type of consumer credit. The stress is real, it's coming on early, and it's going faster than most investors think. That one sentence reframed the macro picture. It confirmed what many investors have felt beneath the surface: this isn't just about high interest rates or inflation fatigue; it's about behavioral collapse. The U.S. consumer is no longer just stretched. They're snapping. For all the talk about a 'soft landing,' this is a hard truth. We're witnessing the early stages of a credit deterioration cycle that markets are failing to price in. It's showing up first in subprime auto, now in mortgages, and next it may bleed into broader consumer credit and regional banks. This isn't a doom prediction. It's a recognition of inflection points I've spent my career identifying. The signs are flashing red for sectors exposed to leveraged consumers and real estate-linked lending. Investors need to ask: where is the risk hiding? Which companies are fragile? And more importantly, which ones are built to survive this storm? The ripple effects of a 200% spike in mortgage delinquencies could be significant for equities, especially as we look toward 2026. Those chasing high-beta names and ignoring balance sheet quality might be walking into the next drawdown. What's Really Driving The Spike in Mortgage Delinquencies? A 200 percent increase in mortgage delinquencies in just six months is not a statistical anomaly. It is the result of three powerful forces converging beneath the surface of the economy. Investors who ignore them are missing early warnings. The first is interest rate fatigue. After two years of relentless tightening by the Federal Reserve, the impact is finally hitting home. Variable rate resets on mortgages and home equity lines of credit are taking a toll. Credit card balances are ballooning. For many Americans, homeownership is no longer just unaffordable to achieve. It is becoming unaffordable to maintain. Second, there is the pandemic overhang and the disappearance of so-called excess savings. That story has ended. Consumers have already spent on their reserves trying to maintain lifestyle spending during periods of high inflation. Now, the cushion is gone. What remains is a fragile financial position with no room for error. Third, wage stagnation among lower income earners is compounding the problem. Nominal wages may have increased, but real wage growth for most working Americans has failed to keep pace with the cost of living. Prices have climbed. Paychecks have not. Every expense now feels heavier. The margin of error no longer exists. Mortgage delinquencies are not a blip in the data. They are a leading indicator. They are the first crack in a leveraged economy. And that matters for every investor trying to assess risk as we head into 2026. The Credit Cycle Always Starts Quietly It's easy to overlook how credit problems really begin. On the first day, they don't make the news. It always starts quietly. A few lenders tighten up on new credit issuance. Then, small losses begin to tick higher. Next, earnings guidance from banks starts to shift. After that, markets begin waking up to the reality that a credit downturn is underway. This is not alarmism. It is pattern recognition. We have seen this sequence before, in 2007, in 2015, and again in early 2020. Each time, there was a belief that the economy was stable, and the consumer was resilient. And each time, the real deterioration began not at the edges, but in the middle. It doesn't take a collapse in subprime to trigger broader concerns. Often, the first real cracks appear in prime borrowers who were stretched thin, quietly falling behind while headlines focus on everything else. Investors who wait for the obvious signs are usually too late. The time to pay attention is when the signals are faint but consistent. Right now, those signals are getting louder. when the signals are faint but consistent. Right now, those signals are getting louder. Why Markets Haven't Priced In Mortgage Defaults Markets are still fixated on tech earnings, inflated AI valuations, and the idea of a soft landing. That optimism may hold for now, but it becomes fragile the moment cracks spread beyond the housing market. The risk is in the timing. Mortgage delinquencies are a lagging indicator. By the time they appear in earnings calls or data sets, the damage has already begun. The real signal is behavior. It shows up when consumers start missing smaller payments first, credit cards, car loans, utility bills long before they default on a mortgage. If middle income borrowers are falling behind on their homes, you can assume the rest of their financial life is already under strain. Despite this, the market remains complacent. This pricing disconnect is not just curious. It is dangerous. When asset prices ignore early signs of consumer stress, they set up for sharp repricing. The smarter move is to position now, while others are still distracted by headlines and hype. Who Gets Hurt First? Let's get specific. A surge in mortgage delinquencies does not stay isolated. It bleeds into sectors that are structurally exposed to consumer credit stress. The following areas are especially vulnerable. When delinquencies rise, the pain does not stay in one pocket. It spreads. Investors need to be ahead of that curve, not reacting to it. Where The Opportunity Lies Most investors either panic or freeze when cracks begin to show. But disciplined investors know that dislocation creates opportunity—if you know where to look and what signals to track. At The Edge, we are actively watching three key areas where volatility could unlock real upside. 1. Special Situation Plays Disruption often forces companies to streamline. For some well-capitalized lenders, that could mean divesting non-core operations or spinning off riskier divisions to focus on high-quality credit or commercial lending. These restructurings are rarely well understood at the start. But they often create mispricing's when market participants fail to re-rate the remaining business. The telltale signs are in the filings. Look for changes in segment disclosure, restructuring charges, or management commentary that hints at strategic realignment. Breakups are not just governance stories—they are often the fastest path to unlocking hidden value. 2. Deep Value With A Catalyst Valuation alone is not enough. A stock that looks cheap may stay cheap unless something forces a shift. Take Synchrony Financial. On the surface, it trades at a discount. But without a catalyst such as activist interest, M&A potential, or insider accumulation, the market has little reason to reprice the risk. We are not just hunting for discounts. We are hunting for change, backed by signals that behavior inside the company or on the shareholder register is about to shift. 3. Counter-Cyclical Buys Consumer stress does not hurt everyone. In fact, some business models thrive in these conditions. Companies that operate in credit recovery, debt collection, or financial tech platforms designed to manage delinquencies could see a tailwind. The same goes for discount retailers with strong balance sheets and pricing power. These are not hope trades. They are behavioral trades. When the consumer tightens spending, the beneficiaries are often hiding in plain sight. The key is knowing which names have real leverage to that shift and which are simply cyclical placeholders. The Smart Investor's Playbook At The Edge, we approach markets with a clear framework. In environments like this, the best returns come not from reacting to headlines, but from reading signals before they turn into narratives. Here's how we think about it: This is not a time to be passive. It is a time to be process-driven, not emotionally reactive. Investors with a disciplined approach to signal tracking will be the ones ahead of the market, not chasing it. The Cracks Come Before The Collapse Most investors wait for a chart to break before they take action and they will wait for sure with mortgage defaults, as no one wants to believe it. But the smartest ones look for cracks before they spread. Lending standards are tightening. Defaults are rising. And the pressure is not at the edges—it is building in the middle. The market may still be celebrating new highs in the S&P 500. That celebration can vanish quickly if the consumer buckles under the weight of stagnant wages, high rates, and rising mortgage defaults. Behavior tells the story first. The author has clarified certain terms post initial publication.

People in the US: have you fallen behind on federal student loan payments?
People in the US: have you fallen behind on federal student loan payments?

The Guardian

time30-06-2025

  • Business
  • The Guardian

People in the US: have you fallen behind on federal student loan payments?

Nearly one in three federal student loan borrowers are at risk of defaulting on payments as early as July, as delinquency and default rates soar in the wake of pandemic-era repayment relief ending. About 5.8 million federal student loan borrowers – roughly 31% – were 90 days or more past due on their payments as of April 2025, according to a new analysis from TransUnion. Borrowers fall into default once they are 270 days past due. Based on current trends, approximately 1.8 million borrowers could reach default status in July 2025, making them subject to wage garnishment and other collection actions by the US Department of Education. In May, the government resumed collecting on defaulted student loans after a five-year pause starting during the pandemic. We want to hear from federal student loan borrowers. Have you fallen behind on payments? Are you at risk of delinquency or default? What has caused you to fall behind, and do you have concerns about the consequences? You can tell us your experience of federal student loan payments using this form or by messaging us. Please be as specific as possible when discussing your loans and repayments. Please include as much detail as possible. Please include as much detail as possible. Please note, the maximum file size is 5.7 MB. Your contact details are helpful so we can contact you for more information. They will only be seen by the Guardian. Your contact details are helpful so we can contact you for more information. They will only be seen by the Guardian. If you include other people's names please ask them first. Contact us on WhatsApp at +447766780300. For more information, please see our guidance on contacting us via WhatsApp. For true anonymity please use our SecureDrop service instead. If you're having trouble using the form click here. Read terms of service here and privacy policy here.

People in the US: have you fallen behind on federal student loan payments?
People in the US: have you fallen behind on federal student loan payments?

The Guardian

time25-06-2025

  • Business
  • The Guardian

People in the US: have you fallen behind on federal student loan payments?

Nearly one in three federal student loan borrowers are at risk of defaulting on payments as early as July, as delinquency and default rates soar in the wake of pandemic-era repayment relief ending. About 5.8 million federal student loan borrowers – roughly 31% – were 90 days or more past due on their payments as of April 2025, according to a new analysis from TransUnion. Borrowers fall into default once they are 270 days past due. Based on current trends, approximately 1.8 million borrowers could reach default status in July 2025, making them subject to wage garnishment and other collection actions by the US Department of Education. In May, the government resumed collecting on defaulted student loans after a five-year pause starting during the pandemic. We want to hear from federal student loan borrowers. Have you fallen behind on payments? Are you at risk of delinquency or default? What has caused you to fall behind, and do you have concerns about the consequences? You can tell us your experience of federal student loan payments using this form or by messaging us. Please be as specific as possible when discussing your loans and repayments. Please include as much detail as possible. Please include as much detail as possible. Please note, the maximum file size is 5.7 MB. Your contact details are helpful so we can contact you for more information. They will only be seen by the Guardian. Your contact details are helpful so we can contact you for more information. They will only be seen by the Guardian. If you include other people's names please ask them first. Contact us on WhatsApp at +447766780300. For more information, please see our guidance on contacting us via WhatsApp. For true anonymity please use our SecureDrop service instead. If you're having trouble using the form click here. Read terms of service here and privacy policy here.

One in three student loan borrowers risk default as delinquency rates soar
One in three student loan borrowers risk default as delinquency rates soar

The Guardian

time24-06-2025

  • Business
  • The Guardian

One in three student loan borrowers risk default as delinquency rates soar

Nearly one in three federal student loan borrowers are at risk of defaulting on payments as early as July, as delinquency and default rates soar in the wake of pandemic-era repayment relief ending. About 5.8 million federal student loan borrowers were 90 days or more past due on their payments as of April 2025, according to a new analysis from TransUnion. That's roughly 31% of borrowers with a payment due, up from 20.5% in February and nearly triple the 11.7% delinquency rate reported in February 2020, just before the pandemic began. The April figure represents the highest delinquency rate ever recorded. 'With over 200 million credit-active consumers in the US, the 5.8 million affected borrowers make up only a small percentage,' Joshua Turnbull, senior vice-president and head of consumer lending at TransUnion told the Guardian. 'However, for individuals who do not resolve their delinquencies, the personal consequences, particularly regarding access to credit, could be significant.' Borrowers fall into default once they are 270 days past due. Based on current trends, approximately 1.8 million borrowers could reach default status in July 2025, making them subject to wage garnishment and other collection actions by the US Department of Education. Another one million are expected to default in August, followed by two million more in September. This sharp rise in delinquency comes less than two months after the education department resumed collections on defaulted federal loans. The updated projections mark a steep increase from May, when the company estimated 1.2 million borrowers could default by July. The consequences for borrowers extend beyond collections. Those who become delinquent are seeing significant declines in their credit scores by an average of 60 points, according to the report. More than one in five borrowers who are now 90 or more days delinquent had previously been in 'prime' or 'super prime' credit tiers. After falling behind, fewer than one in 50 remain in those top tiers, with many dropping at least one full risk category. While only 0.3% of borrowers are currently in default, a relatively small amount of the population, the growing number of those in serious delinquency could signal continued trouble ahead. The slight increase from March to April, just 0.4 percentage points, suggests some borrowers may be trying to catch up, but the overall trend points to mounting financial stress among student loan borrowers.

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