Rise in US household debt hints at end of deleveraging

09 Mar, 2013

US household debt grew at its fastest pace since early 2008 in the fourth quarter of last year, a possible sign that the painful process of paring back borrowing in the aftermath of the financial crisis may have run its course. Household debt rose at a 2.5 percent annual rate in the fourth quarter, the Federal Reserve said on Thursday in its quarterly Flow of Funds report.
It was the steepest gain since the first quarter of 2008 and only the third quarter since then in which debt levels rose. The data showed that the net worth of American households grew solidly during the fourth quarter of 2012, rising $1.1 trillion to $66.0 trillion, another hopeful sign for future US consumer spending.
The United States is slowly recovering from a severe recession sparked by the crisis. Growth remains tepid and unemployment in January was a lofty 7.9 percent, but the Fed has taken aggressive steps to spur spending, investment and hiring. Home mortgage debt shrank by 0.75 percent in the fourth quarter, while consumer debt rose at an annualised 6.5 percent pace, evidence of growing confidence among households.
The Fed has held interest rates near zero since late 2008 and has tripled the size of its balance sheet to around $3 trillion to support growth, underwriting a recovery in housing and a rally that has driven US stocks to record highs. Critics warn it is fuelling the next asset bubble and risking future inflation. But the Fed says it has these risks under control and has pledged to maintain its extraordinary measures until it sees a substantial improvement in the outlook for the labour market. The US central bank said the increase in Americans' net wealth in the fourth quarter was aided by a $480 billion gain in the value of real estate and a $130 billion advance in the value of household stock portfolios.

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