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Scenario × Asset Analysis

What Happens to Financials (XLF) When Credit Card Delinquencies Spike?

What happens when credit card delinquencies spike? Consumer stress, retail impact, and bank earnings implications.

Financials (XLF)
$51.78
as of Apr 14, 2026
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Trigger: Credit Card Delinquency Rate
2.94%
Condition: rises above 3.5%
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How Financials (XLF) Responds

Large card issuers face margin compression as charge-offs rise.

Scenario Background

Credit card delinquency rates measure the percentage of credit card balances past due 30+ days. Rising delinquencies signal consumer financial stress and typically accompany rising unemployment, declining real income, or the expiration of pandemic-era support programs. The threshold above 3.5% has historically been associated with meaningful consumer distress.

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Historical Context

US credit card delinquency peaked at 6.8% in 2009, troughed at 2.1% in 2021 (stimulus-boosted), and has been rising since 2022 from 1.6% (subset measure) through 3%+ by 2024. The 1990-91 recession saw delinquencies reach 5.5%. The 2020 COVID shock saw delinquencies decline due to stimulus payments and forbearance programs, an unusual pattern. Current levels, while below crisis peaks, are elevated relative to the 2014-2021 period.

What to Watch For

  • Credit card delinquencies above 4%
  • Auto loan delinquencies rising
  • Subprime auto stress signals
  • Credit card charge-off rates rising above 4%
  • Bank consumer loan loss provisions rising

Other Assets When Credit Card Delinquencies Spike

Other Scenarios Affecting Financials (XLF)

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