Banks are Tightening Credit - What it Means for You
I spent most of last week at a banking conference in Chicago. It was one of the better industry events I’ve attended in the past couple of years. The panel of speakers included representation from every sector of the financial services market, from a key analyst at Goldman Sachs to a former President’s chief economic advisor.
From the perspective of a casual observer, what’s going on in our economy is really interesting - we’re seeing unprecedented lending standards result in unprecedented charge-offs. No one knows how bad it’s going to get, but everyone I visited with over the course event agreed that the economy is going to get worse before it gets better.
So, how is this going to impact the average bank customer? Here are my best guesses on how the next couple of years are going to shape up for bank customers.
1. Mortgage underwriting standards are going to get more stringent
This isn’t a surprise. Expect it to become much more difficult to get into a home. Individuals with low debt-to-income ratios and credit scores over 740 will still have access to credit of all kinds, including mortgages, but those with less-than-perfect credit, no down payment, and high consumer debt are going to have a hard time getting into a traditional 30-year fixed mortgage at the best rates.
New trend: banks will begin to market savings accounts targeted to those that have been asked by their lenders to make a 10% down payment on The American Dream
2. Banks will continue to come up with creative savings account service bundles
Banks of all sizes are experiencing record losses and write-downs, and liquidity problems are running rampant. Banks need low-cost deposits more than ever.
Look for more checking/savings bundles like Bank of America’s “Keep the Change” and Wachovia’s “Way to Save.” Small banks are getting into the innovative savings game as well - check out this article at netbanker about a new product called “SmartyPig” - it’s a savings account with a social networking element currently in beta at West Bank.
Also expect to see ‘creative positioning’ of existing bank products. Banks will create an offshoot of a traditional money market account or high-yield savings and call it a “risk-free CD” - a savings product that has a guaranteed rate of return but can be withdrawn at any time, without penalty.
3. Student loans will be the next victim of the sub-prime fallout
50 of the 2700 current student lenders have announced plans to discontinue their student lending programs. Expect rates on non-federal student loans to climb into the double digits.
4. Long-term CD rates will rise
The only piece of really good news I have is that the yield curve is positively sloping for the first time in a few years. Expect to see more CD specials locking in decent rates for 2-5 year money.
5. Household pricing will be next big thing in deposits
Banks are doing a lot more household (also called “relationship”) pricing. We’re going to see banks wave “buh-bye” to unprofitable accounts by dropping rates on expensive single-relationship account holders and high-touch customers with small balances.
Only a handful of the largest US Banks have the technology and analytics in place to do this today, but eventually most banks will set account interest rates and run specials on a customer-by-customer basis - much the same way airlines price airfare.
Parting Thoughts
The experts that addressed my group couldn’t tell us how long this “economic downturn” will last - we heard everything from 18 months to five years - but they did agree that deposits are going to see a lot of action as banks try to improve their cash positions. If the Fed would just be a bit more concerned about inflation and stop lowering target interest rates - it would be a great time to be a saver!
March 10th, 2008 at 7:58 am
It would be great to have higher savings rates. Could you work on that for us?
March 10th, 2008 at 12:20 pm
So, Is 740 the new 720? It seems like that FICO score got you pretty much whateve you wanted, but if it goes to 740…plus FICO 08 rolls, it will be much tighter!
March 10th, 2008 at 12:33 pm
It probably won’t be too hard to get a first mortgage with a 720 credit score and low debt-to-income ratio - it will be much more challenging if you want to borrow 100% and are carrying other debt.
My bank buys a lot of HELOC pools - and we just raised on minimum FICO requirement to 740.
March 12th, 2008 at 3:03 pm
Nobody should buy a house without a 10-20% down payment. Interesting thing - when I was young (admittedly almost 30 years ago) I thought you could only buy a house if you had a 20% down payment so I saved up $10K and bought a $45K house. That was 1978. Home prices dropped for the next few years as mortgages neached 15%. I needed to sell my house and was able to sell it for $41K without it being a crisis because I had paid 20% down. Home ownership is not cheap. If you can’t save any money on your present income, then you probably shouldn’t be buying a house. Isn’t that why we have the mess we have now? People plan financially so that the only way they are OK is if everything goes fine. Unfortunately, everything doesn’t always go fine.
March 17th, 2008 at 5:03 am
[…] shares her thoughts on the future of the banking industry at Banker […]
March 21st, 2008 at 1:25 pm
[…] Banks are Tightening Credit - What it Means for You - BankerGirl From the perspective of a casual observer, what’s going on in our economy is really interesting - we’re seeing unprecedented lending standards result in unprecedented charge-offs. No one knows how bad it’s going to get, but everyone I visited with over the course event agreed that the economy is going to get worse before it gets better. […]