- Credit card delinquency has hit a 15-year high: 13% of all credit card balances in the US were 90 or more days past due in Q1 2026, according to New York Federal Reserve data — a level not seen since the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis; the figure reflects mounting consumer financial stress as elevated interest rates, persistent inflation, and post-pandemic debt accumulation collide with the limits of household balance sheets that have been stretched since 2022.
- The big banks are insulated from this stress by the structure of their credit card portfolios: JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Citigroup, and Wells Fargo serve primarily higher-income, higher-credit-quality cardholders, whose default rates are far lower than the broader market; the stress visible in NY Fed aggregate data is concentrated at mid-tier and subprime lenders — Capital One, Synchrony, Bread Financial, regional bank card programs — whose earnings tell a very different story than the majors’ Tuesday results.
- The divergence creates a misleading signal for investors and analysts focused on big-bank earnings as a proxy for consumer health: headline results from JPMorgan and Bank of America will show manageable credit card loss rates and stable or declining provision builds, while the underlying consumer stress at the 13% delinquency level is real and accelerating — it is simply happening in portfolios not visible in the most-watched earnings reports of the season.
- The dynamic has significant implications for the credit cycle: when stress remains concentrated at lower-income, higher-risk borrowers served by smaller lenders, it tends to stay contained — but it also tends to be a leading indicator, with prime borrowers typically following with a lag of 12-18 months if macroeconomic conditions don’t improve; the 15-year high in 90+ day delinquencies is a signal that the credit stress building since 2023 has not resolved and may still be in its early stages at the aggregate level.
What Happened?
New York Federal Reserve data shows 13% of US credit card balances were 90 or more days past due in Q1 2026 — the highest delinquency rate in 15 years. Despite this, earnings reports from JPMorgan, Bank of America, and other major banks this week are not expected to reflect the strain. The reason: large banks’ credit card portfolios skew toward higher-income, lower-risk customers who are weathering the environment better. The delinquency surge is concentrated at smaller lenders serving subprime and near-prime borrowers.
Why It Matters?
The divergence matters because big-bank earnings are the most widely-watched indicator of US consumer financial health — and in this cycle, they are systematically undercounting consumer stress. The 13% 90+ day delinquency rate is a genuine financial hardship indicator affecting tens of millions of Americans, but it won’t show up in the results that dominate financial media coverage this week. Investors relying on JPMorgan and BofA as consumer health proxies risk missing an important deterioration signal that is clearly visible in Fed data and smaller-lender results.
What’s Next?
Watch earnings from Capital One, Synchrony, and Bread Financial in the coming weeks — those results will give a much cleaner read on the delinquency trend than the majors. Also watch for any change in big-bank provision guidance: if JPMorgan or BofA raises loan loss reserves despite relatively clean current results, it would signal their own credit teams see the broader deterioration as a leading indicator for their portfolios too. The NY Fed’s next quarterly household debt and credit report will be a key milestone for assessing whether the 15-year high in delinquencies is a peak or a stepping stone.
Source: The Wall Street Journal












