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Sub-prime credit card applications rocket

Emma Lunn
Written By:
Emma Lunn
Posted:
Updated:
11/11/2020

Sub-prime credit card applications jumped 143% between August and September, according to Equifax.

Data from the credit reference agency’s Market Pulse series found that new credit card accounts plummeted following the start of the first UK lockdown. But sub-prime approvals have bounced back hard, more than doubling since August 2020.

According to Equifax, the overall volume of new credit card accounts bottomed out in May, and was 86% below March levels when UK lockdown measures first began.

The fall was sharpest among near-prime credit card accounts (91%), followed by prime and sub-prime (86% and 85% respectively).

In September new accounts were down by 60% overall since March, with the highest drop in prime accounts, down by 82%.

But new sub-prime accounts are recovering strongly, with a jump of 143% from August to September, compared to a more modest increase of 64% across all credit card categories.

While the total volume of new sub-prime accounts remains less than half of levels at the start of lockdown in March, the average credit limit has risen by 12% since its trough in July.

Paul Heywood, chief data and analytics officer at Equifax UK, said: “The accelerated rate of adoption within sub-prime products is a warning sign that an increasing number of consumers may be facing financial difficulty. While the credit limits associated with these accounts are lower than average, the resulting cost of borrowing can still represent a significant proportion of an individual’s income, particularly in an environment where nearly a third of adults have suffered a fall in overall household income.

“Covid-19 government support schemes have provided a level of protection for many people, but there is undeniably a growing financial divide within the UK. With the proportion of furloughed employees highest among the lowest quartile of earners and households on lower incomes most likely to have leant on their savings during the first lockdown3, the FCA now estimates 12 million Britons will struggle to repay debt or cover their bills. With a further national lockdown now in force the financially vulnerable may face a challenging period ahead.”