From Reuters:
Late loans soar on troubled mortgages: FDIC
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation said on Wednesday delinquent loans at U.S. banks jumped 36 percent to $66.9 billion in the second quarter, the biggest quarterly increase since 1990, largely fueled by unpaid real estate loans.
Rising U.S. home foreclosures and problems in the subprime mortgage market have spilled into broader financial markets in recent weeks.
In a sign of the distress borrowers are facing, U.S. banks’ delinquent or noncurrent loans hit $66.9 billion at the end of the second quarter, up 36 percent from a year ago and up 10.6 percent from the end of the first quarter, the FDIC said.
The rise was the largest quarterly jump since the fourth quarter of 1990, the agency said. The second-quarter figure also represented the largest 12-month increase since 1991.
Noncurrent loans are those for which payments are overdue by at least 90 days.
“We remain vigilant,” FDIC Chairman Sheila Bair told a news conference on the data. “We are closely monitoring the situation in the markets as well as individual institutions.”
Charge-offs, which indicate losses due to unpaid loans, also jumped sharply in the second quarter to the highest level since the end of 2005. Net charge-offs totaled $9.2 billion, up 51 percent from $6.1 billion in the same quarter of 2006.
Bair said the “tremendous golden age of banking” for U.S. financial institutions has ended, at least temporarily.
“Everybody is being challenged in this current environment,” she said.