UK credit card borrowing soars by most since 2005 as cost-of-living squeeze tightens

Credit card borrowing was 11.6 per cent higher than in April 2021, marking the biggest increase since November 2005. PHOTO: REUTERS

LONDON (BLOOMBERG) - Credit card borrowing in Britain rose last month at the fastest annual rate since 2005, possibly reflecting a worsening cost-of-living squeeze that may now be starting to slow the housing market, Bank of England data suggested on Tuesday.

The BoE said credit card borrowing was 11.6 per cent higher than in April 2021, marking the biggest increase since November 2005.

Overall consumer credit, which includes personal loans and car finance deals, rose by 5.7 per cent in annual terms, the fastest growth since February 2020.

The increase in borrowing came despite business surveys showing signs of a marked slowdown in demand, particularly among consumer-facing companies.

Households were hit last month by a double whammy of surging energy costs and higher taxes. The hit to disposable income - likely the worst since modern records began in the mid-1950s - means Britain is at risk of entering recession later this year.

Last week finance minister Rishi Sunak announced £15 billion (S$25.8 billion) of further support for households struggling to meet their bills.

"The solid rise in unsecured borrowing in April suggests that households are using credit to support their spending as the cost of living squeeze has intensified," said Nicholas Farr, assistant economist at consultancy Capital Economics.

The BoE figures are not adjusted for inflation which hit a 40-year high of 9 per cent in April, so some of the increase in borrowing likely reflects a price effect.

The data also pointed to a possible slowing of Britain's housing market, which has seen rapid increases in house prices over the past two years.

Lenders approved 65,974 mortgages in April, the smallest total since June 2020 and down from 69,531 in March, the BoE said. A Reuters poll of economists had pointed to approvals of roughly 70,000.

"Higher rates and falling real incomes are likely to dampen demand after a period of loose monetary policy," said Karim Haji, head of financial services at accountants KPMG UK.

Mortgage lender Halifax reported annual price growth slowed to 10.8 per cent in April after hitting a nearly 15-year high of 11.2 per cent in February.

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