You are here

Business

Americans Are Dying With An Average Of $61,500 In Debt

Americans Are Dying With An Average Of $61,500 In Debt

According to a recent study, the average total household debt in America is just over $132,500, broken down as per the chart below...

... and thanks to the Fed's recent and ongoing rate increases, the repayment of said debt will become increasingly more difficult. So difficult, in fact, that most Americans will be saddled with a sizable chunk of it at the time of their death.

Actually, most already are.

Happy 10 Year Anniversary: "On June 22, 2007, Credit Spreads Began To Unwind"

Happy 10 Year Anniversary: "On June 22, 2007, Credit Spreads Began To Unwind"

June 21, 2007 is when the financial crisis - which had officially started on February 7 with an announcement by HSBC - hit home for Wall Street, with the news that Bear Stearns had staved off the collapse (not for long) of 2 subprime-focused hedge funds. This is what the NYT wrote that day:

The high-stakes game of brinksmanship began early yesterday on Wall Street, and continued throughout the day. Bankers traded telephone calls, frenetically negotiating the fate of two hedge funds.

 

Fed "Stress Test" Results Are Out: Every Bank Passes For Third Year In A Row

Fed "Stress Test" Results Are Out: Every Bank Passes For Third Year In A Row

Moments ago the Fed released the first phase of its annual stress test which, once again, found that all thirty-four of the US largest banks "passed", exceeding minimum projected capital and leverage ratios under severely adverse scenarios, based on their projected ability to withstand economic shocks, which  as Bloomberg notes, shows that "firms are getting the hang of the once-dreaded reviews." The result marks the third straight year all firms cleared the minimum requirements in the exams’ first phase, begging the question just how "stressful" this test truly is.

Pages