The credit markets are flashing warning signals that haven't been this severe since 2008. Rejection rates across the board—credit cards, limit increase requests, mortgages, auto loans, you name it—just hit 25%. That's the highest we've seen since the Great Financial Crisis.
What makes this particularly striking is the breadth. We're not talking about one struggling sector. This is consumers getting turned down for basic credit cards AND homebuyers unable to secure mortgages AND car loans being denied. When rejection rates spike this uniformly across all credit types, it typically signals either massive risk aversion from lenders or deteriorating consumer creditworthiness. Probably both.
For context, during normal economic periods, these rejection rates hover around 15-18%. The jump to 25% represents a fundamental shift in credit availability. Banks are clearly tightening standards aggressively, which historically precedes or accompanies economic slowdowns. Whether this triggers a flight to alternative assets or simply reflects broader financial stress remains to be seen, but it's definitely a data point worth monitoring.
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MoonWaterDroplets
· 12-07 03:13
25% rejection rate? Damn, the banks are really scared now.
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PositionPhobia
· 12-07 03:13
Damn, a 25% loan rejection rate? The banks are really panicking, even basic credit cards are getting denied...
Wait, is this really worse than 2008? Then we really need to be careful.
Maybe it's time to start pulling some things out...
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0xLostKey
· 12-07 03:06
Banks are really starting to panic; these numbers are a bit scary.
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AirdropLicker
· 12-07 02:55
25% loan rejection rate... The banks are really panicking. This feels a bit like 2008.
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NFTRegretter
· 12-07 02:49
Damn, a 25% loan rejection rate? This has to be a joke, even 2008 wasn't this crazy.
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SnapshotBot
· 12-07 02:48
Banks are really starting to compete this time—even basic credit cards are getting declined... This pace feels a bit familiar.
The credit markets are flashing warning signals that haven't been this severe since 2008. Rejection rates across the board—credit cards, limit increase requests, mortgages, auto loans, you name it—just hit 25%. That's the highest we've seen since the Great Financial Crisis.
What makes this particularly striking is the breadth. We're not talking about one struggling sector. This is consumers getting turned down for basic credit cards AND homebuyers unable to secure mortgages AND car loans being denied. When rejection rates spike this uniformly across all credit types, it typically signals either massive risk aversion from lenders or deteriorating consumer creditworthiness. Probably both.
For context, during normal economic periods, these rejection rates hover around 15-18%. The jump to 25% represents a fundamental shift in credit availability. Banks are clearly tightening standards aggressively, which historically precedes or accompanies economic slowdowns. Whether this triggers a flight to alternative assets or simply reflects broader financial stress remains to be seen, but it's definitely a data point worth monitoring.