Saturday, March 6, 2010

US borrowing saw unexpected rise in January

  

  

US credit cards

  Credit card borrowing, however, has fallen for the 16th month in a row

  Borrowing by US consumers rose for the first time in a year in January, according to the Federal Reserve.

  The central bank said consumer credit rose 2.4% or $5bn (£3.3bn) from December 2009 to a total of $2.45 trillion in the first month of 2010.

  It was the first gain after a record 11 straight declines and it was the largest increase since July 2008.

  Analysts were expecting a $4.5bn decrease in January following a $4.6bn fall in December.

  January's figure was boosted by a $6.62bn, or 5%, increase in credit for car loans.

  However, credit card borrowing, which has now fallen for the 16th month in a row, declined by $1.7bn, or 2.3%.

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