Delinquency Rate là gì

Delinquency Rate Definition
  • Education
    • General
      • Dictionary
      • Economics
      • Corporate Finance
      • Roth IRA
      • Stocks
      • Mutual Funds
      • ETFs
      • 401(k)
    • Investing/Trading
      • Investing Essentials
      • Fundamental Analysis
      • Portfolio Management
      • Trading Essentials
      • Technical Analysis
      • Risk Management
  • Markets
    • News
      • Company News
      • Markets News
      • Trading News
      • Political News
      • Trends
    • Popular Stocks
      • Apple (AAPL)
      • Tesla (TSLA)
      • Amazon (AMZN)
      • AMD (AMD)
      • Facebook (FB)
      • Netflix (NFLX)
  • Simulator
  • Your Money
    • Personal Finance
      • Wealth Management
      • Budgeting/Saving
      • Banking
      • Credit Cards
      • Home Ownership
      • Retirement Planning
      • Taxes
      • Insurance
    • Reviews & Ratings
      • Best Online Brokers
      • Best Savings Accounts
      • Best Home Warranties
      • Best Credit Cards
      • Best Personal Loans
      • Best Student Loans
      • Best Life Insurance
      • Best Auto Insurance
  • Advisors
    • Your Practice
      • Practice Management
      • Continuing Education
      • Financial Advisor Careers
      • Investopedia 100
    • Wealth Management
      • Portfolio Construction
      • Financial Planning
  • Academy
    • Popular Courses
      • Investing for Beginners
      • Become a Day Trader
      • Trading for Beginners
      • Technical Analysis
    • Courses by Topic
      • All Courses
      • Trading Courses
      • Investing Courses
      • Financial Professional Courses
Submit
Loan Basics
  • Student Loans
  • Personal Loans
  • Auto Loans
Personal Finance Loan Basics

Delinquency Rate

By
Julia Kagan
Full Bio
  • LinkedIn
Julia Kagan has written about personal finance for more than 25 years and for Investopedia since 2014. The former editor of Consumer Reports, she is an expert in credit and debt, retirement planning, home ownership, employment issues, and insurance. She is a graduate of Bryn Mawr College (A.B., history) and has an MFA in creative nonfiction from Bennington College.
Learn about our editorial policies
Reviewed by
Julius Mansa
Article Reviewed
on November 30, 2020
Full Bio
  • LinkedIn
Julius Mansa is a CFO consultant, finance and accounting professor, investor, and U.S. Department of State Fulbright research awardee in the field of financial technology. He educates business students on topics in accounting and corporate finance. Outside of academia, Julius is a CFO consultant and financial business partner for companies that need strategic and senior-level advisory services that help grow their companies and become more profitable.
Learn about our Financial Review Board
on November 30, 2020

What Is a Delinquency Rate?

Delinquency rate refers to the percentage of loans within a financial institution's loan portfolio whose payments are delinquent. When analyzing and investing in loans, the delinquency rate is an important metric to follow; it is easy to find comprehensive statistics on the delinquencies of all types of loans.

How Delinquency Rates Work

Tracking Delinquency Rates

Typically, a lender will not report a loan as being delinquent until the borrower has missed two consecutive payments, after which a lender will report to the credit reporting agencies, or "credit bureaus," that the borrower is 60 days late in their payment. If late payments persist, then each month that the borrower is late, the lender may continue reporting the delinquency to the credit agencies for as long as 270 days.

After 270 days of late payments, the code of federal regulations considers any type of federal loan to be in default. Loans between borrowers and private-sector lenders follow individual U.S. state codes that define when a loan is in default. To begin the process of retrieving delinquent payments, lenders generally work with third-party collection agents.

Reporting Delinquency Rates

The credit bureaus may give borrowers various delinquency rate marks on the individual tradelines included with their credit reports. If a borrower is consistently delinquent, they will receive marks for 60 days late, 90 days late, and so on. If a borrower makes a payment and defaults again, then a new cycle of delinquency appears on the tradeline. When considering a borrower for credit approval, credit agencies and lenders consider all of a borrower's delinquent marks.

Often, especially with corporate debt, lenders will report total delinquency rates on loans according to the borrower's credit quality; this can help investors gain insights into the risks involved with specific loans.

Calculating Delinquency Rates

To calculate a delinquency rate, divide the number of loans that are delinquent by the total number of loans that an institution holds. For example, if there are 1,000 loans in a bank's loan portfolio, and 100 of those loans have delinquent payments of 60 days or more, then the delinquency rate would be 10% (100 divided by 1,000 equals 10%).

Special Considerations: Publicly Reported Delinquency Rates

The Federal Reserve System (FRS) provides public data on delinquency rates quarterly across the U.S. financial market. As of the fourth quarter of 2018, the total delinquency rate from loans and leases at commercial banks was 1.79%. Residential real estate loans reported the highest delinquency rate at 2.83%. Consumer credit cards reported the second-highest delinquency rate at 2.54%.

Compare Accounts
Advertiser Disclosure
×
The offers that appear in this table are from partnerships from which Investopedia receives compensation. This compensation may impact how and where listings appear. Investopedia does not include all offers available in the marketplace.
Provider
Name
Description

Related Terms

60-Plus Delinquencies Definition
60-plus delinquencies are home loans that are more than 60 days past due on their monthly mortgage payments.
more
What Everyone Should Know about Average Outstanding Balances
An average outstanding balance is the unpaid, interest-bearing balance of a loan or loan portfolio averaged over a period of time, usually one month.
more
Revolving Account
A revolving account is a type of credit account which provides a borrower with a maximum credit limit and allows for varying credit availability.
more
Beacon (Pinnacle) Score
The Beacon (Pinnacle) Score is a credit score generated by the Equifax Credit Bureau to provide lenders with insight on an individual's creditworthiness.
more
Default Rate Definition
The default rate is the percentage of loans outstanding that have been written off by the lender as unpaid. Default rates are economic indicators.
more
What Are the 5 C's of Credit?
The five C's of credit (character, capacity, capital, collateral, and conditions) is a system used by lenders to gauge borrowers' creditworthiness.
more
Partner Links

Related Articles

Credit Cards

How Credit Card Delinquency Works

Loan Basics

The Difference Between Delinquency vs. Default

Government & Policy

What Happens if You Dont Pay Your Student Loans?

Mortgage

How Many Mortgage Payments Can I Miss Before Foreclosure?

Debt Management

Should I Make Partial Payments on My Debt?

Personal Loans

How Personal Loans Affect Your Credit Score

  • About Us
  • Terms of Use
  • Dictionary
  • Editorial Policy
  • Advertise
  • News
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us
  • Careers
  • California Privacy Notice
  • #
  • A
  • B
  • C
  • D
  • E
  • F
  • G
  • H
  • I
  • J
  • K
  • L
  • M
  • N
  • O
  • P
  • Q
  • R
  • S
  • T
  • U
  • V
  • W
  • X
  • Y
  • Z
Investopedia is part of the Dotdash publishingfamily.

Video liên quan

Chủ đề