Policy

Pop Goes the Student Loan Bubble

Default rates jump 2 percent

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Zero Hedge has some lovely scary charts showing a remarkably sharp uptick in student loan delinquencies. The bubble has officially burst:

As noted over at Reason 24/7 today, Market Watch has some additional reporting:

New data released today shows 11% of student loans were 90 days or more past due in the third quarter, up from 8.9% in the previous quarter and 8.8% a year prior, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. It's also the highest since at least 2003, when the bank first started tracking student loan delinquencies. "It's a red flag and a warning sign that more Americans are struggling to repay their student loans — things are bad, really bad, and getting worse," says Rich Williams, higher-education advocate at the U.S. Public Interest Research Group, a nonprofit based in Washington.

The latest data comes at a time when delinquencies on many other consumer debts, including credit cards and mortgages, are dropping. Overall, delinquency rates on outstanding consumer debt fell to 8.9% in the third quarter, from 10% a year prior, according to the FRBNY.

Zero Hedge warned in September that the student loan bubble had already burst. Now we're seeing the fallout.