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Sea of debt

theDoors

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Number of credit cards charges past 6 million mark
Cardholders spending more but are also rolling over more debt
http://www.straitstimes.com/print/BreakingNews/Singapore/Story/STIStory_620680.html
By Harsha Jethnani

FLASHING the plastic has never been more popular in Singapore, with the number of credit cards issued crossing the six million mark for the first time.

That works out to six to seven cards per eligible cardholder, and they are spending more with their plastic arsenal, too, as consumer confidence rebounds strongly.

Based on the latest preliminary figures from the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS), the number of main cards crossed the six million mark in October and hit 6.079 million in November.

Including supplementary cards - cards linked to the principal cardholder's cards - the total number of cards based on November's preliminary figures would be 7.46 million.

Singapore crossed the five million mark in main credit cards in November 2008, meaning new cards were added to consumer wallets at a blistering pace.

Market experts suggest the eligible number of cardholders is around one million. The taxman's latest annual report shows about 906,000 taxpayers have assessed income of at least $30,000, which is the minimum annual income required for a card. A back-of-the-envelope calculation works out to 6.7 cards per person.



Home > ST Forum > Story
Jan 5, 2011
CREDIT COUNSELLING ADVOCATE'S CONCERN
Personal debt bomb
http://www.straitstimes.com/STForum/Story/STIStory_620599.html

THE real star behind the recent Monetary Authority of Singapore statistics is consumer loans and not business loans ('Business loans surge in sign of upswing'; last Thursday).

Business loans actually contracted from July 2009 until March last year, and showed anaemic growth until the second half of last year.

By contrast, total consumer loans have never declined and have grown steadily with usually double-digit growth year on year. Even in the depths of the financial crisis, total consumer loans were growing at a high single-digit pace from October 2008 to September 2009, before spurting into double-digit territory a year ago.

The growth of total consumer loans has quickened from 10 per cent a year ago to more than 18 per cent for the past three months to reach $150 billion. Business loans managed only a double-digit growth from October to November last year.

The performance of business loans therefore pales in comparison with the growth of consumer loans.

The fast growth can be explained by housing loans. January 2008 housing loan figures were already 16 per cent higher than the corresponding figure in 2007. This double-digit performance lasted until October 2008, when growth figures slipped into the high single-digit figures before going back into double-digit growth in July 2009. Total housing loans are now $111 billion.

Since May last year, housing loans have been growing at more than 20 per cent year on year, a growth rate that must be the highest ever seen in Singapore.

Two other milestones which merit mention are that the total number of main credit cards crossed six million in October last year; and second - which is of greater concern - that rollover balances breached the $4 billion mark in November. This is the amount that is not paid by cardholders and on which interest is charged at usually 24 per cent per annum. Rollover balances have been growing at an average annual rate of 11.5 per cent for the past two years.

Personal indebtedness in Singapore is, therefore, growing unabated and the pace has quickened this year. The recent big surge in housing loans and the growth of rollover balances raise the question of whether Singaporeans, already facing one of the highest debt-to-income ratios in the world, have placed themselves in a very precarious situation.

If the economy stumbles and real estate prices decline, many individuals will be unable to pay off their debts.

Kuo How Nam
President
Credit Counselling Singapore
 
I think conerns for banks would be if the FT run.

Very hard to look for and sue someone over $10K when he is happily back in UK or Australia. Even if the amount is $50K it is not easily.

Locals are easy to catch
 
I think conerns for banks would be if the FT run.

Very hard to look for and sue someone over $10K when he is happily back in UK or Australia. Even if the amount is $50K it is not easily.

Locals are easy to catch

I have 2 pino ex-colleagues chalk up CC cash advance from several banks, then run road... The bank statements sent to office, we open a take a look... fwah... at least 10k each
 
I think conerns for banks would be if the FT run.

Locals are easy to catch

I am wondering how they can be geting the credit cards? Several of my PRC and Pinoy colleagues are holding a few credit cards each and they is having monthly pay of $1.2K to $1.8K only. :confused:
 
I am wondering how they can be geting the credit cards? Several of my PRC and Pinoy colleagues are holding a few credit cards each and they is having monthly pay of $1.2K to $1.8K only. :confused:

Easy credit. Banks these days will issue cards to just about anyone to make up the quotas. :rolleyes:
 
I have 2 pino ex-colleagues chalk up CC cash advance from several banks, then run road... The bank statements sent to office, we open a take a look... fwah... at least 10k each

I am wondering how they can be geting the credit cards? Several of my PRC and Pinoy colleagues are holding a few credit cards each and they is having monthly pay of $1.2K to $1.8K only. :confused:

I have made this observation also-the Pinoys are the biggest culprit in this.
If you ever have a Pinoy tenant, you will find all the unpaid bills and lawyers lettters coming in for months after they run road back to Phil or move on to other countries to repeat the act.

A Pinoy nurse or salesperson can stay in a condo while Silliporeans of eqv pay struggle to survive in a HDB 3 room flat.

With so many Pinoys being let in by this govt, things can only get worse.

Exercise your vote wisely and stop the rot.
 
I have 2 pino ex-colleagues chalk up CC cash advance from several banks, then run road... The bank statements sent to office, we open a take a look... fwah... at least 10k each

Bloody pinoys are crooks.

Never trust a pinoy, they may be same color with mat but pinoys are more cunning than mats.

By the way, opening other people's mail, pinoy or not, does not seems right.......
 
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