Canadian Consumer Credit Market Driven by Strong Credit Activity

In This Article:

TransUnion
TransUnion

Chart 1: Canadian Credit Industry Indicator

Chart 1: Canadian Credit Industry Indicator
Chart 1: Canadian Credit Industry Indicator
  • In Q3 2022, TransUnion’s Credit Industry Indicator remained steady and close to pre-pandemic levels

  • Strong credit activity driven by higher consumer participation and consumer-level balance growth

  • Growth in credit usage and stability in performance somewhat offset by slowing credit demand in a high inflation and interest rate environment

TORONTO, Nov. 29, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- TransUnion today released the findings of its Canada Q3 2022 Credit Industry Insights Report (CIIR), which shows that more Canadian consumers are utilizing credit. Credit participation reached a new record high, with 27.9 million Canadians having active credit products with a total outstanding balance of $2.29 trillion. This is a year-over-year (YoY) increase of 7.9%, on a three-year compound annual growth rate of +6.4%.

As part of the CIIR, TransUnion maps consumer credit market health with its Credit Industry Indicator (CII), which rose 3.5 points YoY to 105.6 in September 2022, staying relatively steady following the Q2 2022 score of 103.8, after reaching a high of 110.8 in April this year.

“Rising CII levels generally indicate an improvement in the overall activity and health of the consumer credit market, which in the most recent quarter was primarily propelled by the strong credit activity due to balance growth and continued higher spend levels,” said Matt Fabian, director of financial services research and consulting at TransUnion in Canada.

“Credit performance remains relatively healthy compared to pre-pandemic levels, although the CII was offset somewhat by slowing credit demand in a high interest rate environment, with lenders also being more cautious in anticipation of continued macroeconomic headwinds,” he added.

Chart 1: Canadian Credit Industry Indicator

Chart 1: Canadian Credit Industry Indicator
Chart 1: Canadian Credit Industry Indicator


A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/b3c5182c-6c20-4dc3-9f6b-14f068000138

Source: TransUnion Canada consumer credit database.
(i) A lower CII number compared to the prior period represents a decline in credit health, while a higher number reflects an improvement. The CII number needs to be looked at in relation to the previous period(s) and not in isolation. In September 2022, the CII of 105.6 represented an improvement in credit health compared to the same month prior year (September 2021) and a slight increase in credit health compared to the prior quarter (June 2022).

Consumer balances growing at a healthy pace
Growth in the number of consumers carrying a balance was the highest among subprime* consumers (those consumers with higher risk of default), with the number of consumers in this segment growing by 7.2% YoY in Q3, although their share of balances remained relatively low compared to other consumer segments. This marks a re-engagement with credit among these consumers after a decline during the pandemic, likely led by the effects of inflation along with lenders increasing their participation in the subprime consumer space.