US household debt reached a new record in the second quarter, surpassing a peak recorded at the start of the global financial crisis, the New York Federal Reserve Bank said Tuesday.
At $12.8 trillion, debt held by American families increased 1.2 percent from the end of the third quarter of 2008, according to the latest quarterly report.
And total borrowing was 15.1 percent above the trough recorded in the second quarter of 2013.
Mortgages account for the bulk of borrowing at $8.7 trillion, a $64 billion increase from the first quarter of this year.
Meanwhile, auto lending rose by $23 billion over the first quarter reach $1.2 trillion, while consumer credit gained $20 billion for a total of $784 billion, the highest levels for both since the end of 2009.
Student loans were steady at $1.3 trillion.
The foreclosure rate remained low by historical standards and the default rate was steady, the report said, with 244,000 individual borrowers in default, about the same as the second quarter last year.
At the end of June, 4.8 percent of outstanding debt, or $612 billion, was declared in default, of which $411 billion was more than 90 days delinquent.
However, credit card defaults rose for the third straight quarter, a trend not observed since 2009.
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