By Liz McCormick
U.S. student loan debt now equals the size of the $1.3 trillion U.S.
high-yield corporate bond market, presenting investors with a whole
different range of risks.
“Delinquency
rates on student loans are much higher than those on auto loans or
mortgages, due to loose student loan underwriting standards, the
unsecured nature of student debt, and the inability to charge off
non-performing student loans in bankruptcy,” Goldman Sachs Group Inc.
analysts Marty Young and Lotfi Karoui wrote in a note Tuesday. “The
substantial majority of student loan default risk is borne by the U.S.
Treasury.”
While the trend of rising defaults on student loans doesn’t pose
“systemic financial risks,” it does impact household behavior as the
debt load itself hurts home ownership rates, Young and Karoui said.
The share of student loan debt that is securitized, meaning
it’s backed by assets and known as asset-backed securities, is about
$190 billion, according to Goldman Sachs. Of that, about $150 billion is
linked to loans where the repayment of the principal is guaranteed by
the U.S. government.
“Most of the remaining student loan debt not in ABS format is provided
to students by the U.S. government through its Federal Direct lending
program,” wrote Young and Karoui.
Copyright 2017 Bloomberg L.P. All rights reserved.
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