Credit-card issuer Capital One Financial Corp. wrote off an additional $1 billion for bad loans and posted a worse-than-expected loss in the fourth quarter due to a rising default rate.
The bank expects losses to worsen this year based on its expectation that the unemployment rate will hit 8.7% and home prices will fall another 10%.
Capital One lost $1.42 billion, or $3.74 a share, in the fourth quarter ended Dec. 31, compared with a profit of $226.6 million, or 60 cents a share, in the year-earlier period. Analysts had estimated a profit of 33 cents a share.
The bank said 7.08% of its credit-card and auto loans were in default, up from 5.85% in the third quarter.
- Wall Street Journal
Confidence among U.S. consumers approached its lowest level since 1980 this month after job losses mounted and the slide in home values deepened.
The Reuters/University of Michigan preliminary index of consumer sentiment fell for the first time in three months, to 56.2. The gauge reached a low of 55.3 in November.
- Bloomberg