KEY POINTS
  • One of the big questions for retailers is: What will happen when shoppers' holiday bills come due?
  • Retailers are paying closer attention to factors that influence consumers' debt load, including rising interest rates and the resumption of student loan payments.
  • Credit card delinquencies have ticked up, though they are not as high as during the Great Recession.

Shoppers are springing for holiday gifts and decorations, but bustling mall traffic, full shopping bags and large hauls under the Christmas tree could hide a challenge for retailers: rising credit card balances and what that may mean when the bills come due.

This holiday season, shoppers who ring up purchases on credit cards will pay more interest if they carry balances from month to month after the Federal Reserve's string of rate hikes. The cost of borrowing has climbed as credit card delinquencies — the number of people not making payments toward their balance — have ticked up, though the metric remains below the highs of the Great Recession. In addition, student loan payments have resumed after more than three years of a pandemic-related pause, adding to the debt that many Americans are trying to pay off.