Table of Contents

Charge-off Rate

The 30-Second Summary

What is Charge-off Rate? A Plain English Definition

Imagine you're a farmer who, instead of growing crops, lends out seeds to other farmers. Your business model is simple: you lend out 100 bags of seeds, and you expect to get back 105 bags after the harvest. Those extra 5 bags are your profit. Now, most of the farmers you lend to are skilled and have fertile land. They return your seeds with the agreed-upon “interest.” But inevitably, some seeds go to farmers with rocky soil or who face a local drought. They simply can't produce a harvest, and they can't pay you back. After waiting a season or two, you realize you're never getting those specific seeds back. You have to face reality and “charge them off” your books. You declare them a loss. The charge-off rate is simply the percentage of seeds you declared as a loss in that period. If you lent out an average of 1,000 bags of seeds this year and had to write off 10 bags as lost forever, your charge-off rate is 1%. In the world of banking and lending (like credit card companies or auto lenders), the “seeds” are dollars. When a bank lends money, it's making a bet that the borrower will pay it back with interest. But some borrowers lose their jobs, get sick, or make poor financial decisions. They stop paying. The journey to a charge-off usually follows a clear path:

  1. Delinquency: The borrower misses a payment. The loan is now “delinquent.”
  2. Default: After a set period of non-payment (e.g., 90 or 120 days), the loan is declared to be in “default.” The bank's collection efforts intensify.
  3. Charge-off: After a longer period, typically 120 to 180 days of non-payment, the bank's regulators require it to stop pretending it will be paid back in the normal course of business. The bank removes the loan from its balance sheet of performing assets and recognizes the loss.

It’s crucial to understand that a charge-off is an accounting action, not a legal one. The borrower still legally owes the debt. The bank can (and often does) continue to try to collect the money or sell the bad debt to a collection agency for pennies on the dollar. Any money recovered later is called a “recovery.”

“It's only when the tide goes out that you discover who's been swimming naked.” - Warren Buffett

This famous quote is the perfect lens through which to view charge-off rates. In good economic times, almost anyone can look like a genius lender. Jobs are plentiful, and consumers have money to pay their bills. But when the economic tide goes out (a recession hits), banks that were making reckless loans (“swimming naked”) are exposed by a sudden and massive spike in their charge-off rates.

Why It Matters to a Value Investor

For a value investor, analyzing a lending institution isn't just about its growth or its stated profits. It's about understanding the quality and durability of those profits. The charge-off rate is a truth serum that cuts right to the heart of a lender's business quality.

How to Calculate and Interpret Charge-off Rate

The Formula

The formula itself is straightforward, but understanding its components is key. `Charge-off Rate = (Net Charge-offs / Average Loans Outstanding) * 100` Let's break that down:

Interpreting the Result

A charge-off rate number in isolation is almost meaningless. The art is in the interpretation, which requires context.

^ Lender Type ^ Typical “Good” Charge-off Rate (in a stable economy) ^

Prime Mortgage Lender < 0.25%
Prime Auto Lender 0.5% - 1.0%
Small Business Lender 1.0% - 2.5%
Credit Card Issuer 2.5% - 4.0%
Subprime Lender 5.0% +

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A Practical Example

Let's consider two hypothetical banks to illustrate the power of this metric. Bank A: Steady Savings & Loan (SSL)

Bank B: Go-Go Growth Bank (GGB)

Here are their financials in a stable economic year:

Metric Steady Savings & Loan (SSL) Go-Go Growth Bank (GGB)
Gross Charge-offs $10 million $100 million
Recoveries $2 million $10 million
Net Charge-offs $8 million $90 million
Average Loans $2,000 million $3,000 million
Charge-off Rate 0.40% 3.00%

In the good times, GGB might be praised for its fast growth. Its higher charge-off rate is seen as an acceptable cost of doing business in its lucrative niche. The value investor, however, is wary. They see the low, stable 0.40% rate at SSL as a sign of deep-rooted institutional discipline. Now, a mild recession hits. Unemployment ticks up, and consumers get squeezed.

Metric (Recession Year) Steady Savings & Loan (SSL) Go-Go Growth Bank (GGB)
Net Charge-offs $24 million $360 million
Average Loans $2,000 million $3,000 million
Charge-off Rate 1.20% 12.00%

Analysis:

This example shows how the charge-off rate, analyzed through a conservative, long-term lens, can reveal fundamental risks that a superficial focus on growth would miss.

Advantages and Limitations

Strengths

Weaknesses & Common Pitfalls

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These are general estimates. Always compare a company to its direct peers.