Record 7 Percent Surge Small Business Rent Delinquency In October

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    by Mish Shedlock, Mish Talk:

    Small businesses are struggling to pay rent due to higher rent inflation and fewer customers. The struggles vary by type of business.

    Record Surge in Small Business Delinquencies 

    Alignable reports Record Surge In Rent Delinquency: Up 7% In October, Totaling 37% For U.S. SMBs

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    Surge in Small Business Rent Delinquencies

    Due to ongoing economic challenges, small business owners’ ability to pay their full rent on time in October took a major hit based on a new Alignable poll. In fact, the U.S. rent delinquency rate among small businesses jumped 7% in just one month, marking the largest, most rapid increase in 2022.

    In September, rent delinquency was at a six-month low, as optimism for Q4’s earning potential was high and some small business owners reported increased sales.

    But now, a month later, 37% of small business owners in the U.S. were unable to pay their rent in full and on time in October, compared to just 30% in September.

    Poll Results

    • Higher rents for 51% of SMBs
    • Cumulative, negative impact of more than a year of high inflation, which has absorbed most sales gains
    • Recessionary fears
    • Steeper-than-usual gas prices (rising yet again)
    • Ongoing increases in supply chain costs
    • Rising labor expenses and shortages
    • Slowdown in consumer spending.

    The overall delinquency rate jumped to 37 percent in October from 30 percent in September and from 26 percent in December of 2021.

    Manufacturers are doing OK, only up one percentage point since December of 2021.

    Artists/Musicians are up from 10 percent in December of 2021 to 37 percent in October of 2022.

    This is an interesting set of numbers, especially education. Have parents stopped sending their kids to daycare?

    The only relevant article I could find is from February 24, 2022.

    PEW reports Working Parents Face Continued Chaos Despite Reopened Schools

    Federal data analyzed by Stateline shows that parents of small children have left the workforce in much higher numbers than other working adults during the pandemic.

    In the last quarter of 2021, 6% fewer jobs were held by parents of children ages 5-12, both mothers and fathers, compared with the same period in 2019, while other prime-age workers were only 1% short of pre-pandemic job levels, according to a Stateline analysis of census numbers provided by ipums.org at the Institute for Social Research and Data Innovation at the University of Minnesota.

    Parents, especially mothers, have lagged in returning to work, partly because of periodic school closures due to COVID-19 outbreaks.

    “At the beginning of the pandemic, at least everybody was on the same page and realized we were all in this terrible thing together. Now it feels like parents are alone in this. We’re forgotten,” said William Scarborough, a University of North Texas assistant professor who has a 3-year-old son in a pre-K program that’s often canceled. Children under 5 years old cannot yet be vaccinated, making them more vulnerable to COVID-19.

    Is it still a Covid issue or did that morph into a cost issue?

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