BREAKING: U.S. corporate failures and consumer stress just hit crisis levels,
BREAKING: U.S. corporate failures and consumer stress just hit crisis levels, the worst since 2008.
In just the last 3 weeks, 18 large companies each with $50M+ in liabilities have filed for bankruptcy. Last week alone, 9 large U.S. companies went bankrupt.
That pushed the 3-week average to 6, the fastest pace of large bankruptcies since the 2020 pandemic. To put that in perspective, the worst stretch this century was during the 2009 financial crisis, when the 3 week average peaked at 9.
So we’re at crisis peak levels.
Now look at consumers: the stress is even clearer.
Serious credit card delinquencies rose to 12.7% in Q4 2025, the highest since 2011, when the economy was still dealing with the aftermath of 2008.
Since Q3 2022, serious delinquencies have jumped +5.1 percentage points, a bigger rise than what was seen during the 2008-2009 period.
That means people falling behind on payments is accelerating, not stabilizing.
Late stage stress is rising too.
Credit card balances moving into 90+ days delinquent climbed to 7.1%, now the 3rd highest level since 2011.
Younger consumers are under the most pressure:
Ages 18-29 are seeing serious delinquency transitions around 9.5%, and ages 30–39 around 8.6%, both much higher than older groups.
Younger households drive a big share of discretionary spending, so this is serious.
U.S. household debt just hit a new record of $18.8 trillion, rising +$191 billion in Q4 2025 alone. Since January 2020, household debt has increased by $4.6 trillion.
Every major category is now at record highs:
Mortgage debt is at $13.2T, credit card debt at $1.3T, auto loans at $1.7T, and student loans also at $1.7T.
So, Here's what happening all at same time: - Companies are going bankrupt faster. - Consumers are missing payments more. - Delinquencies are rising sharply. - Debt balances are already at records.
This combination usually shows up late in the cycle, when growth is slowing but debt is still high.
If bankruptcies keep rising and consumers keep falling behind, it puts pressure on jobs, spending, and credit markets next.
That’s when policymakers typically step in.
The Federal Reserve’s main tools are rate cuts, liquidity support, and eventually balance sheet expansion if stress spreads into the financial system.
In simple terms: cheaper borrowing, easier credit, and more money flowing into the system to stabilize growth.
But policy response usually comes after the damage starts showing clearly in the data.
Right now, the signal from bankruptcies, delinquencies, and debt is pointing in one direction:
Financial stress is rising fast and the window for policy support is getting closer.
Every time the market drops, the same thing happens.
Bitcoin falls and people panic.
Suddenly everyone says: “Bitcoin is dead.” “It’s going to zero.” “It’s a scam.” “It has no value.”
But this isn’t new:
In 2013, they said it was dead. In 2015, they said it was over. In 2018, they said the bubble had popped forever. In 2022, they said crypto was finished.
And now they’re saying it again.
Every cycle, when the price crashes, people lose hope and forget that this has happened before.
When Bitcoin is going up, everyone calls it the future. When Bitcoin is going down, everyone calls it a scam.
Years later, when the price recovers, the same people who said “it’s going to zero” will start asking:
862,000 JOBS ERASED, THE BIGGEST DOWNWARD REVISION SINCE 2009 FINANCIAL CRISIS.
The annual BLS benchmark revision shows the U.S. economy created far fewer jobs than originally reported.
Total 2025 job growth was cut down to just 181,000 jobs for the entire year.
For comparison: 2024 added 1,459,000 jobs. That’s a massive slowdown year over year.
On average, 2025 saw only about 15,000 jobs added per month after revisions, one of the weakest years for job creation outside recession periods.
This −862K revision is the largest downward revision since the 2009 financial crisis.
Not only that, the total federal employees dropped to 2.68 million, the lowest level in 60 years.
Month by month data was revised lower almost across the board. Some months that originally showed job gains were revised close to zero or negative.
At one point, total employment levels were overstated by over 1 million jobs vs. actual payroll records.
This also continues a pattern:
• 2023 → revised lower • 2024 → revised lower • 2025 → revised even more lower
So for three straight years, job growth has been overestimated in real time. Yes, January showed +130K jobs and unemployment at 4.3%.
But that single month strength sits on top of a labor market that was far weaker through 2025 than headline data suggested.
Now if this trend continues, recession risks rise even more because job creation is the backbone of consumer spending and economic growth.
A weaker labor market increases pressure on the Fed to support the economy through rate cuts, liquidity injections, or even QE if conditions deteriorate further.
So while markets focus on today's strong jobs print, the revised data underneath is pointing to a much softer economic backdrop going forward.