By: SoberLook.com
Private loan balances in the euro area continue to decline. Last month's drop of 2.2% from the previous year was worse than had been expected by economists. Source: Investing.com The area's banks are undergoing a sharp deleveraging exercise with balance sheets shrinking due to both loan write-downs and extraordinarily weak lending. Maturing loans are not being fully replaced with new credit. Pressure from the ECB's 2014 stress testing of banks (similar to what the Fed just completed) is also discouraging credit expansion. Reuters: - Lending to households and firms in the euro zone shrank further in February and money supply growth remained subdued, adding to the European Central Bank's list of concerns ahead of its policy meeting next week.Some have pointed to a "glimmer of hope" in the household lending balances which showed a small uptick in credit expansion. Eurozone household loan growth (YoY); Source: ECB The increase however came from a slightly slower decline in consumer credit (credit cards, auto loans, etc.), which continues to fall (year-on-year change is firmly in the red). This contraction to a large extent is driven by weak demand. Eurozone consumer credit growth (YoY); Source: ECB (apologies for the different time scale) Furthermore, growth in mortgage loans remains anemic, making this household lending uptick less of a reason to celebrate. Eurozone mortgage loan growth (YoY); Source: ECB Moreover, the area's corporate loan balances are continuing to see sharp declines - down 3.1% from the same time last year. Weak demand remains the culprit here as well. Eurozone corporate loan growth (YoY); Source: ECB In February Mario Draghi blamed credit weakness on banks' "window dressing" exercise of trimming balance sheets before year-end financial reporting. Draghi: - "One would not rule out a certain behavior by the banks that would like to present their best data by the end of 2013, which means that this is going to affect credit flows, which means that we may have different figures in the coming weeks ..."It would be interesting to see what Mr. Draghi will come up with this time to explain the ongoing contraction in euro area's private credit. |
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