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Euro zone banks expect small bounce in loan demand - ECB poll

Published 01/23/2024, 04:14 AM
Updated 01/23/2024, 04:55 AM
© Reuters. A view shows the logo of the European Central Bank (ECB) outside its headquarters in Frankfurt, Germany March 16, 2023. REUTERS/Heiko Becker

FRANKFURT (Reuters) -Euro zone banks expect a small rebound in the demand for mortgages and corporate loans for the first time in two years as a slump in lending shows early signs of moderating, a European Central Bank survey showed on Tuesday.

The results of the quarterly Bank Lending Survey are likely to strengthen the ECB's view that the most brutal increase in interest rates in the euro's history has now been fully passed on to the real economy and lenders are beginning to anticipate a recovery.

The poll showed lenders continued to tighten access to credit in the last quarter of 2023 but fewer banks did so than at any point in the previous two years and than banks themselves had expected three months earlier.

Among the euro zone's four largest economies - Germany, France, Italy and Spain - none saw a net tightening in credit standards for mortgages and only Germany witnessed it for corporate loans.

While banks expect to raise the bar for extending loans this quarter, they also see "a small net increase" in the demand for corporate credit and for mortgages for the first time since early 2022, the ECB said.

"That's what the start of a gradual recovery looks like," Dirk Schumacher, an economist at Natixis, said. "Standards aren't getting tighter and demand is not shrinking as fast."

Furthermore, while terms and conditions tightened further on consumer credit, they eased for housing loans, the survey showed.

In corporate loans, there was "almost no net tightening in services" but this was more than offset by "relatively large net tightening in the commercial real estate, construction and residential real estate sectors".

© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A view shows the logo of the European Central Bank (ECB) outside its headquarters in Frankfurt, Germany March 16, 2023. REUTERS/Heiko Becker

Banks' access to funding via money markets, long-term deposits and debt securities improved as markets started expecting rate cuts from the ECB.

But short-term retail funding and securitisation tightened slightly.

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