Sunday, November 2, 2008

"A contraction in the availability of credit is the main source of our current economic woes."

Robert Peston on BBC about the disconnect between national banks cutting interest rates and yet borrowing rates are going up. Basically, the people putting money into the banks, not borrowing from it, are needing to get a higher rate of interest in this current environment:

"We all feel in an animalistic way that in an economic downturn, in a recession, the risk of lending - even to the bank - increases.

That's why banks are having to offer us higher interest rates to persuade us to put our money on deposit with them.

And really that's all you need to know to understand why the interest rates that households and businesses pay for loans have not come down as they normally do in line with the Bank of England's reductions in its policy rate, in what it calls its Bank Rate.

As it happens, the banking system is in better shape than it was only three or four weeks ago, when there was a genuine danger that our banks were going to stop lending anything to anyone at any interest rate.

But whoever you are, if you have money to lend, you want to be better rewarded for providing the loan - because you think (correctly) that the risks of lending have risen.

That's true if you are an individual depositing money in the bank (which is simply lending to the bank), if you are a bank lending to a small business or to someone wanting to buy a house, of if you are a money manager with billions to lend to other financial institutions."

Here's the point:

"What that means is that, right now, when the Bank of England cuts rates, it has the effect of boosting the profits of lenders - the banks and other financial institutions - rather than leading to sharp reductions in interest payments by borrowers.

If you are having difficulty keeping up the payments on a mortgage or a small-business loan, you'll think that's a scandal.

But it isn't a wholly terrible thing.

Even after raising all those billions in new capital from taxpayers, our banks need to strengthen their balance sheets further against rising losses on the tens of billions of pounds of imprudent loans they made over the past few years."

I'm sure that's not very comforting, especially if you're creditworthy and still having to pay higher rates.

Read the comments as well. Some of them are very incisive. Still, his basic point is correct.

However, to the extent that rate cuts don't lead to more lending, surely some of their worth is negated.

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