"Lending
Yesterday the Federal Reserve released the result of an obscure quarterly survey (which in truth I had no idea existed) about the Terms of Business Lending. JPMorgan economist Michael Feroli had some interesting comments.
Today the Fed released the quarterly Survey of Terms of Business Lending. The data refer to Commercial and Industrial (C&I) loans made by banks in the week of February 2-6. Unlike the more famous Senior Loan Officer Survey, the STBL asks about actual terms of loans made, rather than subjective attitudes toward lending. Contrary to recent rhetoric that claims banks aren’t lending to businesses, today’s data show solid lending growth at record low contract rates. During the survey week, banks extended $95.6 billion in credit to businesses, an increase of 13% from the same quarter last year. Moreover, much of the recent decline in policy rates has passed through to rates facing businesses: the average rate for C&I loans in the first quarter was 2.34%, the lowest since the series began in 1997. Moreover, it is not the case that these loans are being made only because of existing credit lines: 77.6% of loans were made under prior commitment, down from the previous quarter and well below the recent peak of 84.7% reached in 2006. Other terms, such as average maturity or percent secured by collateral, show little change from recent surveys. In short, the hard data lend little support to those who scapegoat the banks by accusing them of choking off credit to businesses."


































By Don the libertarian Democrat on Mar 18, 2009 | Reply
John or Nick,
Could you take a look at E2.6 and tell me what’s going on between the large, small, and foreign banks?
Take care,
Don
By Darren Larson on Mar 18, 2009 | Reply
Don, I also noticed the difference between bank sizes. The rates are dramtically higher, the fixed period of rate is longer and the time since the commitment was made is shorter the smaller the bank. One would guess that commitments made by large banks 10.7 months ago (avg) are a lot different than those being made today. We shall see if the numbers change over time. Namely, large banks could start using different indexes, margins or installing floor rates.
On the other hand, the small bank numbers show that the commitment is 6.3 months on average. Plus, anything that contains a rate with a repricing interval greater than one year has a rate of 5.94% and these were less than a month ago in commitment time. These loans are also 97% secured and less than 8% are based on prime. In essense, prime is a useless index right now.
I would assume that large banks are attempting to swap out those rates or packaging the loans out, as making a profit at 3% interest has to be incredibly difficult. For the most part, small banks portfolio their loans, thus they need a profitable interest rate.