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		U.S. skies still bright for Main Street banks even as Wall Street frets
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		 [October 03, 2019]  By 
		Howard Schneider 
 ST. LOUIS (Reuters) - The view from Wall 
		Street may be all trade wars, tariffs and uncertainty these days, but 
		ask a Main Street banker and things are pretty darn good.
 
 Americans are building and buying homes, small businesses are borrowing, 
		and families are earning and spending money. Even the seemingly stressed 
		U.S. farm sector, which has borne the brunt of the fallout from the 
		Trump administration's trade battle with China, is holding its own 
		financially, with steady land prices backing the loans needed to stay in 
		business.
 
 It's an outlook that contrasts with the brooding about recession that 
		has driven U.S. bond yields to near historic lows in recent weeks, and 
		caused stock markets to wobble with each trade threat from the White 
		House. Even with markets diving another 2% on Wednesday and the World 
		Trade Organization slashing estimates of global trade growth, the mood 
		here remained firm.
 
		 
		
 Federal Reserve officials have "continually made the point that the 
		economy is on a strong footing. Employment is strong. The household 
		sector is strong," said Michael Stevens, senior executive vice president 
		of the Conference of State Bank Supervisors, the local regulators who 
		oversee the roughly 5,500 banks with less than $10 billion in assets. 
		Most have less than $250 million.
 
 "When you get down to that local level – I see consistency" with the 
		Fed's view of a continued, household-driven expansion, Stevens said in 
		an interview at the sidelines of a conference on community banking 
		hosted by the St. Louis Fed.
 
 Since the spring the CSBS has rolled out a new sentiment index built on 
		surveys of more than 500 community bankers from across the country. The 
		first set of results, in June, showed "an overall positive outlook," 
		with large majorities of those surveyed expecting stable or improved 
		business conditions and profit.
 
 A second reading was just recently released, covering a volatile summer 
		when President Donald Trump threatened to order American companies to 
		leave China, and compared the chairman of the Federal Reserve, Jerome 
		Powell, to a communist adversary of the United States.
 
 The outlook was unchanged.
 
 With a steady migration of people to Texas, "we see the positive - 
		people moving out to our part of the state, building homes," said Tom 
		Sellers, president of Alliance Bank in Sulphur Springs, Texas, outside 
		Dallas. "There is still a lot of construction, commercial and 
		residential," that is more than offsetting a steady consolidation in the 
		dairy industry that used to be more important to the bank's business, he 
		said.
 
 Despite the trade war and other risks, "I am still pretty optimistic 
		about where we are," Sellers said.
 
 DILEMMA FOR THE FED
 
 The survey results shed light on the dilemma facing the Federal Reserve 
		as it tries to understand whether strong household spending will 
		continue, or be sapped if a slowdown in manufacturing and global trade 
		starts to weigh on hiring and wage growth.
 
 
		
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			The business district along King Street is empty of pedestrian and 
			vehicular traffic ahead of the arrival of Hurricane Dorian in 
			Charleston, South Carolina, U.S., September 3, 2019. REUTERS/Randall 
			Hill 
            
			 
The risks seem truly scary, with the world's main economic actors seeming to 
have turned away from cooperation and toward conflict and central bankers 
admitting they may not be of much help going forward.
 For some at an annual central bank conference here, the situation is less than 
rosy, a reminder that disruptions, like the trade conflict, do not hit all 
communities in the same way.
 
"All signs for us are pointing to a recession," said Kish Bank president Gregory 
Hayes, who noted that small business lending in his rural Pennsylvania area 
flattened in May and has yet to recover.
 That was around the time Trump threatened to raise tariffs on Mexico over an 
immigration dispute, an event which jolted Fed officials in their analysis of 
economic risks.
 
 "On the small business side it is across the board. It is that project that 
maybe they are going to hold off on, or that expansion they are going to hold 
off on," he said. "Where there was just a ton of demand...we went flat."
 
Nationally, yearly growth in bank commercial and industrial lending has fallen 
by about half since April, from an annualized rate of 10% to around 5% - one 
possible impact of a slowdown in manufacturing and a decline in global trade 
flows.
 But the U.S. economy remains dominated by services and consumer spending, and 
the largely upbeat attitude here may show how buffered many parts of the United 
States are from the trade war that dominates debate in Washington.
 
 Regardless of what tariffs Trump has slapped on Chinese imports, or what 
retaliation China has taken, it remains the case that those people moving to 
Texas will all need a place to live, as well as grocery stores, barbershops, 
mechanics, and all the other services that follow population.
 
 
That can fuel a whole portfolio of loans for a local bank. And that is a dynamic 
that can last as long as jobs continue to expand and wages to grow.
 "We have a booming, robust economic situation," said Julieann Thurlow, president 
of Reading Cooperative Bank in Reading, Massachusetts, near Boston.
 
 She said the mood may be different in a city dependent on global exports and 
tradeables. But around Boston it is "really a service economy and a tech economy 
and education," she said. "There is low unemployment...There is huge demand for 
housing."
 
 (Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Dan Burns and Andrea Ricci)
 
				 
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