The credit crunch the Fed fears may already be taking shape
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[April 10, 2023] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Jeffrey Haley, the CEO of American National Bank
and Trust Company, saw the crunch coming at the start of 2023.
Rising interest rates and a slowing economy to him meant that loan
growth would likely fall by half as the Danville, Virginia-based
community bank turned its focus to better-quality, higher-yielding
credit, worrying little about volume.
Then a pair of U.S. regional banks abruptly failed in mid-March.
Instinct told him things would tighten further, with loan growth
plunging to perhaps a quarter of what it was in 2022, when his bank's
loan book grew by 13% to around $2.1 billion.
Coming into 2023 "my rule of thumb was whatever you did last year you
will probably do half this year," Haley said. "Based on current events
... I now think it gets cut in half again."
After a year of racing along a virtually unfettered path to higher
interest rates, the Federal Reserve is facing its first significant
pothole as the decisions made in hundreds of bank executive suites will
either add up - or not - to an economy-shaping drop in lending.
By raising the benchmark interest rate that banks use in lending money
to each other, tighter monetary policy makes consumer and business loans
more expensive and harder to get. In theory, that lowers demand for
credit-financed goods and services, and in time also lowers inflation.
The concern now is how far and fast that unfolds.
Household and business bank accounts remain comparatively flush, a
buffer against too swift an economic comedown.
But overall bank credit has been stalled at about $17.5 trillion since
January. Its year-over-year growth has been falling fast, and the Fed's
next interest rate decision in May now hinges on whether policymakers
decide that's just monetary policy running its course or something
deeper.
RATTLED CAGE
Inflation, as measured by the Fed's preferred gauge, remains more than
double the U.S. central bank's 2% target, and for now policymakers seem
agreed that another rate increase at their May 2-3 meeting is warranted.
But the potential for a worse-than-expected credit crunch remains
elevated in the wake of the Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank
collapses last month, which raised concerns of a larger financial panic.
The worst seems to have been avoided. Emergency steps by the Fed and
Treasury Department protected depositors at both banks, helping ease
what could have been a destabilizing run from smaller banks to larger
ones. Other actions by the Fed helped maintain confidence in the wider
banking system.
Yet the cage was rattled as a year of rising interest rates had already
put smaller banks under pressure, competing for deposits that were
leaking into Treasury bonds and money market funds that paid more
interest.
The response - less lending, tighter credit standards and higher
interest on loans - was already taking shape. Officials are now watching
for signs that has been kicked into overdrive.
Hard data on bank lending and credit will come into play, augmenting
topline statistics like unemployment and inflation that the Fed is
focused on. As Fed policymakers gauge whether tougher bank lending may
let the central bank forego future rate hikes, bank officer surveys will
also be mined for clues about sentiment among those driving credit
decisions.
Updated results for one, the Fed's quarterly Senior Loan Officer Opinion
Survey on Bank Lending Practices, will be presented at the central
bank's next meeting before being released publicly the following week -
among the more-anticipated editions of a poll that gets little attention
outside the most intent of Fed watchers and financial industry analysts.
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A security guard stands outside of the
entrance of the Silicon Valley Bank headquarters in Santa Clara,
California, U.S., March 13, 2023. REUTERS/Brittany Hosea-Small
"Survey data is going to be very important because it's going to
give us a sense of whether financial institutions are pulling back
even more on their credit standards," Cleveland Fed President
Loretta Mester said last week. "We already saw it happening, which
you'd expect to see as interest rates moved up ... That was kind of
a normal thing."
"Now we're going to be really assessing, OK, is this even a stronger
impact, because that's going to matter ... We're trying to calibrate
our monetary policy, and tightening credit conditions is the
mechanism through which that's going to impact the broader economy."
SENTIMENT WEAKENING
The survey of large and small banks asks high-level questions - Are
lending standards tighter or looser? Is loan demand increasing or
decreasing? - yet is considered a reliable gauge of how lending will
behave.
It was already showing the wheels of a slowdown in motion.
Results for the last quarter of 2022 showed a net share of around
45% of banks were tightening standards for commercial and industrial
loans, the survey question seen as the best barometer for the
direction of lending. Up sharply in the last three surveys, that is
already near levels associated with recession.
Some consumer loan standards were also getting stricter.
Other banking survey data has also turned down.
A Conference of State Bank Supervisors survey found the lowest
sentiment among community bankers since the poll began in 2019.
Nearly all of the 330 respondents, some 94%, said a recession had
already begun.
A Dallas Fed bank conditions survey, conducted in late March after
the two bank failures, indicated lending standards in that Fed
regional bank's district have kept tightening, with loan demand
falling.
What this means for consumption, business investment and inflation
"remains difficult to gauge," wrote Peter Williams, director of
global policy strategy at ISI Evercore. "This latest shock will add
another, challenging-to-model, layer to the outlook."
Tighter credit is hitting an already-slowing economy, with key
sectors showing stress.
Small businesses are already reporting tightened profit margins, a
recent Bank of America study found. With their reliance on bank
loans, lines of credit and credit cards, tougher financing
conditions may land particularly hard on that segment of the
economy, a key source of employment.
Matthew Luzzetti, chief U.S. economist for Deutsche Bank, recently
estimated if the next Fed loan officers survey shows a
10-percentage-point rise in the share of banks tightening credit, it
could lop about half a percentage point from U.S. output - enough to
turn expected meager growth into a recession.
"These scenarios would push lending conditions into a range that has
more clearly been associated with recession," Luzzetti and his team
wrote, saying they see potential for "a broader tightening of
financial conditions that will meaningfully slow growth at a time
when recession risks were already elevated."
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Dan Burns and Paul Simao)
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