Post by Sapphire Capital on Aug 11, 2008 23:46:22 GMT 4
Fed Says Banks Toughen Standards for All Loan Types
By Craig Torres
Aug. 11 (Bloomberg) -- The Federal Reserve said more banks made it harder for businesses and consumers to borrow money as defaults and delinquencies on home loans soared.
Most ``domestic institutions reported having tightened their lending standards and terms on all major loan categories over the previous three months,'' the Fed said today in its quarterly Senior Loan Officer Survey.
The Fed, concerned that $494 billion in losses among financial institutions is damping credit, cut the benchmark interest rate at a record pace between September and April. The central bank also began accepting mortgage bonds as collateral and began lending to securities firms. The survey, conducted last month, covers 52 domestic banks and 21 foreign institutions.
``When the Fed started to cut rates, mortgage rates and other rates were actually lower than they are today,'' former San Francisco Fed Bank President Robert Parry said before the report. ``To say that things are easier in many areas of credit would be mistaken.''
About 75 percent of U.S. banks surveyed indicated they tightened standards on prime mortgage loans, up from 60 percent in the previous survey, the Fed said.
The Fed has reduced its main rate 3.25 percentage points over the past 11 months to 2 percent. Still, rates on a 30-year mortgage stood at 6.52 percent Aug. 7, nearly unchanged from 6.59 percent a year ago, according to data from Freddie Mac.
Reluctant to Lend
Banks may be reluctant to lend against housing collateral that is falling in value. Home prices in 20 U.S. metropolitan areas dropped 15.8 percent in May, the biggest decline since record keeping began in 2001, according to the S&P Case-Shiller Home-Price Index.
The economy is also faltering. The unemployment rate has moved up 1 percentage point during the past 12 months to 5.7 percent, while delinquencies on home loans to borrowers with weak or limited credit histories rose to 18.8 percent in the first quarter from 13.8 percent a year earlier.
``Large majorities of domestic respondents reported having tightened their lending standards on prime, nontraditional, and subprime residential mortgages over the previous three months,'' the Fed said.
Of the 32 banks that originate non-traditional mortgage loans, about 85 percent reported tighter lending standards, up from 75 percent in the prior survey, the Fed said.
Credit Cards
About 65 percent of domestic banks indicated they had tightened their lending standards on credit card loans over the previous three months, up ``notably'' from about 30 percent in the April survey, the Fed said.
Most banks increased loan rates over their cost of funds for commercial and industrial borrowing, according to the central bank. The proportion of banks raising such rates rose to a net of 80 percent, compared with 70 percent in the April survey.
``Very large majorities of domestic and foreign respondents pointed to a less favorable or more uncertain economic outlook, their banks reduced tolerance for risk and the worsening of industry specific problems as reasons for tightening their lending standards'' on commercial loans the Fed survey said.
``About 60 percent of domestic banks -- a slightly larger fraction than in the April survey -- reported having tightened lending standards on commercial and industrial loans to large and middle-market firms over the past three months,'' the Fed said.
Policy makers last left the benchmark lending rate unchanged Aug. 5 and said ``financial markets remain under considerable stress.''
Federal funds futures traders see a 69 percent chance that the benchmark lending rate remains unchanged at the October 29 meeting
By Craig Torres
Aug. 11 (Bloomberg) -- The Federal Reserve said more banks made it harder for businesses and consumers to borrow money as defaults and delinquencies on home loans soared.
Most ``domestic institutions reported having tightened their lending standards and terms on all major loan categories over the previous three months,'' the Fed said today in its quarterly Senior Loan Officer Survey.
The Fed, concerned that $494 billion in losses among financial institutions is damping credit, cut the benchmark interest rate at a record pace between September and April. The central bank also began accepting mortgage bonds as collateral and began lending to securities firms. The survey, conducted last month, covers 52 domestic banks and 21 foreign institutions.
``When the Fed started to cut rates, mortgage rates and other rates were actually lower than they are today,'' former San Francisco Fed Bank President Robert Parry said before the report. ``To say that things are easier in many areas of credit would be mistaken.''
About 75 percent of U.S. banks surveyed indicated they tightened standards on prime mortgage loans, up from 60 percent in the previous survey, the Fed said.
The Fed has reduced its main rate 3.25 percentage points over the past 11 months to 2 percent. Still, rates on a 30-year mortgage stood at 6.52 percent Aug. 7, nearly unchanged from 6.59 percent a year ago, according to data from Freddie Mac.
Reluctant to Lend
Banks may be reluctant to lend against housing collateral that is falling in value. Home prices in 20 U.S. metropolitan areas dropped 15.8 percent in May, the biggest decline since record keeping began in 2001, according to the S&P Case-Shiller Home-Price Index.
The economy is also faltering. The unemployment rate has moved up 1 percentage point during the past 12 months to 5.7 percent, while delinquencies on home loans to borrowers with weak or limited credit histories rose to 18.8 percent in the first quarter from 13.8 percent a year earlier.
``Large majorities of domestic respondents reported having tightened their lending standards on prime, nontraditional, and subprime residential mortgages over the previous three months,'' the Fed said.
Of the 32 banks that originate non-traditional mortgage loans, about 85 percent reported tighter lending standards, up from 75 percent in the prior survey, the Fed said.
Credit Cards
About 65 percent of domestic banks indicated they had tightened their lending standards on credit card loans over the previous three months, up ``notably'' from about 30 percent in the April survey, the Fed said.
Most banks increased loan rates over their cost of funds for commercial and industrial borrowing, according to the central bank. The proportion of banks raising such rates rose to a net of 80 percent, compared with 70 percent in the April survey.
``Very large majorities of domestic and foreign respondents pointed to a less favorable or more uncertain economic outlook, their banks reduced tolerance for risk and the worsening of industry specific problems as reasons for tightening their lending standards'' on commercial loans the Fed survey said.
``About 60 percent of domestic banks -- a slightly larger fraction than in the April survey -- reported having tightened lending standards on commercial and industrial loans to large and middle-market firms over the past three months,'' the Fed said.
Policy makers last left the benchmark lending rate unchanged Aug. 5 and said ``financial markets remain under considerable stress.''
Federal funds futures traders see a 69 percent chance that the benchmark lending rate remains unchanged at the October 29 meeting