The economy seems to be picking up steam, yet bank lending does not seem to be keeping pace. Also, money stock growth does not give off positive signals in terms of how people are allocating their short-term assets in the banking system.
The question is: can the economy continue to pick up if people are staying very conservative in terms of their asset allocation in the banking system and the banks, themselves, continue to stay out of the lending market?
Overall, the total assets in the banking system (according to the H.8 release from the Federal Reserve System) have only grown modestly in recent months, up 1.3% from March to April at all commercial banks in the United States, with large banks (the twenty-five largest banks in the United States) showing a 2.1% rise and all other banks increasing at a 1.0% rate.
Over the past year Total Assets at all commercial banks are down by -1.5%, decreasing by 0.8% in the largest banks and rising 1.0% in the larger banks.
The problem with this is that the rise in the last month is due to a reporting change in the banking system and is not the result of real growth. On March 31, banks were required to bring a substantial amount of securitized loans onto their balance sheets from being accounted for as memoranda items.
The vast majority of this movement was connected with consumer loans. Thus we see that from March to April consumer loans at all banks rose by slightly more than 31%. The largest banks saw the greatest change, rising over 35%, while the smaller banks consumer loan accounts rose by slightly more than 17%.
The thing is, consumer loans are not increasing. The increase is coming solely fromt the change in the accounting for these securitized consumer loans.
All other loan classifications rose by much smaller amounts over the past month but actually declined over longer periods of time.
For example Commercial and Industrial loans, business loans, at all commercial banks rose by only 0.6% from March to April. They are actually lower over the past three months, down 4.0% and down 18.0% year-over-year.
Commercial banks are just not lending to businesses! And, this is across the board, in both the biggest 25 banks in the country and all the rest. Over the past year Commercial and Industrial Loans at large commercial banks dropped by over 19% while this same category of loans at small banks dropped by almost 9.0%
Real Estate loans have not fared any better. Up only modestly in the past month, these loans have declined for the past three months, the past six months and the last 12 month. Again, Real Estate loans at the biggest 25 banks have declined by slightly more than 2.0%, year-over-year, and they have declined by a little more than 4.0% at the smaller banks.
Shall we take these modest increases as a positive start to the increase in bank loans? Well, one month does not make a trend. We need to keep watching the banks to see if loan volume is increasing giving us some feel that not only loan demand is rising, but that the banks are actually lending again.
Cash assets at all banks declined over the past month. Whether this was a response to the Treasury’s use of their Supplemental Financing Account at the Federal Reserve (See my posts: “Federal Reserve Exit Watch Part 10”, http://seekingalpha.com/article/202476-federal-reserve-exit-watch-part-10; and “The Fed’s New Exit Strategy?”, http://seekingalpha.com/article/199444-the-fed-s-new-exit-strategy.) or the portfolio behavior of the banks themselves, there was a fairly sizeable drop in cash asset at all commercial banks.
Still over the past three months cash asset rose at both the biggest banks and the smaller ones. Again, the direction the banking system is taking with respect to excess reserves is still unclear. All one can say is that they have declined recently.
The banking system is still facing the fact that people are continuing to move their assets into the banking system and primarily into transactions accounts. This is seen by the fact that the M1 measure of the money stock has risen by almost 7.0%, year-over-year in April while the M2 money stock measure has risen by only about 2.0%. Thus, since there is almost no growth in the M2 measure of the money stock, there must be a substantial amount of shift between the non-M1 portion of M2 to the M1 measure.
In fact the total non-M1 M2 has risen by only 0.4% from April 2009 to April 2010.
As I have argued many times before, this is very conservative money management on the part of asset holders. People are putting their funds into transactions accounts so that they have them for spending. They are removing funds from non-transaction accounts which are less liquid and, with interest rates so low, not worth the effort of keeping their funds in these accounts.
This movement is also picked up in the decline in Retail Money Funds which have dropped almost 28%, year-over-year, and Institutional Money Funds which have dropped about 23%, year-over-year. These declines have continued at rapid paces for the last three months and the last month as well!
The efforts of the Federal Reserve are not being translated into bank loans or money stock growth. Monetary policy is not being translated into assets that support economic growth!
People and businesses are still in a defensive mode with respect to their asset management!
The Great Recession is over and the recovery has begun. Yet, the statistics coming from the banking system do not promote a lot of optimism. This is consistent, I believe, with consumers that are still reeling from being unemployed and losing their homes and with a banking system that is not out-of-the woods in terms of solvency issues (except for the largest 25 banks, of course.)
Strong recoveries are usually connected with strong growth in bank loans and the various measures of the money stock. Especially important is an increase in commercial and industrial loans…business loans. This is not happening.
From all we see the large banks are making a “killing” being subsidized with extraordinarily low interest costs. We learned last week that many large manufacturing and industrial business firms are sitting on huge amounts cash and other assets ready to “make a killing” when things do start to pick up. The big guys are in great shape!
If anything the financial collapse, the Great Recession, and government policy have done for big business what they could not have done for themselves. The transfer of wealth in America is going to be huge in the next five years or so thanks to Bush 43 and Obama 1. Greater wealth inequality…here we come!
Showing posts with label commerical loans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label commerical loans. Show all posts
Sunday, May 16, 2010
Monday, April 20, 2009
The Banking System and Bank Lending
The headlines in the Wall Street Journal shout out at us this morning, “Bank Lending Keeps Dropping” (See http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124019360346233883.html#mod=testMod.) The bank lending they are referring to is the lending at “the nation’s biggest banks”, the banks that were the biggest recipients of government money. The results: the biggest recipients of taxpayer money “made or refinanced” 23% less in new loans in February than in October, the month the Treasury kicked off the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP).
This is just one more piece of information that the banking system still has major problems.
This is the case even though banks are posting first quarter profits. The latest, Bank of America posted a $4.25 billion net income figure for the quarter. (See http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124021187032334351.html#mod%3DtestMod%26articleTabs%3Darticle.) But don’t get overjoyed: Apparently, excluding merger costs, Merrill Lynch contributed $3.7 billion to the posted number which included a $2.2 billion gain related to mark-to-market adjustments on certain Merrill Lynch structured notes. The results also included a $1.9 billion pretax gain on the sale of China Construction Bank shares. What does this mean? I don’t know. Who has any trust in the financial reporting of banks anymore!
What information do we have that indicates that the banks still have massive problems? Let me suggest several bits of information that add up to an exceedingly weak banking system.
First, let it be noted, again, that the Monetary Base, the aggregate money figure that is defined as all bank reserves and anything that can become bank reserves (currency in circulation) has doubled in the past year (97.5% increase year-over-year using non-seasonally adjusted data). This measure was increasing at a 2.0% annual rate in August 2008.
The in-bank component of the Monetary Base, Total Reserves in the banking system, in March, was increasing at a 1,722% annual rate (again, year-over-year using non-seasonally adjusted data). We have never seen figures like this before!
In August 2008, the annual rate of increase was -1.0. Yes that is a negative one percent year-over-year rate of increase.
And, what are the banks doing with these funds?
They are holding onto them!
Excess reserves in the banking system (non-seasonally adjusted) were right at $2.0 billion in August 2008. These are funds in the banking system that are just sitting idle on the balance sheets of banks in the banking system—not earning interest or anything. In the banking week ending April 8, 2009, excess reserves totaled $724.6 billion.
Let me put this in perspective. On September 4, 2008, the assets of the Federal Reserve System totaled about $945 billion. So, in the first week of April 2009, the banking system was keeping, in cash, a little less than the total amount of funds that the Federal Reserve had put into the banking system in the first week of September 2008!
If I look at the Federal Reserve Release H.8, I see that commercial banks in the United States, non-seasonally adjusted, had Cash Assets on their balance sheets in March of $915 billion, again quite close to Federal Reserve assets in early September. One year earlier these banks had Cash Assets of only $300 billion, so Cash Assets rose by 205% in the past year.
Now, the total banking system, in aggregate, is lending some. Total bank credit outstanding rose at an annual rate of 3.2% from March 2008 to March 2009. Within this category, Commercial and Industrial loans rose by 4.3% and real estate loans rose by 4.7%. Consumer credit rose by about 9.0%, of which credit card debt rose by 13.0%. So lending in these categories were increasing, but not by major amounts.
The interesting thing to note, security lending—Federal Funds lending and Repurchase Agreements with brokers—dropped by a third, -33.0% and Interbank loans remained basically flat. Banks reduced their lending to other financial institutions, including other banks, during this time period. Talk about risk averse.
The major story that these data tell is that commercial banks are afraid to lend, especially to their own kind. Delinquencies continue to rise, write-offs continue to rise, and banks continue to increase the provision they set aside for future charge-offs. The banks have gone back to lending only to those that don’t need to borrow, the way banking used to be. They are afraid to lend to anyone else and they are still uncertain about the value of the assets that they already have on their books.
This situation is not going to change overnight. There is not much that the Federal Reserve can do if banks won’t even lend to banks!
We see that “U. S. May Convert Banks’ Bailouts to Equity Share.” (See the New York Times article, http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/20/business/20bailout.html?_r=1&hp.) Still the question remains, “How deep is the hole in bank balance sheets?” We cannot provide the answer to this. Ultimately, the bankers, themselves, will have to provide that answer, and my guess is that bank lending will not start to pick up again until these bankers have that answer.
This is just one more piece of information that the banking system still has major problems.
This is the case even though banks are posting first quarter profits. The latest, Bank of America posted a $4.25 billion net income figure for the quarter. (See http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124021187032334351.html#mod%3DtestMod%26articleTabs%3Darticle.) But don’t get overjoyed: Apparently, excluding merger costs, Merrill Lynch contributed $3.7 billion to the posted number which included a $2.2 billion gain related to mark-to-market adjustments on certain Merrill Lynch structured notes. The results also included a $1.9 billion pretax gain on the sale of China Construction Bank shares. What does this mean? I don’t know. Who has any trust in the financial reporting of banks anymore!
What information do we have that indicates that the banks still have massive problems? Let me suggest several bits of information that add up to an exceedingly weak banking system.
First, let it be noted, again, that the Monetary Base, the aggregate money figure that is defined as all bank reserves and anything that can become bank reserves (currency in circulation) has doubled in the past year (97.5% increase year-over-year using non-seasonally adjusted data). This measure was increasing at a 2.0% annual rate in August 2008.
The in-bank component of the Monetary Base, Total Reserves in the banking system, in March, was increasing at a 1,722% annual rate (again, year-over-year using non-seasonally adjusted data). We have never seen figures like this before!
In August 2008, the annual rate of increase was -1.0. Yes that is a negative one percent year-over-year rate of increase.
And, what are the banks doing with these funds?
They are holding onto them!
Excess reserves in the banking system (non-seasonally adjusted) were right at $2.0 billion in August 2008. These are funds in the banking system that are just sitting idle on the balance sheets of banks in the banking system—not earning interest or anything. In the banking week ending April 8, 2009, excess reserves totaled $724.6 billion.
Let me put this in perspective. On September 4, 2008, the assets of the Federal Reserve System totaled about $945 billion. So, in the first week of April 2009, the banking system was keeping, in cash, a little less than the total amount of funds that the Federal Reserve had put into the banking system in the first week of September 2008!
If I look at the Federal Reserve Release H.8, I see that commercial banks in the United States, non-seasonally adjusted, had Cash Assets on their balance sheets in March of $915 billion, again quite close to Federal Reserve assets in early September. One year earlier these banks had Cash Assets of only $300 billion, so Cash Assets rose by 205% in the past year.
Now, the total banking system, in aggregate, is lending some. Total bank credit outstanding rose at an annual rate of 3.2% from March 2008 to March 2009. Within this category, Commercial and Industrial loans rose by 4.3% and real estate loans rose by 4.7%. Consumer credit rose by about 9.0%, of which credit card debt rose by 13.0%. So lending in these categories were increasing, but not by major amounts.
The interesting thing to note, security lending—Federal Funds lending and Repurchase Agreements with brokers—dropped by a third, -33.0% and Interbank loans remained basically flat. Banks reduced their lending to other financial institutions, including other banks, during this time period. Talk about risk averse.
The major story that these data tell is that commercial banks are afraid to lend, especially to their own kind. Delinquencies continue to rise, write-offs continue to rise, and banks continue to increase the provision they set aside for future charge-offs. The banks have gone back to lending only to those that don’t need to borrow, the way banking used to be. They are afraid to lend to anyone else and they are still uncertain about the value of the assets that they already have on their books.
This situation is not going to change overnight. There is not much that the Federal Reserve can do if banks won’t even lend to banks!
We see that “U. S. May Convert Banks’ Bailouts to Equity Share.” (See the New York Times article, http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/20/business/20bailout.html?_r=1&hp.) Still the question remains, “How deep is the hole in bank balance sheets?” We cannot provide the answer to this. Ultimately, the bankers, themselves, will have to provide that answer, and my guess is that bank lending will not start to pick up again until these bankers have that answer.
Labels:
Bank lending,
bank loans,
bank reserves,
cash,
commerical loans,
excess reserves,
loans,
monetary base
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