FRANKFURT, Jan 28: Demand for credit in the 17-country eurozone remains weak, even though tensions seem to be easing in the region's financial markets, data published by the European Central bank showed on Monday.

Eurozone bank loans to the private sector declined by 0.7 per cent in December compared with the same month in 2011 after already shrinking by 0.8 per cent in November, the ECB calculated in regular monthly data.

A breakdown of the lending data showed that the growth rate of loans to private households appears to be slowly starting to recover, edging up to 0.5 per cent in December from 0.4 per cent in November.

By contrast, loans to non-financial corporations contracted by 2.3 per cent last month, after already shrinking by 1.9 per cent the previous month.

The central bank has long argued that falling loans to the private sector reflects weak demand for credit rather than tight lending conditions, given the pessimistic view of eurozone growth prospects and heightened risk aversion amid the crisis.

And analysts believe an upturn is unlikely to be seen any time soon as it will take time for recent more positive economic data to feed through into higher borrowing in the non-financial sector.

“An upturn is unlikely until the economy gathers momentum once more.

Our empirical studies suggest that to a large extent, the low level of lending is due to meagre demand,” said Commerzbank economist Michael Schubert.

UniCredit analyst Marco Valli said that lending to households was showing “signs stabilisation or modest recovery, while corporate lending — usually the last aggregate to turn, because it lags the business cycle — remains under pressure.”

But “if, as we expect, the next months will see a further improvement of both growth indicators and banks' funding conditions, the lending cycle is likely to embark on a moderate recovery sometime in the second half of 2013,” Valli argued.

“The eurozone may be heading for a recovery, but not a credit-fuelled one according to December monetary data,” said Berenberg Bank economist Christian Schulz.

IHS Global Insight economist Howard Archer was similarly cautious.

“Mounting evidence from surveys that eurozone economic activity bottomed out around last October has yet to be reflected in increased lending to the eurozone private sector,” he said.

“It remains to be seen if the recent overall strengthening in eurozone business and consumer confidence from late-2012 lows leads any time soon to an appreciable pick-up in demand for credit from the private sector and whether banks believe the economic situation and outlook is improving sufficiently to make it significantly more attractive and less risky to lend,” he said.

Marie Diron of Ernst & Young Eurozone Forecast said the “much more positive sentiment about the eurozone future that has prevailed in financial markets so far this year will probably take some time to materialise in greater credit availability and economic growth.—AFP

Opinion

Editorial

Interest rate cut
Updated 11 Jun, 2024

Interest rate cut

The decision underscores SBP’s confidence that economic stability is gaining traction.
Rampant zealotry
11 Jun, 2024

Rampant zealotry

Decades of myopic policies pursued by the state have further aided the radicalisation of significant portions of the population.
Cricket breakdown
11 Jun, 2024

Cricket breakdown

THERE was a feeling that Pakistan had finally turned the corner in their T20 World Cup campaign. Sadly, it was only ...
Approaching budget
Updated 10 Jun, 2024

Approaching budget

Many are sceptical of the premier and finmin of translating their words into well-defined actions in the budget. Will they prove their doubters wrong?
A fresh start?
10 Jun, 2024

A fresh start?

After a decade of acrimony and mistrust, it is natural to tread carefully. But the ball is in India’s court. Backchannel and Track II diplomacy can be revived.
Hidden cams
10 Jun, 2024

Hidden cams

THE Digital Rights Foundation has drawn attention to a disturbing trend that seems to only be ballooning instead of...