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Go Home Why Aren't Banks Lending?

THE STASH JULY 17, 2009

Why Aren't Banks Lending?

John Judis and I have been debating this question around the water cooler for the past several months, so we figured we'd drag it into our pages. He went first last week with this rather compelling piece. Today, I pushed back here. Here's a flavor for what I'm arguing:

In mid-October, then-Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson forced nine of the nation's 20 largest banks to accept $125 billion in government money. Despite this increased capital buffer, the five biggest banks cut their lending by 16 percent (roughly $120 billion dollars) during the fourth quarter of last year, according to the Fed. The next 20 biggest banks cut their lending by over 4 percent ($9 billion).

John would probably say this proves his point: It must have been the weak economy, rather than insufficient capital, that led banks to contract credit even after receiving all that bailout money. But the evidence suggests the opposite: During the same period, the country's small and mid-sized banks (basically every bank outside the top 25) increased lending by about 5 percent ($27 billion). Presumably both sets of banks were facing the same economic conditions; only the biggest ones were hemorrhaging capital.

Also, I try to draw some attention to the next looming disaster in the financial sector, small and mid-sized banks. (Though I don't get into it, this touches on some of the issues arising from the expected collapse of CIT):

The big banks, with their massive investment portfolios and their large exposure to home mortgages, were most vulnerable to the initial financial crisis and to the residential real-estate bust that precipitated it. It made sense that they felt the strain first. For their part, small banks tend to be heavily invested in commercial real estate, which has faltered only in recent months as the financial crisis has spread through the economy and evolved into a deep recession. In a recent study of small and mid-sized banks, the Journal projected about $200 billion in total losses through the end of next year, with commercial real estate accounting for roughly half of that amount. If that estimate is right, the paper concluded, "more than 600 small and midsize banks could see their capital shrink to levels that usually are considered worrisome by federal regulators."

Now, even if you combine all the small and mid-sized banks in the country, they only account for about a third of the assets in the banking system. (The 19 stress-tested banks account for the other two-thirds.) The reason they're worth worrying about is that, relative to other banks, they play an outsize role in supplying credit to the economy. The mega-corporations that do business with the biggest banks have multiple ways to get credit: They can issue corporate bonds, for example, or participate in the commercial paper market (basically a way to borrow money from investors on an extremely short-term basis). These companies tap lines of credit with the big banks that service them only as a last resort. But most of these other options are closed to smaller companies.

--Noam Scheiber

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I am speculating, but it is not the case that the clientele of big banks and medium banks is the same.  Depending on the distribution of the recessionary declines, this could explain why the medium and smaller bannks had loan demand while the big banks either didn't or would not respond.  However, it is also possible that the big banks aren't really in the money-lending business anymore.  They got out of it in favor of securities and are not necessarily in a position to get back in if they have lost the human infrastructure with which to engage in this business.  This raises the question whether banks should be permitted in the securities business and derivatives business (you can guess my answer) or should be sent back to traditional banking.  That is a reasonable thing to require of them in exchange for the unique ability to print money  

- roidubouloi

July 17, 2009 at 1:28am

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First, it's a myth that discussions and debates around the water cooler produce the most intriguing observations. Try the elevator or the urinals.

Secondly, never use expressions like, "this proves my point". In the world of global capitalism, there has never, ever been a point that was not proven. This is surpassed only by the points that have been. For all practical purposes, they are interchangable.

Thirdly, it's futile to make distinctions between big banks and small banks. Both are either on the way to becoming the other or they are already both----depending on whether they are dealing with the IRS or Congressional banking committee members.

Finally, be forewarned that discussions and debates between folks like, say, Roid and Noam and John, may appear to be at odds, but they are really little more than different ways of defending [or rationalizing] the same inherently corrupt system.

Whether this this might change if they switch the confabs from the water cooler to the urinal is hard to say. But I'm an empirical kind of guy, so I'm open to having this tested.

But only in a double blind experiment, of course.

gw

- iambiguous

July 17, 2009 at 2:49am

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Ever hear of the saying, "Once burned, twice shy?" Banks were giving out mortgages without any meaningful checks on a borrower's ability to pay, then selling the mortgages to Wall Street. You know the rest. Now they demand a borrower's blood and urine samples.  Otherwise, Roi is right and Glass-Steagle should be reinstated and Gramm, Leach and Bliley consigned to the nethermost reaches of hell.

- nbarry

July 17, 2009 at 11:30am

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