Bank Lending Standards Tighten Systematically
Bond and mortgage rates do not tell the whole story about credit market conditions facing businesses and consumers. The rest of the story is told by shifts in lending standards at depository institutions ― and that story is increasingly serious.
The Federal Reserve’s recent Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey (SLOOS), conducted in mid-July and released on Aug. 11, documents a progressive tightening of lending standards in all major components of U.S. credit markets.
The July SLOOS also asked banks about expectations for further tightening down the line, and the responses point toward considerably more tightening of lending standards for most types of credit well into 2009 — hardly good news for housing and the economy.
Since early last year, the Fed’s SLOOS has provided separate treatment of prime, subprime and “nontraditional” home mortgages (primarily pay-option and interest-only ARMs as well as Alt-A products).
The July survey showed that 75% of respondent banks had tightened their lending standards on prime mortgages during the previous three months, and the readings for subprime and nontraditional home mortgages both came to 85%.
Of course, this round of tightening comes on top of a series of tightening moves during the past two years, and the cumulative tightening process is alarming to say the least.
Looking forward, large percentages of banks said they expect to tighten lending standards for home mortgages (prime or nonprime) during the second half of this year and during the first half of 2009, adding to the cumulative tightening process.
The July SLOOS also asked banks about lending standards on commercial real estate loans, a category that includes residential construction and land development loans.
Eighty percent of respondents said they had tightened credit standards for approving applications for such loans over the past three months, similar to findings of the Fed’s April survey, and a majority of banks expect to tighten further in the second half of this year and the first half of 2009.
NAHB’s surveys of builders also have been identifying substantial cumulative tightening of lending standards on land acquisition, land development and construction loans in recent quarters, and the Fed’s survey suggests that there’s more to come down the line. [return to top]
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