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The Credit Squeeze Scare

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The Federal Reserve Board chairman described the credit squeeze as being "as severe as any supply-induced constraint ever, other than from policy actions." That statement should help to prompt Congress into quick passage of the bank bailout bill, except this quote is from February of 1991, and the chairman at the time was Alan Greenspan.

The economy is in a recession and banks always tighten up on credit in a recession. When the economy's growth prospects are in question, it puts the health of any particular business into question. Therefore, banks will be far more hesitant to make loans during a period of economic weakness. There were literally hundreds of news stories about the credit squeeze in the 1990-1991 recession.

While the story of the big Wall Street banks teetering and/or crashing may be unique to the current downturn, the stories we are hearing of the main street credit squeeze could be cut and pasted from the news coverage of the 1990-1991 recession.

There is little reason to believe that the current tightness is substantially worse than what we have seen in prior recessions.

The most obvious measure of credit tightness is interest rates. We expect that banks will raise interest rates if the demand for credit substantially exceeds the supply. Yet, the interest rates on most categories of loans are far below their averages over recent decades. According to the Mortgage Bankers Association, the average interest rate on 30-year fixed rate mortgages was 6.07 percent last week (down from 6.08 percent the prior week). Back in the early 90s, the average interest rate on 30-year mortgages was over 9.0 percent.

State and local governments are complaining about having to pay interest rates of 5.0 percent, but back in the early 90s they were paying more than 6.0 percent. The same applies to loans for large and small businesses. The interest rates are somewhat higher now than they were in prior months, but they are still relatively low by historic standards. (Real interest rates are even lower by historic standards, since the inflation rate is higher today than it was in the early 90s.)

Of course this past history doesn't mitigate the pain being suffered by families and businesses trying to make ends meet. But it is important to put the problem in context. No one threatened us with the Great Depression if we didn't cough up $700 billion for the Wall Street banks in the 1990-1991 recession.

The bottom line is that we have badly over-leveraged banks who are on the edge of collapse and we have a credit tightening due to an economic downturn. These problems are related, but even if we could snap our fingers and make the banks healthy again tomorrow, we would still have a serious credit problem due to the recession. In other words, many of the businesses and people who have been appearing on news shows because they could not get credit would still not be able to get credit. (Although they probably will not be appearing on the news shows once the bailout passes.)

Just to remind everyone the cause is the loss of more than $4 trillion in housing equity due to the collapse of the housing bubble. The collapse of this bubble has not only devastated the construction and real estate market, it also has forced consumers to cut back. Tens of millions of homeowners no longer have any equity against which to borrow. Even those who still have equity realize that they will have to increase their savings to support themselves in retirement.

And all this came about because the experts who are now insisting that we need a bailout had previously insisted that there was no housing bubble and that everything was just fine. It is always important to keep things in context.


8 Comments

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Without intervention of some sort, banks will take longer to recover and therefore a prolonged recession, aka a depression.

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It is amicably suggested that newbies to TPM Cafe -- especially newbies who are, by nature, especially unserious -- cut their teeth by responding to topics appearing on the right side of menu.

The welcome extended there to blatherers can only make such a newbie feel right at home.

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There are a bunch of signs of uncharacteristic credit squeeze in the short-term market (all the blather about LIBOR and the TED spread), but at this point it seems hard to tell how much of that is "real" and how much of that is induced by bailout expectations. I would be more impressed by the spread, for example, if it were accompanied by a serious contraction in interbank borrowing. But as long as the banks still think they can make money getting overnight loans from each other, the squeeze part isn't obvious. If people are willing to pay the higher rates, lenders would be stupid not to charge them.

And, as Dean points out, we've been kinda lulled by the negative real interest rates on so many big financial instruments during the past 7 years or so.

There are many small banks and credit unions. Concerned readers might take the time to talk with the bank officers. Given that they often based on relationships and serve small businesses and members of the community, you can as about the local economy, their current lending practices, their rates on CD's and so on.

These small, local banks are deeply admired by some economists, particularly ones in underdeveloped companies, because of their contribution to the economy. While Bank of America is now a huge institution, it was originally closer to a network of small banks whose officers had a great deal of autonomy and accountability to their community. A branch or branch management could fail.

A long and deep recession has been likely for some time. The complaint about these pieces of legislation is the form of the solution (and the way it is being "sold") and alternatives have been put forth that seem to have support by economists, etc. This crisis is part and a symptom of some very serious problems none of which are being addressed and none of which could be addressed in this short of a time period. You can do business with them if you like and the people you meet seem trustworthy and sane.

We need to get past the "It's just this" and populist or reductive ideological characterizations of this problem. The situation seems like what they say about Americans and geography: They only learn the latter when there is a war.

Threatening a deepening recession at this point suggests that there is a way to avoid one. I think the economic policy makers have missed that boat long, long ago.

Here is a link to the Senate proposal

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As Dean points out interest rates are not that high historically, but still, given past investment practices of banks which they cannot alter in the short term, those rates may be prohibitively high, today.

And too, sudden large increases in the rate of interest may indicate a loss of confidence without which the banking system cannot function -- the canary in the coal mine or the gulls circling before Moby Dick breeches.

In the end, though, I second Dean's skepticism with respect to this "crisis" and his call for alternate programs to meet the banks' current capital needs.

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One cannot compare any previous credit crisis to the current one and expect these comparisons to be helpful wihtout addressing the effect of CDS.

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Continuing turbulence in the banking sector, an economic slowdown, and profit falls and bonus cuts have led to increasing concerns over the future of the UK financial sector. There's a lot of press coverage dedicated to a credit crunch. Well, there is one – banks are less willing to lend to anyone, meaning there is a credit crunch, and so if you need some short term credit, banks will be less willing to help you out. There are a lot of job losses, and that means not everyone can pay them back. Well, there are other options – you could look into payday loans. Payday loans are short term loans for small amounts that you pay back quickly, usually your next payday. Some lenders can use direct deposit – that's one of the payday loan benefits – so if you feel the credit crunch, try filling out a personal loan application.

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