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Tag Archives: euro area

The Italian Dilemma

Panic Pause The sudden panic about a potentially imminent Italian banking sector collapse back in July has somewhat subsided for now, but sooner or later the issue will inevitably rear its ugly head again. The impressive headquarters of the world’s oldest surviving bank, Monte dei Paschi di Siena, Piazza Salimbeni Photo credit: Stefano Rellandini / Reuters - Click to enlarge Two months after Italian bank stocks...

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Redistribution From Unexpected Deflation in the Euro Area

In the JEEA 14(4) (August 2016) Klaus Adam and Junyi Zhu argue that unexpected price-level movements generate sizable wealth redistribution in the Euro Area (EA) … The EA as a whole is a net loser of unexpected price-level decreases, with Italy, Greece, Portugal, and Spain losing most in per capita terms, and Belgium and Malta being net winners. Governments are net losers of deflation, while the household (HH) sector is a net winner … HHs in Belgium, Ireland, Malta, and Germany experience...

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Euro area credit flows prove resilient

Euro area bank credit flows were pretty strong in July, despite concerns about the impact of the 23 June Brexit referendum and banks’ health. In July, bank credit to euro area non-financial corporations (NFCs) accelerated, to EUR 12bn (adjusted for sales and securitisations) compared with a rise of EUR 8bn in June and EUR 10bn in May. Lending to NFCs seems to be stable, and on a gentle upward trend. On a country-by-country basis, core countries led the increase on loans to NFCs adjusted for...

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European Banks and Europe’s Never-Ending Crisis

  Landfall of a “Told You So” Moment… Late last year and early this year, we wrote extensively about the problems we thought were coming down the pike for European banks. Very little attention was paid to the topic at the time, but we felt it was a typical example of a “gray swan” – a problem everybody knows about on some level, but naively thinks won’t erupt if only it is studiously ignored. This actually worked for a...

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Some ingredients still missing in euro area recovery

We remain relatively upbeat about euro area growth, but the pressures on banks are a concern, and decisive pro-investment moves remain in abeyance Leaving aside the possible disruptions surrounding the Brexit referendum and other near-term political events, a number of fundamental factors — most notably strengthening domestic demand — mean we are cautiously optimistic about the euro area economy over the short term, with an above-consensus GDP growth forecast for this year of...

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Euro area credit growth slowed in March, but Q1 very strong overall

Macroview Bank lending grew at a record pace in Q1, in spite of challenging environment for banks Read the full report here The expansion of bank credit to euro area non-financial corporations slowed in March, to EUR 1bn compared with a rise of EUR 24bn in January and EUR 19bn in February. By contrast, credit to households continued to increase at a decent pace in March and was slightly stronger than in previous months. Although credit flows eased in March, the three-month moving...

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Euro area business surveys regain some momentum in March

Hard activity data for the euro area have improved since January, but downside risks still dominate despite the ECB’s support. At the very least, monetary policy looks set to remain exceptionally accommodative for an extended period of time. Euro area business surveys (PMIs and IFO) showed renewed signs of life in March after the drops seen in the first two months of the year. Surveys also highlighted the contrasting trend between the manufacturing sector, dented by a subdued external...

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The ECB delivers a bigger-than-expected package to support bank lending

The ECB announced measures that exceeded expectations, targeting the refi rate, its monthly asset purchases, a new corporate bonds purchase programme, new TLTROs and a negative rate. The deposit rate was cut as expected, but Draghi said that “no more cuts” were anticipated at this stage. The ECB’s Governing Council delivered a comprehensive policy package that exceeded market expectations by a large margin. The 10bp deposit rate cut to -0.40% was expected but other measures were not,...

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Euro area: Credit rebounds sharply

After a large and unexpected fall in December, largely due to a collapse in lending to non-financial corporations in the Netherlands, euro area bank credit flows rebounded sharply in January, in line with other indicators such as the ECB’s Bank Lending Survey We continue to believe that the credit cycle has legs and we therefore maintain our forecast for the euro area GDP growth unchanged at 1.8% for 2016. Nevertheless, we also remain cautious. January bank credit flows came before the...

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