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February 2001
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Credit Conditions: Crying Wolf or Crying
Time?
Regulators have sounded the alarm regularly
over the past five years, warning of an impending decline
in banking conditions. In much the same way, each year one
economist or another has predicted a sharp slowdown in the
national economy. But as the economy continued on its steep
upward path, both the financial and economic doomsayers only
earned the title of the boy who cried wolf. Until, perhaps,
now.
Recently, the voices of gloom have become
a chorus, as each day brings fresh signs of a dramatically
slowing economy. Everyone now accepts that the economy has
begun a substantial correction. Corporate boards across America
are cutting investment plans. Many are uttering the "r"
word. Even those observers harboring the most ardent faith
in the economy's growth potential and inherent stability have
had to ask themselves whether perhaps the wolf is really here
this time. In the words of Buck Owens and Ray Charles, maybe
it really is "cryin' time," and the economic expansion,
like a lost love, is now walking out the door.
I will first go over some of the most
noteworthy causes for concern regarding the economic outlook,
focusing mostly on credit conditions. Some observers feel
the current economic cycle may be different from previous
post-war cycles, in that the length of the expansion and the
prolonged absence of rising inflation have allowed credit
levels to grow too high.
After reviewing some troubling statistics,
most of which have been vividly portrayed in the media, I
will present a case for the hope that it is not crying time,
at least not yet. Given that business conditions have faltered,
the possibility arises that the credit markets might pull
back sharply and for an extended period, thereby exacerbating
economic difficulties. However, another possible outcome is
that problems in the credit markets might be resolved without
too much disruption. Stability in the process of financial
intermediation could then help sustain economic growth. This
latter scenario appears to be the most likely. If we have
a recession, the banking sector in particular will not be
to blame.
Causes for Concern
Sales and Inventories
Perhaps the starkest portrayal
of the current economic challenge is offered by the data on
business sales and inventories. In the accompanying chart,
the yellow areas correspond to periods of monetary tightening,
while the red area denotes the last recession. Near the end
of the tightening that began in March 1988, growth in business
sales slowed dramatically, falling substantially below growth
in inventories. With inventories growing much more rapidly
than sales, production growth slowed so that the excess inventories
could be eliminated. Similarly, the monetary tightening that
began in February 1994 also led to a sharp reduction in sales
growth, which again fell below the growth in inventories.
And more recently, with the tightening that began in July
1999, sales growth has once again slowed, again falling below
the growth in inventories. In particular, sales growth in
November of last year was absolutely dismal, leading to an
ominous gap between growth in sales and inventories. Moreover,
November was the last month for which these inflation-adjusted
sales and inventory data are available, and the situation
may have deteriorated further since then. The implication
is that production will slow considerably. This notion is
consistent with the low levels in January of the National
Association of Purchasing Managers indices of manufacturing
and non-manufacturing activity. Sales Equity and Debt Net
IssuanceSome have said the current slowdown will be exacerbated
by credit difficulties. The last few years saw an explosion
in corporate debt, as firms shunned equity financing in favor
of debt. Many feel this situation has created a debt trap
for U.S. corporations.
Household Debt-Service Burden
In addition, households have taken
on debt aggressively, to the point where the proportion of
their disposable income devoted to interest and principal
has risen to levels similar to those prior to the last recession.
And the payment burden is even higher, once you include auto
lease payments.
Bank Asset Quality
You do not have to look far to
see that credit conditions are deteriorating. The delinquency
rate on loans extended to businesses has been rising since
1998, especially for large banks. While the delinquency rate
is still low compared with the heights reached during the
last recession, its three-year upward trend is nevertheless
disturbing. The delinquency rate rose substantially in the
fourth quarter of last year and is likely to continue rising.
Business Loan Standards
Accompanying the increase
in problem loans has been a tightening of the standards banks
use in extending business loans to firms of all sizes. Based
on the Fed's Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey for January,
almost 60 percent of domestic banks are tightening their standards
on business loans to large and middle-market firms, and 45
percent report tighter standards for small firms. Banks are
also strengthening loan covenants and charging higher premiums
for riskier loans. The move to a more conservative lending
posture is a natural response to deteriorating credit quality
and a worsening economic outlook. Banks are also tightening
standards on commercial real estate loans.
Bond Market Risk Spreads
This tightening of the standards
on bank loans to businesses is part of a broader movement
in the credit markets toward a lower tolerance of risk. This
chart shows the spread between the rates on bonds of various
grades. The spread between yields on low-grade and high-grade
bonds reflects a premium for risk. Rising risk premiums are
associated with tighter credit conditions and increase the
price firms pay for financing. AAA–Treasury and BAA–AAA
spreads began rising in 1998. And the spread between high-yield,
or junk, bonds and BAA bonds has risen dramatically, reflecting
growing concerns over the creditworthiness of relatively weak
or less established firms.
Monetary Tightening
One possible factor behind the
deterioration in credit conditions is the monetary tightening
engineered by the Fed beginning in July 1999. However, the
increase in the fed funds rate during this most recent tightening
was smaller than the increase that occurred over the same
amount of time during the monetary restrictions that began
in March 1988 and February 1994. By this account, the most
recent monetary tightening was relatively mild. Admittedly,
this is a simple characterization based solely on changes
in interest rates, thereby abstracting from, among other things,
the level of interest rates at the beginning of each tightening
episode. Nevertheless, the most recent tightening appears
relatively mild, whether changes in nominal or real interest
rates are examined.
Tightening and the Risk Spread
Now contrast the mild nature of
the recent tightening with its relatively severe associated
developments. The spread between high-yield and AAA bonds
rose by a relatively large amount from the time the Fed began
tightening in July 1999 to the end of last year. In contrast,
the response of this spread was subdued during the first 18
months of the previous two monetary restrictions. The recent
rapid widening of the spread points to the existence of additional
contributing factors besides monetary tightening alone.
Behind the Slowdown
A number of factors may have contributed
to slower growth, lower profits, and tighter credit conditions.
Potential factors include high oil prices, an extremely cold
November-December, a sifting effect as firms attempt to gain
the upper hand in a changing environment, and media doom and
gloom.
Reasons for Optimism
While we obviously cannot afford
to be sanguine about the economy's potential lack of near-term
strength, there are good reasons to believe the adjustment
we are going through currently may be less severe than some
would have us believe.
Business Debt-Service Burden
One reason for optimism is that
by some measures the debt-service burden of U.S. corporations
is only moderate, a fact that most media sources will not
tell you. For non-financial businesses, net interest payments
as a percent of pre-tax profits fell during the early 1990s
and have remained relatively low. In other words, the coverage
of interest payments by profits is now much higher than before
the last recession. These data are not consistent with the
notion of a debt trap. Admittedly, these are aggregate data,
and the debt-service burden for many firms is much higher.
Nevertheless, the relatively low level of interest expense
relative to profits in the aggregate suggests the debt-trap
scenario is not widespread.
Consumer Confidence and Personal Consumption
A second reason for optimism is
that consumer confidence, while falling, has not yet reached
critical levels. Confidence has taken a big hit, but it still
compares favorably with most of the last 15 years. Personal
consumption expenditures track consumer confidence fairly
closely. If confidence does not slip too far, a prolonged
slowing of consumer spending most likely will be avoided.
Inflation
A third reason for optimism is
the inflation picture. The recent increase in inflation as
measured by the price index derived from personal consumption
expenditures (PCE) has leveled off. Moreover, inflation as
measured by the core PCE, with volatile food and energy prices
taken out, is performing even better. Core inflation has risen
relatively little, reflecting the impact of rising energy
prices on the overall price level. The relatively low and
stable rate of inflation gives the Fed much more room to lower
borrowing costs than it had prior to and during the last recession,
which was characterized by high and rising inflation rates.
Monetary Easing
A fourth reason for optimism is
monetary easing. The Fed has lowered the target fed funds
rate 50 basis points twice this year. These aggressive moves
to lower borrowing costs are already resulting in important
distinctions between credit conditions currently and those
that existed prior to the last recession. The accompanying
chart shows the magnitude of the three episodes of monetary
easing that followed the three periods of monetary tightening
we have already examined. The reduction in the fed funds rate
during the current easing has been larger than the reductions
that occurred over the same amount of time during the previous
two episodes of monetary easing.
Easing and the Risk Spread
A fifth reason for optimism is
that the securities markets have responded favorably to the
monetary easing that has occurred so far, as reflected in
a substantial reduction in the spread between high-yield radiocarbons.
While the risk spread is still high, it is moving in the right
direction. And the reduction in the spread compares favorably
with the early phases of the previous two periods of easing.
An examination of the entire period
of easing that began prior to the last recession reveals that
the risk spread never really declined much and, in fact, continued
to rise. This is in sharp contrast to what we have seen in
recent days.
Overall Bank Asset Quality
A sixth reason for optimism is
that, despite the tightening in standards, banks are in good
shape and are in the position to continue lending to viable
firms and consumers. While the delinquency rate for business
loans at large banks has been rising for three years, the
worsening in overall loan quality has been relatively mild.
For the banking system as a whole, with the smaller banks
included, the delinquency rate for total loans has been relatively
stable and increased only in the last year.
There is likely to be some continued
deterioration in loan quality going forward, but it is moving
off a very favorable base. The banking system is sufficiently
healthy to continue lending. This situation contrasts sharply
with conditions just prior to the last recession, when the
banking system was burdened with high levels of delinquent
loans.
Bank Capital
A look at bank capital provides
an even more favorable comparison. The ratio of capital to
assets at U.S. banks currently compares very favorably with
that of the last 15 years. Most notably, the aggregate capital
ratio is considerably higher than it was entering the last
recession, when banks, already carrying a heavy load of troubled
assets, were struggling to improve their capital positions
under the newly adopted risk-based guidelines. Whereas the
adjustment to higher capital requirements worked against any
expansion of lending activity during the last recession, the
current high levels of capital provide banks with the financial
standing necessary to support a continued expansion of lending
activity.
Bank Assets by Supervisory Rating
The strong position of banks currently
is summarized in the ratings assigned by supervisors after
an on-site exam. In June 1990, just prior to the last recession,
banks that had been assigned a problem rating accounted for
25 percent of the banking system's assets. In contrast, as
of the beginning of this year, only 2 percent of the banking
system's assets were held by problem banks. Because on-site
exams occur only infrequently, the Fed employs a statistical
model based on financial ratios to predict the supervisory
rating each bank would receive if it were examined. The results
from this model are available quarterly, the same frequency
at which the banks submit financial statements. The results
of this model suggest problem banks may have accounted for
5 percent of the banking system's assets at the end of last
year. This still compares favorably with the banking situation
going into the last recession.
Bank Lending to Businesses
Business loans flattened prior
to the last recession before falling substantially, even in
nominal terms. However, since 1994 loan growth has remained
high, reflecting both favorable banking conditions and strong
economic growth.
Looking more closely at last year and
January 2001, the weekly data on business loans show continued
strong growth. Given the tightening of loan standards, together
with weaker demand for loans to finance capital expenditures
or mergers and acquisitions, the continued increase in lending
activity most likely reflects a shortage of internally generated
funds at businesses and an increased need for inventory financing.
In addition, some businesses have responded to tightness in
the securities markets by switching to bank loans.
So why has loan growth remained strong,
even as credit standards and terms have been tightened? Banks
obviously like to see their loans repaid. As a result, they
may be willing to help borrowers through bad times, if doing
so will prevent writing off loans. In addition, the value
of borrower relationships may prompt banks to renew maturing
loans, even when the condition of borrowers has temporarily
worsened. These considerations suggest banks may provide more
of a cushion to borrowers than the media stories would lead
one to believe.
Conclusion
Nobody doubts the economy has entered
a significant correction. The suddenness of the slowdown is
cause for concern. However, there are also reasons for optimism.
Very important among those I have mentioned is the combination
of aggressive monetary easing and a healthy banking system.
The Fed's quick and strong response to emerging economic weakness
has been made possible by a favorable inflation picture, especially
when compared with the periods preceding previous recessions.
As for the banks, they are not without some significant problems,
but the financial status of the banking system overall is
very good, and the process of financial intermediation should
continue on course.
A final reason for optimism, and probably
the chief one, is the remarkable performance of the U.S. economy
in recent years. U.S. businesses have proven themselves adept
at harnessing new technology to raise productivity. The pace
and size of technology's strides have led to the introduction
of all sorts of new businesses and new business models, some
of which have failed or will fail. But the surviving businesses
are made stronger. Taking all these considerations into account,
the economic situation may not be so dismal after all. Our
love's suitcase is packed, but we may yet convince her (or
him) to stay a while longer.
—Jeffery W. Gunther
| About In Depth
This article is based on
a presentation by Jeffery W. Gunther, research
officer, Financial Industry Studies Department,
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.
The views expressed are
those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect
the positions of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
or the Federal Reserve System. |
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