Skip to main content

2009, No. 36
Posted 2009-08-06

Commercial Bank Lending Data during the Crisis: Handle with Care

by Silvio Contessi and Hoda El-Ghazaly

Since the financial crisis began in mid-2007, media sources and academics alike have scrutinized data from the banking sector to understand how lending to consumers and firms has changed. The graph shows total loans and leases by commercial banks and their components: real estate loans, individual loans, commercial and industrial loans, and other loans. This measure is part of the H.8 data, which provide weekly aggregate balance sheet data for commercial banks with a charter in the United States.1

If considered over the past three decades, the series appears approximately on trend but slightly erratic during the current recession; total loans and leases remains fairly constant until the end of 2008:Q3, when it increases sharply and then declines.

If our goal is to understand changes in lending dynamics, particularly over the past few quarters, do the graph series imply that commercial bank lending increased in the last few months of 2008 and then bank lending to the public contracted? Not quite. Several reasons suggest reading such data with extreme care.2

First, existing loans and leases at each point in time are equilibrium quantities that depend on the interaction between the supply and demand of credit. Whether the observed decrease in the series is caused by banks restricting their lending or by borrowers demanding less credit during a major recession remains unclear.

Second, commercial banks are responsible for only a fraction (about 35 percent) of financial intermediation in the U.S. economy.3 The H.8 release does not include the loans of other intermediaries (thrifts and non-depository institutions); therefore, just because we do not observe a large contraction in this volume of total loans and leases does not mean that a contraction in the overall economy has not occurred. In fact, evidence suggests that other credit markets have been severely strained.4



Third, since the onset of the crisis, several financial services companies and thrifts that made loans to consumers and firms (but whose loans were not included in the H.8 release) have either become commercial banks or have been acquired by commercial banks. When a commercial bank acquires a thrift, an insurance company, or another financial firm, the loans of the target (acquired) company suddenly appear as additional commercial bank loans even though no real change in credit took place in the economy. Many such transactions have occurred since the crisis began, creating an upward shift to the series that cannot be interpreted as an increase in lending. (Take, for example the acquisition of the banking operations of Washington Mutual by JPMorgan Chase on September 25, 2008.)

Fourth, evidence indicates that firms and individuals are taking advantage of their previously unused (but committed) bank credit lines, just as they did in previous periods of credit contraction.5 If banks grant only a handful of new loans but borrowers continue to draw from existing lines of credit available at commercial banks, the end result would appear to be an increase in lending. At the same time, commercial banks may be withdrawing part of their commitments, which would not be recorded in balance sheet and H.8 data.

Finally, this series may be affected by the programs implemented by the Treasury and the Federal Reserve (for example, the Troubled Asset Relief Program or the Term Auction Facility), and may have been very different without these interventions.

These caveats indicate that caution is necessary when making inferences based solely on aggregate loans data.


Notes

1 The value of loans in the H.8 is a good approximation of aggregate measures because large banks regularly report their loan status. The 70 banks that comprise the top percentile of commercial banks based on total assets made up about 73 percent of total loans in 2009:Q1.

2 See Contessi, Silvio and Francis, Johanna L. "U.S. Commercial Bank Lending through 2008:Q4: New Evidence from Gross Credit Flows." Working Paper No. 2009-011B, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, April 2009; http://research.stlouisfed.org/wp/2009/2009-011.pdf.

3 Feldman, Ron and Lueck, Mark. "Are Banks Really Dying This Time? An Update of Boyd and Gertler." Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis The Region, September 2007, pp. 6-9 and 42-51; www.minneapolisfed.org/pubs/region/07-09/banks.pdf.

4 Duke, Elizabeth A. "Containing the Crisis and Promoting Economic Recovery." Presented at Women in Housing and Finance Annual Meeting, June 15, 2009; www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/duke20090616a.htm.

5 See Morgan, Donald P. "Bank Credit Commitments: Protection from a Crunch?" Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City Economic Review, September/October 1990, 75(5), pp. 51-59; www.kc.frb.org/PUBLICAT/ECONREV/EconRevArchive/1990/3-4q90morg.pdf.


© 2009, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. The views expressed are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect official positions of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis or the Federal Reserve System.