European Bank Deleveraging and Global Credit Conditions [electronic resource] : Implications of a Multi-Year Process on Long-Term Finance and Beyond / Erik Feyen
Material type: TextPublication details: Washington, D.C., The World Bank, 2013Description: 1 online resource (28 p.)Subject(s): Access to Finance | Bad deleveraging | Bankruptcy and Resolution of Financial Distress | Banks & Banking Reform | Credit | Debt Markets | Deleveraging | Emerging markets | European banks | Finance and Financial Sector Development | Financial Intermediation | Financial stress | Good deleveraging | Loan maturities | Long-term finance | Private Sector Development | Project finance | Retrenchment | Syndicated loans | Tightening credit standards | Trade financeAdditional physical formats: Feyen, Erik: European Bank Deleveraging and Global Credit Conditions:.Online resources: Click here to access online Abstract: This paper assesses European bank deleveraging and its impact on global credit conditions. Before the onset of the global financial crisis, European banks had rapidly expanded their foreign lending activities. However, European banks have since been tightening credit conditions in Europe more for longer-term lending, a trend that banks expect to continue. European financial stress has been transmitted to emerging markets that have experienced a sustained deterioration of credit standards and funding conditions. As a result, European lending in emerging markets has been lagging behind lending of other international banks although European banks remain a dominant source of funding. "Good" bank deleveraging is still necessary from a prudential perspective. Although acute "bad" deleveraging pressures due to financial stress, which can trigger a credit crunch, have subsided recently on account of decisive policy measures, tail risks remain. Curtailing lending will probably be a core component of this multi-year deleveraging process. Taken together, European bank deleveraging warrants close attention.This paper assesses European bank deleveraging and its impact on global credit conditions. Before the onset of the global financial crisis, European banks had rapidly expanded their foreign lending activities. However, European banks have since been tightening credit conditions in Europe more for longer-term lending, a trend that banks expect to continue. European financial stress has been transmitted to emerging markets that have experienced a sustained deterioration of credit standards and funding conditions. As a result, European lending in emerging markets has been lagging behind lending of other international banks although European banks remain a dominant source of funding. "Good" bank deleveraging is still necessary from a prudential perspective. Although acute "bad" deleveraging pressures due to financial stress, which can trigger a credit crunch, have subsided recently on account of decisive policy measures, tail risks remain. Curtailing lending will probably be a core component of this multi-year deleveraging process. Taken together, European bank deleveraging warrants close attention.
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