US banks tightening lending standards: Fed
The Federal Reserve reports that more US banks are tightening lending standards on home mortgages, other types of consumer loans and business loans in response to a spreading credit crisis.
WASHINGTON: The Federal Reserve reports that more US banks are tightening lending standards on home mortgages, other types of consumer loans and business loans in response to a spreading credit crisis.
The Fed reported on Monday that the percentage of banks reporting tighter lending standards was near historic highs for nearly all loan categories.
The survey, conducted in April, found that nearly two-thirds of banks surveyed had tightened lending standards on traditional home mortgages with 15 percent saying those standards had been tightened considerably.
The current credit crisis began last year with rising defaults in the market for subprime loans, loans extended to borrowers with weak credit histories. Many of those subprime loans were packaged into mortgage-backed securities and sold to investors around the world.
Those investors, however, have pulled back from the subprime market and from other types of credit as losses have soared with the rising mortgage defaults.
The latest Fed survey found that banks tightened their lending standards on not just prime or traditional mortgages but also on nontraditional mortgages such as "Alt-A" loans given to people who supplied only limited income verification.
The survey found that about 32 percent of the banks responding to the survey had tightened ``considerably'' their standards for nontraditional mortgages and another 43 percent had tightened standards in this category ``somewhat.''
The survey found that only nine banks are currently making loans in the suprime category and of that group, 78 percent had tightened lending standards either considerably or somewhat.
``The net fractions of domestic banks reporting tighter lending standards were close to, or above, historical highs for nearly all loan categories in the survey,'' the Fed said.
The central bank also last week cut a key interest rate, the federal funds rate, by a quarter-point, in an effort to lower borrowing costs for consumer and business loans. However, the central bank signaled that this rate cut may be the last for a while as the Fed pauses to determine the impact of the seven rate cuts it has made since September.
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