Business finance is shrinking which is a big concern to the RBA.
Figures collated by the Reserve Bank of Australia show the amount of credit outstanding to businesses and consumers fell 0.3per cent in December to just over $1.9trillion - the first monthly fall since 1992 - slowing what was expected to be a steady rise to $2trillion. Outstanding debt has roughly doubled in the past six years.
Corporations are leading the retreat, with demand for finance for new projects investment drying up and lenders become more cautious about who they lend to. Outstanding loans to business shrank 1.1 per cent in December, reducing the annual growth rate to 8 per cent, down from 24per cent the year before. The Reserve Bank said some of the decrease "reflected a fall in foreign currency-denominated lending".
Other figures released yesterday by the banking watchdog, the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority, and analysed by CommSec showed banks with foreign parent companies such as HSBC, Barclays and ING reduced loans and advances to both Australian firms and households in December. All of the big Australian banks, excluding NAB, increased theirs.
Credit Crunch to get worse
The chief economist at Morgan Stanley, Gerard Minack, said the figures showed the credit crunch was beginning to be felt domestically. "More to the point, it will likely get significantly worse. Reduced credit flows is part of the reason I expect a severe recession in Australia.
In particular, tight credit points to a major fall in business investment over the next 18 months."
The credit figures are another sign of a slowing economy, which as expected convinced the Reserve Bank to opt for a one percentage point interest rate cut yesterday.
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