Finance

Euro zone banks tighten companies' access to credit, ECB survey shows

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review

Posted on January 28, 2025

2 min read

· Last updated: January 27, 2026

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Graph illustrating tightening credit access for companies in Euro zone banks - Global Banking & Finance Review
This image depicts a graph showing the tightening of credit access for companies by Euro zone banks, as highlighted in the ECB survey. It reflects the broader economic challenges faced by firms in securing loans amidst a stagnating lending environment.
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FRANKFURT (Reuters) - Euro zone banks tightened firms' access to credit last quarter and expect further tightening in the first three months of 2025, a European Central Bank survey showed on Tuesday,

Euro Zone Banks Further Restrict Credit Access for Companies

FRANKFURT (Reuters) - Euro zone banks tightened firms' access to credit last quarter and expect further tightening in the first three months of 2025, a European Central Bank survey showed on Tuesday, reinforcing the case for more interest rate cuts as the economy slows.

Lending growth has been broadly stagnant for most of 2024 as the long-awaited economic recovery failed to materialise given weak consumption, a two-year industrial recession, paltry export demand and lacklustre spending from governments.

Banks had expected to tighten credit standards or loan approval criteria for firms but did so much more than predicted, despite overall weak demand, the ECB said based on its quarterly Lending Survey, a key input into Thursday's interest rate decision.

"It was driven by higher perceived risks related to the economic outlook, the industry-and-firm specific situation and banks’ lower risk tolerance," the ECB said.

Credit standards tightened in all sectors but especially in commercial real estate, wholesale and retail trade, construction and energy intensive manufacturing, the bank added.

For mortgages, credit standards were broadly unchanged, but that too is a disappointment since banks predicted "strong" easing when the ECB asked them three months ago.

In the current quarter, banks expect to tighten credit standards for both households and firms, suggesting that lending growth will remain weak.

The ECB cut interest rates four times last year and another four moves are priced in for 2025, with the first of those coming on Thursday as excessive inflation is largely defeated and attention has shifted to poor growth.

In the current quarter, banks expect loan demand to remain broadly unchanged for firms and to increase further for households, especially for housing loans with banks expecting their own access to funding to remain broadly unchanged.

(Reporting by Balazs Koranyi, Editing by Louise Heavens)

Key Takeaways

  • Euro zone banks tightened credit access for firms last quarter.
  • Further tightening is expected in early 2025.
  • Economic recovery remains weak with stagnant lending growth.
  • Credit standards tightened across all sectors, especially real estate.
  • ECB plans more interest rate cuts as growth concerns rise.

Frequently Asked Questions

What did the ECB survey reveal about credit access for firms?
The ECB survey showed that Euro zone banks tightened firms' access to credit last quarter and expect further tightening in the first three months of 2025.
What factors contributed to the tightening of credit standards?
The tightening was driven by higher perceived risks related to the economic outlook, specific industry and firm situations, and banks’ lower risk tolerance.
How did the credit standards for mortgages change?
Credit standards for mortgages remained broadly unchanged, which was disappointing as banks had predicted a strong easing.
What is the outlook for lending growth in the upcoming quarter?
Banks expect to tighten credit standards for both households and firms, suggesting that lending growth will remain weak.
What is the ECB's stance on interest rates?
The ECB cut interest rates four times last year, and another four moves are anticipated for 2025, with the first coming soon as inflation concerns are addressed.

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