The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Eurozone lending growth brakes in March — ECB

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FRANKFURT AM MAIN: Growth in lending to the eurozone economy slipped slightly in March, but households’ and firms’ borrowing kept gaining momentum, European Central Bank data showed.

The pace of private-sector loan growth in the 19-nation single currency zone fell to 3.0 per cent year-on-year last month, adjusting for some purely financial transactio­ns, down from 3.1 per cent in February and 3.3 per cent in January.

Both households and nonfinanci­al firms’ uptake of credit both picked up slightly in March, with all of the slowdown coming from non-bank financial firms like insurance companies and pension funds.

Credit growth is a vital indicator for the ECB as it hesitates by the exit door from its massive support to the eurozone.

Governors want to be certain the economy is healthy before ending their mass bond-buying programme of 30 billion euros (US$36.4 billion) per month – the first step to eventually raising interest rates from their historic lows.

Both policy levers are designed to pump cash through the financial system and into the pockets of firms and households, where it can be used for spending and investment to power growth and, indirectly, inflation.

But after almost 2.4 trillion euros of asset purchases the ECB remains far from its target of price growth just below 2.0 per cent, with March’s reading coming in at just 1.3 per cent.

Looming threats to the eurozone like a possible transatlan­tic trade war and weakening indicators of business,investoran­dconsumer confidence could prompt a “moderation” in growth following an unexpected­ly strong year, ECB President Mario Draghi said last week.

But he added that policymake­rs have ‘unchanged confidence’ the central bank will eventually hit its price growth target – although forecasts call for just 1.7 per cent inflation by 2020. — AFP

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