“Fuelling the FIRE, Part IIb”

FIRE- vs COCO-based lending – a cross-EA comparison

The key chart

The balance between FIRE- and COCO-based lending in the six largest EA banking markets (Source: ECB; CMMP)

The key message

In “Fuelling the Fire, Part II”, I stressed the importance of distinguishing between different forms of credit. I made the contrast between productive, “COCO-based” credit and less-productive, “FIRE-based” credit, highlighted the shift towards greater levels of FIRE-based lending in the euro area (EA), and noted the negative implications of this trend for leverage, growth, financial stability and income inequality in the EA.

In this short, follow-on post, I add details on how the balance between these forms of credit differs between the largest EA banking sectors (NL/BE vs ES/IT) and across the EA as a whole. For interest, I also note an adaptation of Hyman Minsky’s hypothesis that states that over the course of a long financial cycle, there will be a shift towards riskier and more speculative sectors and discuss its application to EA banking briefly.

FIRE-based versus COCO-based lending across the EA

The balance between FIRE-based and COCO-based lending varies across the EA. Among the six largest banking sectors that account for just under 90% of total EA credit, FIRE-based lending ranges from 64% of total credit in the Netherlands to 43% in Italy (see the key chart above). Across the 19 EA economies, the low end of this range extends down to 40% in Slovakia and Greece, and Ireland joins the Netherlands and Belgium with a relatively high share of FIRE-based lending (see chart below).

The wider picture across the 19 EA member states (Source: ECB; CMMP )

Interestingly, in the Netherlands and Belgium, the two large economies with the highest share of less-productive FIRE-based lending, the NFC debt ratios are both 159% of GDP, well above the BIS threshold level of 90%. In both cases, the NFC sectors are deleveraging with debt ratios falling from peaks of 179% of GDP in the Netherlands (1Q15) and 171% of GDP in Belgium (2Q16).

Trends in NFC debt ratios (%GDP) in the Netherlands and Belgium (Source: BIS; CMMP)

The HH dynamics are very different however, re-enforcing the message that the EA money sectors are far from a homogenous group! In the Netherlands, for example, the HH sector has also been deleveraging since the 3Q201 when the debt ratio hit 121%. In contrast, HH leverage is increasing in Belgium, with the debt ratio hitting a new high (albeit a relatively low one) of 65% in 2Q20.

Trends in HH debt ratios (% GDP) in the Netherlands and Belgium (Source: BIS; CMMP)

The high levels of HH and NFC debt in the Netherlands has stimulated much research. Dirk Bezemer at the University of Groningen, for example, has studied the impact of these trends and the extent to which the financial sector helps, hurts or hinders the wider economy. His research builds on Hyman Minksy’s theory and the idea that over the course of a long financial cycle, investors will shift towards riskier and more speculative investments.

The 2008 crisis demonstrated that the Netherlands behaved in line with Minsky’s insights. It proved very vulnerable indeed to financial shocks. The country also experienced a stagnation in economic growth which was unusually long in international comparison.

Dirk Bezemer, “Why Dutch debt tells us economic growth may be fragile” 2017

Bezemer argues that Minksy’s theory can be applied to data on credit trends with “Minsky’s shift” being reflected in the decline in bank credit to the real sector (COCO-based credit) and an increase in funds flowing towards property and financial asset markets (FIRE-based credit). There are many similarities between Bezemer’s arguments and the trends highlighted in CMMP analysis. Please contact me for details.

CAGR in credit versus CAGR in nominal GDP (rolling, three years) in France (Source: BIS; CMMP)

That said, there are always exceptions to the rule. In France, for example, FIRE-based and COCO-based lending are more balanced (52%:48%) with the later growing strongly despite the fact that the NFC debt ratio hit a new high of 167% of GDP in the 2Q20.(This is the highest NFC debt ratio in this sample.) Over the past three years, the CAGR in HH and NFC credit in France has exceeded the CAGR in GDP by 4.4ppt and 5.4ppt respectively (see chart above), highlighting the fact that banking risk comes in many, different forms…

Please note that the summary comments and charts above are extracts from more detailed analysis that is available separately.