Credit growth rates above clearly show the following trends:
- Household loans rate of contraction has accelerated from 4.8% yoy in October and November to 5.2% in December. Thus December 2010 marked the worst month in the entire series history since 2004.
- Rate of decline in mortgages lending was also accelerating to 1.9% in December from 1.7% in November and 1.6% in September and October.
- Rate of decline in credit for non-financial corporations eased in December to 1.6% yoy from 2.4% in November.
The chart above shows:
- A dramatic exist from Irish banks by non-financial corporate deposits. This flight is accelerating - having gone from -9.2% yoy fall in July, to -13.1% in August, -14.8% in September, -15.4% in October, -14.9% in November and a whooping -16.1% in December.
- Household deposits are also accelerating in the rate of decline from -2.4% in October to -4.5% in November and -4.7% in December
Now, let' remove this 'hump' and see what the banking sector deposits really look like today:
The chart abvoe does exactly this. And it clearly shows that:
- Over 2010, Irish households have suffered a loss of savings, not a gain, pushing our deposits to the comparable level of December 2007
- Over the entire crisis total private sector deposits have fallen to the levels comparable to those in May-June 2006.
3 comments:
The media reports of increased household savings had puzzled me for a long time. That people were able to tighten their belts so much that they could support themselves on decreased incomes and increase savings never made sense.
Thanks for clearing this up
now that is wild
Well, I dunno. On the final point, I think it's not unfair to say that a lot of savings are still existing and even increasing, just not in the Irish banks.
Not all, or even I suspect a majority, of the withdrawals are withdrawals to meet rising expenditure. They are withdrawals to transfer it somewhere else, because the only worthwhile guarantee regarding holding money in an Irish bank is that it is guaranteed to do your head in.
I guess this number is largely unquantifiable though.
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