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Weak euro zone lending adds to recession fears

Lending to euro zone businesses expanded by just 0.2% in September - the lowest figure since late 2015
Lending to euro zone businesses expanded by just 0.2% in September - the lowest figure since late 2015

Bank lending across the euro zone came to a near standstill last month, European Central Bank data showed today, providing further evidence that the 20-nation bloc was skirting a recession.

Growth indicators from industrial output data to PMI and sentiment readings in recent weeks are all suggesting that euro zone's economy is now either stagnating or even shrinking as weak external demand, consumer caution and high interest rates are exerting their toll.

Lending to businesses expanded by just 0.2% in September, the lowest figure since late 2015 when the bloc was just emerging from its debt crisis, and down from 0.7% a month earlier.

Still, detailed data suggest that underlying trends may be more nuanced as the monthly flow of fresh loans was a positive €14 billion, reversing much of the previous month's negative €19.9 billion reading.

Lending is taking a hit after a string of interest rate hikes took the ECB's key rate to a record high 4% last month, all in the hope this would depress activity enough for inflation to return to 2%.

Lending to households meanwhile rose by just 0.8% after a 1% increase in August with the monthly flow of loans at a positive €4.5 billion, ECB data showed.

The ECB's own survey of the bloc's biggest banks show they plan to further curb businesses' access to credit in the fourth quarter and also see waning demand for loans.

The M3 measure of growth money supply, seen in the past as a good indicator of future economic expansion, meanwhile contracted by 1.2%, an improvement on the 1.3% drop a month earlier and better than the -1.7% reading expected in a Reuters poll.