Elliott Wave International | World's Largest Market Forecasting Firm Since 1979
Please Login
   
| What's My Password?
 
 
Alert
May 24, 09:26 AM
Robert Prechter's new, 21-page Elliott Wave Theorist (published monthly since 1979) shows you 23 charts that explain why "The monetary-financial world seems to be setting up for an epic battle." Start your risk-free trial subscription now -- and get your 2nd month FREe >> 

Home > U.S. Economy
The Business of Borrowing: Bernanke, Banks, and Credit
Pay Down Debt or Borrow More?

By Bob Stokes
Mon, 03 Jan 2011 17:00:00 ET
Add to Facebook Add to Twitter Add to Facebook Printer Friendly Get the RSS feed Add to more social media services
Get Elliott wave insights like this article when you sign up for EWI's free email newsletter, The Independent. It will change the way you view the markets forever. Privacy

President Calvin Coolidge said, "The business of America is business."
 
When Coolidge was president -- the Roaring 'Twenties -- much of the business expansion was fueled by credit. But the growth of credit then was small potatoes compared to recent decades.
 
Since 2007, however, many businesses and individuals don't want to take on more debt. They worry about the future and their ability to pay back debt. Many want to pay down the debt already owed. This psychology prevails despite very low interest rates and the tailwind of optimism from the market rally.
 
The Chief Financial Officer of a well-known company said in a recent interview that his company's financial priority was to pay down debt -- not assume more. That CFO's financial strategy is probably representative of many other companies.
 
"The 90-day T-bill rate fell to 0% in late 2008, essentially making credit free. More loans were offered in 2009 and 2010, but the end appeared in the form of slack demand."
Elliott Wave Financial Forecast, Sept. 2010
 
"Just when credit becomes more available, there's little evidence of a surge in demand for it."
CNNMoney, August 2010
 
It took independent thinking and intellectual courage to call for a "credit contraction" when most economists disagreed.
 
Yet, EWI's Robert Prechter made that call years ago:
 
"...two things are required to produce an expansionary trend in credit. The first is expansionary psychology, and the second is the ability to pay interest...after nearly seven decades of a positive trend, confidence has probably reached its limit...a multi-decade deceleration in the U.S. economy...will soon stress debtors' ability to pay. These dual forces should serve to usher in a credit contraction very soon."
Conquer the Crash, 2nd edition, pp. 110-111
 
Of course, some businesses do want to borrow money from banks. But many of those businesses which would have been approved before the financial crisis are being turned down today. Banks don't want to take on too much risk because they've already been badly burned.
 
Here's an excerpt from an interview Ben Bernanke did with CBS' 60 Minutes (12/5):
 
Correspondent Scott Pelley: Lending to small businesses actually declined in the third quarter. Why is that?
 
Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke: A lot of small businesses are not seeking credit...because their business is not doing well, because the economy is slow. Others are not qualifying for credit, maybe because the value of their property has gone down. But some also can’t meet the terms and conditions that banks are setting.
 
Taken together, all the reasons that Bernanke cites point to a downward spiral -- a deflationary trend. The reasons why depend on the given small business situation, but it's credit contraction just the same.
 
The Wall Street Journal recently reported that fourth-quarter commercial and industrial loans increased by a whopping 0.2% from the third-quarter, yet the WSJ also states (12/29):
 
"The amount of business loans outstanding remains well below historical levels."
 
Credit contraction fits hand in glove with the deflationary trend now unfolding. The January issue of the Elliott Wave Financial Forecast mentions "the front edge of a still burgeoning deflationary trend." You can learn about that "front edge," and also read the Financial Forecast Short Term Update and the Elliott Wave Theorist -- risk-free! All three publications are part of your Financial Forecast Service which you can access by following this link.
 

Tags: Ben Bernanke, central banks, consumer confidence, credit crisis, deflation, Elliott Wave Principle, U.S. Federal Reserve (the Fed)
Rating: - based on [17 rating(s)]
Rate this content: