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- <text id=90TT1453>
- <title>
- June 04, 1990: Feeling A Crunch
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- June 04, 1990 Gorbachev:In The Eye Of The Storm
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 66
- Feeling a Crunch
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A crackdown on loose lending has made credit tougher to get
- </p>
- <p>By John Greenwald--With reporting by Bernard Baumohl and
- Stephen Pomper/New York, with other bureaus
- </p>
- <p> For three years Colin Richardson faithfully made every
- payment on the $125,000 mortgage on his small auto-repair shop
- in Lexington, Mass. But last February the Bank of Boston
- suddenly called in the loan. The bank, which was responding to
- pressure from U.S. regulators to tighten credit standards,
- relented only after an outraged Richardson went public with his
- plight by telling it to reporters in a one-man media blitz.
- Says he: "It would have made no sense to close my doors and
- sell everything off just to pay back the bank. How absolutely
- ridiculous and astounding for a little loan like that."
- </p>
- <p> Richardson's indignation, if not his blunt tactics, are
- widely shared. Beset by tough new regulations and saddled with
- hastily made loans that went sour in the go-go '80s, many
- lenders are reluctant to grant credit even to borrowers who
- present few risks. While the squeeze has so far been greatest
- in New England and neighboring states, economists are worried
- that it could swiftly spread. In a report issued two weeks ago,
- the Federal Reserve Board noted that 80% of the U.S. banks it
- surveyed said they had tightened their standards on loans for
- office buildings. A majority of the banks also said they had
- cut back their lending to small and medium-size companies. For
- some firms, the impact has been relatively minor so far. A poll
- released last week by the National Federation of Independent
- Business, which has 2,300 members, reported only a slight
- increase in the difficulty of obtaining loans.
- </p>
- <p> The new lending caution reflects a backlash against the era
- of financial fraud and excess. After the collapse of hundreds
- of savings and loans, the Government last year barred S&Ls from
- lending amounts representing more than 15% of their capital to
- any one customer. The previous limit was 100%, which allowed
- some S&Ls to sink themselves by committing a dangerously large
- amount to a single venture. Moreover, federal examiners began
- using strict new requirements to judge the quality of lending
- by commercial banks. "When regulators are being tough, bankers
- too have to be very cautious in terms of the credit they
- extend," says Kenneth Guenther, executive vice president of the
- Independent Bankers Association of America.
- </p>
- <p> Some banks throttled their lending down so sharply that
- Government leaders began to fear a full-fledged credit crunch.
- In a candid statement released May 18, the Federal Reserve said
- concern about the scarcity of credit had contributed to the
- central bank's decision at a policy meeting last March not to
- raise interest rates, despite worries about inflation. Federal
- Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan and other top regulators later
- urged banks during an extraordinary May 10 session in
- Washington to continue making loans to credit-worthy customers.
- Said Greenspan at the meeting: "If you have zero loan losses,
- then you're not doing your job."
- </p>
- <p> Officials are concerned worried that a sharp reduction in
- lending could jolt the U.S. economy into a slump. Such fears
- were underscored last week when the Government reported that
- the gross national product grew at an annual rate of just 1.3%
- in the first quarter, down from a previously estimated 2.1%.
- Coming on top of a dreary 1.1% growth rate in the last quarter
- of 1989, the revision indicated that the 7 1/2-year-long U.S.
- expansion could be in deepening danger of groaning to a halt.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, Congress has been swamped with voter complaints
- that lenders have been unfairly rejecting loan requests. Says
- Senate Banking Committee chairman Donald Riegle Jr. of
- Michigan, who plans to hold June hearings on the growing
- scarcity of funds: "Some kind of credit contraction is going
- on. It is probably most notable in real estate, but there is
- more and more evidence that it is spilling over to small
- business in general."
- </p>
- <p> Tight money has hit the construction industry with the force
- of a wrecking ball. The Government reported two weeks ago that
- housing starts fell 5.8% in April, to an annual rate of 1.25
- million units, the lowest level since October 1982, when the
- country was in a recession.
- </p>
- <p> The fallout has spread across the U.S. Michael Foreman,
- president of a small Atlanta development firm, has vainly
- hunted for a year for financing to build suburban homes. Says
- he: "The banks are not only stingy with their loan money; they
- are downright unreasonable. I have got no cooperation
- whatsoever."
- </p>
- <p> Other types of contractors have been hammered hard. The
- construction firm Arthur Rubloff Real Estate and Capital Inc.
- recently abandoned plans to build a $1 billion commercial and
- industrial park in suburban Chicago because the company could
- not obtain a loan. Even developers in Southern California have
- been feeling the pinch. "Unless you have a couple of lead
- tenants signed up," says Jack Kyser, chief economist of the Los
- Angeles area Chamber of Commerce, "lenders don't want to talk
- to you."
- </p>
- <p> Small companies are particularly vulnerable to a credit
- crunch. Unlike major corporations, which can sell bonds or
- borrow on Wall Street, smaller firms rely on banks for most of
- their loans. Yet such companies may lack the well-established
- credit records or other evidence of reliability that
- increasingly nervous lenders demand.
- </p>
- <p> Even medium-size companies can suddenly find themselves cut
- off from vital funds. Arthur Pappathanasi ran into a credit
- squeeze in January when he decided to expand West Lynn
- Creamery, a $200 million-a-year dairy business near Boston that
- his family has run for more than a half-century. His local
- bank, which had promised to add $3 million to the firm's $15
- million line of credit, suddenly backed out and warned him that
- he would soon lose access to the original $15 million. That
- sent Pappathanasi on a frantic dash for cash that ended when he
- found banks in New York City and London that were willing to
- lend. Says he: "I didn't sleep for two months chasing these
- loans."
- </p>
- <p> Few industries are as threatened by tight credit as that
- quintessentially American small business, the neighborhood car
- dealer. Already hurt by weak sales and slender profits, dealers
- across the country are watching their lines of credit dry up
- for everything from showrooms to repair shops. According to the
- National Automobile Dealers Association, 2,000 dealerships, or
- 8% of those open in the U.S., will close their doors by 1992.
- </p>
- <p> The recent Government effort to persuade banks to make more
- loans is an encouraging sign that the credit crunch will not
- be allowed to strangle the U.S. economy. In Washington last
- week a conference of New England lawmakers, lenders and
- economists cited the May 10 meeting between regulators and
- bankers as evidence that the credit crisis in the Northeast may
- be easing up. Nonetheless, the experts said the region's
- economy has been so weakened by the scarcity of credit and
- other problems that it is likely to remain sluggish for the
- next 18 months.
- </p>
- <p>FEELING A CRUNCH
- </p>
- <p>-- 80% of banks in a Rederal Reserve survey had tightened
- their standards on loans for commerical office buildings.
- </p>
- <p>-- 54% had toughened the terms of their lending to small
- businesses.
- </p>
- <p>-- 30% had reduced their lines of credit to medium-size
- corporations.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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