| Actual | Previous | |
| Net Tighter Credit Standards | -1% | 3% |
Highlights
In the July 2025 bank lending survey, euro area banks presented a mixed but stabilising credit landscape. Credit standards for firms fell (net minus 1 percent) compared to the previous period (net 3 percent), softer than previously anticipated, as competition helped offset perceived macroeconomic risks. While Germany reported a tightening stance, Italy eased, and Spain and France saw no change. In contrast, credit conditions for households grew tighter, especially in consumer credit (net 11 percent), reflecting banks' cautious risk tolerance amidst economic uncertainty.
On the demand side, firms' appetite for loans edged up slightly (net 2 percent), a rebound aided by falling interest rates, though dampened by trade tensions and global uncertainty. Housing loans remained the bright spot, with a strong surge in demand (net 37 percent), driven by lower borrowing costs and a buoyant property market.
Meanwhile, loan terms for firms eased due to lower rates, but tighter conditions prevailed in consumer credit, where higher margins and stricter collateral terms dominated. Notably, banks continue to adjust their lending practices for climate risks, easing terms for energy-efficient buildings and green firms, while tightening them for high emitters and older, inefficient properties.
Overall, banks anticipate stable credit conditions for the third quarter of 2025, with housing remaining resilient and consumer credit facing ongoing restraint amid tightening regulation and risk concerns.
Definition
The European Central Bank's quarterly lending survey of around one hundred and forty banks aims to enhance the Eurosystem's knowledge of financing conditions in the Eurozone and so help the central bank to assess monetary and economic developments as an input into monetary policy decisions. The headline number refers to the net percentage of banks that have tightened their credit standards on lending to enterprises. It is designed to complement existing statistics on retail bank interest rates and credit with information on supply and demand conditions in the euro area credit markets and the lending policies of euro area banks. The survey addresses issues such as credit standards for approving loans as well as credit terms and conditions applied to enterprises and households. It also asks for an assessment of the conditions affecting credit demand.
Description
Particularly in the wake of the Great Recession and the Covid-19 crisis, changes in financial market conditions can have a major say in central bank policy, and hence, the level of asset prices. The main focus is the net percentage of reporting banks indicating tightening credit standards or positive loan demand with regards to enterprises, house purchase and consumer credit. An unwanted tightening of standards or undesired fall in lending could prompt a softer monetary stance from the ECB, potentially entailing lower official short-term interest rates and possible efforts to reduce the cost of longer-term loans.