Economy February 3, 2026

Euro-area lenders pull back on corporate credit as trade uncertainty bites

ECB survey of 153 large banks finds tighter loan standards for firms, continued easing for mortgages and mixed sectoral demand outlook

By Ajmal Hussain
Euro-area lenders pull back on corporate credit as trade uncertainty bites

A quarterly Bank Lending Survey from the European Central Bank shows euro-area banks tightened credit access for businesses last quarter and expect further restriction as economic uncertainty, including trade policy concerns, erodes risk tolerance and demand. Mortgage standards were eased in some markets, notably France, while loan demand rose modestly overall though weakness is anticipated in several sectors.

Key Points

  • Euro-area banks tightened lending standards for firms last quarter and expect further tightening, reflecting lower risk tolerance and economic concerns.
  • Mortgage lending standards were eased overall, driven mainly by French banks, though part of that easing could be reversed in the first quarter.
  • Banks expect loan demand to rise broadly but not for car manufacturing, wholesale and retail trade, and commercial real estate.

FRANKFURT, Feb 3 - Euro zone banks moved to tighten lending to companies in the most recent quarter and anticipate further constraint on business credit in the near term, according to the European Central Bank's latest Bank Lending Survey. The ECB based its findings on responses from 153 of the region's largest banks.

While lending to both businesses and households has been expanding for several years, that growth still lags behind pre-pandemic rates. The ECB said this pattern contributes to a picture of the euro-area recovery that is resilient but modest in pace.

Conditions and causes

"Concerns about the outlook for firms and the broader economy, as well as banks’ lower risk tolerance, contributed to tighter credit standards," the ECB said, summarizing respondents' reasoning. Around half of the banks surveyed reported that uncertainty over trade policy had affected their lending practices. The ECB noted those effects operated mainly through reduced risk appetite at banks and weaker loan demand from borrowers, and that both channels are expected to continue to influence lending this year.

Country and product differences

The survey found the tightening of corporate credit was most pronounced in Germany and France, two of the euro zone's largest economies. By contrast, banks in Italy and Spain did not report an increase in restrictiveness for business lending.

Despite the pullback on corporate credit, banks continued to ease lending standards for residential mortgages, a trend driven largely by lenders in France. The ECB cautioned, however, that part of this relaxation could be reversed in the first quarter.

Demand trends and sector outlook

Demand for loans held up overall, with banks indicating a small increase that is expected to persist into the first quarter. On a sector basis, banks forecast rising loan demand in most areas but singled out several exceptions where demand is expected to weaken or not grow: car manufacturing, wholesale and retail trade, and commercial real estate.

Mortgage borrowing also strengthened, supported by what lenders described as improved housing market prospects, even as consumer confidence exerted a negative influence on household sentiment.


Implications

  • Corporate borrowers in Germany and France face tighter credit conditions compared with counterparts in Italy and Spain.
  • Mortgage markets have seen easier standards, mainly in France, though that easing may be at risk of reversal in the short term.
  • Sectoral loan demand diverges, with expected declines or stagnation in autos, wholesale/retail trade and commercial real estate.

Risks

  • Trade policy uncertainty - reduces banks' risk appetite and dampens demand, potentially constraining corporate lending; impacts corporate credit and trade-exposed sectors.
  • Deteriorating outlook for firms and the broader economy - contributes to tighter credit standards, affecting business investment and lending-based growth.
  • Potential reversal of eased mortgage standards - could tighten conditions in housing finance and affect mortgage demand, particularly in France.

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