Financing conditions in Austria since the introduction of the euro

2019 
How have financing conditions for Austrian firms and households evolved since the start of the euro? To answer this question, we consider Austrian credit, bond and stock markets, estimate a financial conditions index and assess euro rates against a simple hypothetical monetary policy rule for Austria. We find that interest rates for bank loans have fallen since the introduction of the euro, with real interest rates being mostly lower in Austria than in Germany and the euro area average. This was partly related to the high share of variable rate loans, especially for house purchase. However, banks have compensated, at least in part, for lower interest rates by increasing non-interest price elements. Banks have also applied higher collateral requirements and loan covenants since the crisis. The post-crisis expansionary monetary policy conducted by the European Central Bank (ECB) has brought Austrian bond yields below 1% since end-2014. Earnings ratios of ATX companies were mostly below those in the DAX and Euro STOXX50. The stock earnings premium over 10-year government bonds was 2% to 3% in Austria during most of the period under review but rose substantially to around 9% in 2017/2018. A financial conditions index for Austria shows that the transmission of the policy rate through lending rates was an important driver of the tightening of financial conditions prior to and during the financial crisis. In the same way, the transmission of expansionary monetary policy through lending rates and credit risk has contributed to the loosening of financing conditions during the recovery. Judging from a hypothetical monetary policy rule for Austria, the monetary stance given by the euro area rate has been broadly adequate or slightly on the loose side in relation to economic conditions in Austria.
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