Consumer borrowing outpacing Corporate debt appetite
Consumers have added $45 billion of non-mortgage bank debt over the past 24 months (loans, credit cards and lines of credit), according to data from the Bank of Canada. What about Canadian corporate and commercial borrowers? $9 billion during the same period, almost all of which has been in 2011. Quite the dichotomy.
As we try to do each month, here are the updated figures on corporate drawdowns. The category is “Business loans to Canadian residents for business purposesâ€:
December 2008: $191.563 billion
January 2009: $185.679 billion
February: $183.759 billion
March: $184.089 billion
April: $181.811 billion
May: $178.691 billion
June: $176.365 billion
July: $174.664 billion
August: $173.818 billion
September: $171.152 billion
October: $171.091 billion
November: $168.425 billion
December: $169.430 billion
January 2010: $167.892 billion
February: $168.104 billion
March: $169.495 billion
April: $169.163 billion
May: $166.378 billion
June: $165.369 billion
July: $166.988 billion
August: $164.774 billion
September: $163.976 billion
October: $168.401 billion
November: $168.892 billion
December: $169.170 billion
January 2011: $170.42 billion
February: $171.800 billion
March: $174.028 billion
April: $175.198 billion
May: $173.974 billion
June: $176.527 billion
July: $177.574 billion
August: $177.655 billion
A nice bump since May of this year, but things are flat again.
MRM
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