Germany – set for steepest economic decline of major eurozone economies
Although traditionally the strongest of the eurozone economies, Germany is set for the fastest decline in GDP next year due to energy price pressures, energy supply issues, and weaker overseas demand, with GDP expected to contract 1.1%.
The prospects for bank lending growth next year are also expected to be weak as demand reduces and overall bank lending in Germany is forecast to fall 1.7% in 2023. Mortgage lending is predicted to contract 0.1% in 2023 – the first decline since 2008 – and consumer credit is forecast to fall 1.6%. On the corporate lending side, the stock of business loans is expected to fall 2.9% in 2023, representing a 10-year low, as the economic situation deteriorates. However, the outlook for all forms of lending is expected to pick-up in 2024 with growth forecast to return at 3.2% (2.8% mortgage growth, 1.9% consumer credit growth and 3.7% business lending growth), followed by a further rise in 2025 of 3.8%.
France – expected to outperform its eurozone peers in the short-term
The French economy is expected to outperform its major eurozone counterparts in the short-term. However, a shallow recession over the winter and into 2023 looks likely, reflecting higher inflation, depressed consumer confidence and rising borrowing costs. GDP growth is forecast at just 0.2% next year.
Overall bank lending is forecast to fall 0.8% in 2023. Mortgage lending is forecast to rise just 1% next year – outpacing eurozone counterparts, but still France’s slowest rate since 2014. Consumer credit is forecast to fall 1.4%, representing the first contraction since 2013, while business lending is expected to decline 2.5%, marking its first fall in 14 years. A return to growth though is expected across all forms of lending in 2024 of 2.6% (1.9% mortgage growth, 2.1% consumer credit growth and 3.4% business lending growth). Total lending is forecast to rise 3.4% in 2025.
Spain – housing market exposed to interest rate rises
Spain is less exposed to potential gas shortages than other European countries, but high energy prices, weakening consumer confidence and high inflation mean the economy is likely to fall into a shallow recession this winter, with 0.8% GDP growth forecast in 2023.
In terms of total Spanish bank lending, the EY European Bank Lending Economic Forecast predicts a fall of 1.3% in 2023. The structure of Spanish mortgages (with the vast majority currently on variable rate contracts) means the housing market is more exposed to rising interest rates than many other eurozone countries. But new measures have recently been announced to provide support to those in difficulty and make it easier to switch to fixed term contracts, and recent lending survey data from the ECB suggests weakness in mortgage demand is less marked than in Germany and France.
Overall, mortgage lending is forecast to fall 0.6% next year, while consumer credit is forecast to decline 1.1%, reflecting high inflation and depressed consumer confidence, while business lending is expected to fall 2%. Like the other major eurozone nations, a return to growth is expected across all forms of lending in 2024, with a rise of 2% (1% mortgage growth, 2.6% consumer credit growth and 2.8% business lending growth). Total lending is forecast to rise 3.4% in 2025.