© Reuters. A man is seen in silhouette near flowers at an office building in the financial district of New York City, U.S., June src4, 2023. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton/File photo
(Reuters) -Bank credit at U.S. commercial banks shrank in the latest week as commercial banks pulled back on lending to businesses, data published by the Federal Reserve showed on Friday.
Overall bank credit fell to $src7.23 trillion in the week ending Aug. 9, down from $src7.25 trillion a week earlier and $src7.32 trillion a year earlier, its second straight year-over-year drop.
Loans and leases fell to $src2.src3 trillion, from $src2.src5 trillion the week prior; commercial and industrial loans slipped to $2.74 trillion, from $2.75 trillion in the week ending Aug. 2. From a year earlier, commercial and industrial (C&I) loan growth slowed sharply to less than src%.
The trends reflect reduced demand from borrowers amid the Fed’s rapid interest-rate hikes, as well as tightening credit standards and the fallout from the U.S. regional bank failures this year.
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