Household
debt in Spain fell to its lowest level in over six years in September as
families continue to deleverage, the Bank of Spain said Monday.
The
central bank said the liabilities of families declined 0.5 percent, or by 4.287
billion euros, from August to 798.045 billion, the lowest level since February
2007. Compared with a year earlier the magnitude of the decline was 4.5
percent. Household indebtedness has now declined for three months in a row
after a pick-up in June as families took on more consumer loans.
The
fall was mainly due to a decline in the value of outstanding home loans, which
dropped 4.3 percent from a year earlier to 618.579 billion euros. Mortgages
account for 77.5 percent of total household debt. Outstanding consumer loans
decreased an annual 5.5 percent to 176.413 billion euros.
Corporate
debt fell 6.0 percent in September from a year earlier and 0.27 percent from
August to 1.080 trillion euros, the lowest level since April 2007. The drop was
largely explained by a decline in the amount owed to resident lenders and
off-balance sheet securitized loans, which fell an annual 9.2 percent to
670.569 billion euros. The value of outstanding loans granted by foreign
lenders dropped 2.3 percent from September 2012 to 328.344 billion euros.
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