The pace of growth in lending to eurozone businesses picked up sharply in October, data released by the European Central Bank showed Tuesday, suggesting lenders and companies remain confident. Credit to businesses added 2.9 percent year-on-year last month, adjusting for some purely financial transactions, a 0.5-percentage-point increase compared with September's rate.
The pickup in lending growth to firms accounted for all of an acceleration in overall private sector loan growth, which added 0.2 percentage points to reach 2.9 percent. Meanwhile, growth in credit to households held at 2.7 percent in October, the same pace as in the two previous months. Lending growth is seen as an important indicator of the effectiveness of the ECB's unconventional stimulus measures - designed to boost economic growth and inflation with cheap credit.
With cheap loans to banks, record low interest rates and monthly bond purchases of 60 billion euros ($71 billion), policymakers have sought to pump cash through the financial system and into the real economy of companies and households.
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