FRANKFURT (Reuters) - Bank lending to euro zone companies plunged last month, suggesting that the bloc's economic slowdown is finally slowing lending after a period of surprising resilience, data from the European Central Bank showed on Monday.
Hoping to arrest a lengthy economic slump, the ECB approved a fresh stimulus scheme last month, partly aimed at banks so they would continue to provide credit to the real economy even as a long-expected recovery fails to materialize.
Corporate loan growth slowed to 3.7% in September from 4.3% a month earlier, its slowest rate since January. Household lending growth meanwhile held steady at 3.4%.
The annual growth rate of the M3 measure of money supply, which often serves as an indicator of future activity, slowed to 5.5% in September from 5.8% in August, underperforming expectations for 5.7%.
To read more about this data, please click: https://www.ecb.europa.eu/press/pr/stats/md/html/index.en.html
(Reporting by Balazs Koranyi; Editing by Jon Boyle)