| Working
Paper 92-4
by Joe Peek and Eric
S. Rosengren
Revised article published in AREUEA 22, no.
1 (Spring 1994): 33-58.
Banks, particularly in New England, have experienced
major losses of capital as a result of their exposure
to risky real estate loans. These losses, accompanied
by strict enforcement of capital regulations, have
caused banks to shrink their assets in an attempt to
improve their capital/asset ratios. Poorly capitalized
banks have contracted their real estate loans much
more than their better-capitalized peers. In New England,
which experienced widespread shocks to bank capital,
credit availability for real estate is being constrained
by capital-impaired lenders.
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