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Scenario × Asset Analysis

What Happens to Regional Banks (KRE) When Commercial & Industrial Loans Contract?

Commercial and Industrial (C&I) loan contraction signals bank credit retrenchment. What happens to growth, jobs, and investment when business credit shrinks?

Regional Banks (KRE)
$69.29
as of Apr 14, 2026
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Trigger: C&I Loans (All Banks)
$3B
Condition: year-over-year growth turns negative
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How Regional Banks (KRE) Responds

Regional banks suffer compression of net interest margins and loan losses. KRE historically underperforms XLF by wide margins during C&I contraction as regional banks are more C&I-dependent.

Scenario Background

Commercial and Industrial (C&I) loans are bank lending to businesses for working capital, inventory, and investment. Year-over-year contraction in C&I loans signals that banks are reducing credit to the business sector, typically because banks are tightening standards, demand is falling, or borrowers are deleveraging.

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Historical Context

C&I loans contracted year-over-year during 1991 (-5% trough), 2002-2004 (-8% trough, extended contraction), 2009-2010 (-20% trough, the deepest post-war contraction), and 2020-2021 (-15% trough, driven by PPP dynamics and COVID). Each contraction preceded or coincided with recession and substantial job losses. The 2009 contraction saw non-residential construction spending fall 25% and business equipment investment fall 20% as C&I credit evaporated. The 2020 contraction was partly technical (PPP ...

What to Watch For

  • DRTSCILM showing net tightening percentage above 40%
  • SBA 7(a) loan volumes declining year-over-year
  • NFIB Small Business Optimism Index below 90
  • Commercial and Industrial loan applications declining
  • Bank earnings showing loan-loss provision increases

Other Assets When Commercial & Industrial Loans Contract

Other Scenarios Affecting Regional Banks (KRE)

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