[General] “credit off-off-balance-sheet”

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michael147

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"In trying to prevent off-balance-sheet lending, regulators may push credit off-off-balance-sheet." http://www.economist.com/node/18118975

What does "push credit off-off-balance-sheet" mean here?


Does it mean "regulators may raise banks' leverage of lending to allow them to lend more money (posted in the balance sheet) to each other to prevent off-balance-sheet lending (or shadow banking activities)?"


Your help will be appreciated.
 
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It's about unofficial loans using state bank money, awarded to friends without proper collateral or credit checks, and/or without proper record-keeping. "Off-off" is a phrase I couldn't see in the article at the time I viewed it. Maybe it was an error that has been corrected.
 
It's about unofficial loans using state bank money, awarded to friends without proper collateral or credit checks, and/or without proper record-keeping. "Off-off" is a phrase I couldn't see in the article at the time I viewed it. Maybe it was an error that has been corrected.

It is in the article. Para.6. "off-off" is a double negative?
 
The double negative is intentional and correct. Whereas up to now these loans have been off-balance-sheet, that is, not shown on the firm's balance sheet, now they may be forced off that status, in other words onto the balance sheet where they belong in the writer's opinion.
 
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The double negative is intentional and correct. Whereas up to now these loans have been off-balance-sheet, that is not shown on the firm's balance sheet, now they may be forced off that status, in other words onto the balance sheet where they belong in the writer's opinion.

Thank you. I get it now.
 
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The double negative is intentional and correct. Whereas up to now these loans have been off-balance-sheet, that is, not shown on the firm's balance sheet, now they may be forced off that status, in other words onto the balance sheet where they belong in the writer's opinion.

I think it may mean something different- in trying to stop off-balance-sheet lending, they may not achieve the aim of bringing the loans onto the balance sheet as people may seek other sources of credit - the unregulated lenders - so the loans go further off the radar.
 
I think it may mean something different- in trying to stop off-balance-sheet lending, they may not achieve the aim of bringing the loans onto the balance sheet as people may seek other sources of credit - the unregulated lenders - so the loans go further off the radar.
I agree. I think the first hyphen is a mistake:

In trying to prevent off-balance-sheet lending, regulators may push credit off (= way from) off-balance-sheet."
 
Having (belatedly) read the whole piece I agree with Rover, Tdol and 5jj. Off-off here means even farther off. If I were the editor of The Economist I would have changed the phrase for clarity.
 
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