Auditors: Spanish banks need up to $78BN
Spain's troubled banks could need as
much as (EURO)62 billion ($78.76 billion) in new capital to protect themselves
from economic shocks, according to independent auditors hired by the government
to assess the country's struggling financial sector.The Spanish government will
use the auditors' report as the basis for their application for a bailout loan
from the 17 countries that use the euro.Announcing the reports' findings
Thursday, Deputy Bank of Spain Governor Fernando Restoy noted that this
worst-case scenario was far below the (EURO)100 billion ($127.04 billion) loan
offered by eurozone finance ministers two weeks ago.Spain's banking sector is
struggling under toxic loans and assets from the collapse of the country's
property market in 2008. Concerns that Spain's economy is so weak that it could
not afford the cost of propping up its banks has sent its borrowing costs
soaring to levels not seen since it joined the European single currency in
1999. The worry is that Spain could soon find itself unable to finance its
debts by itself and join Greece, Ireland and Portugal in seeking a rescue loan
for not just the banks but the whole country.The stakes are huge: Spain is the
eurozone's fourth-largest economy and would seriously hit the bloc's finances
should it need bailing out. The country is struggling through a recession with
a 24.4 percent jobless rate. On top of this, government's main customers at its
debt auctions are Spanish banks the
sector now being bailed out. In a sign of how reluctant the markets are to
invest in Spain, the country had to pay sharply higher interest rates to raise
(EURO)2.2 billion ($2.8 billion) in a bond auction Thursday.The audits of
Spain's lenders, carried out by consultancies Roland Berger and Oliver Wyman,
covered 14 banking groups that account for 90 percent of the sector in Spain.
The country will use the reports' findings to decide how big a bailout loan to
ask for.Restoy and Deputy Economy Minister Fernando Jimenez Latorre declined to
outline individual banks' needs.In the auditors' stress test for the worst-case
economic scenario a fall in gross
domestic product of 6.5 percent over the period 2012-2014 most of the banks were deemed to be in a
"comfortable" position, Restoy said."We're not talking about the
imperative capital necessities of the banks. We're not talking about someone
urgently needing such and such an amount of capital to deal with their
obligations," said Restoy. "We're talking about the capital that would
be needed if we were to see a situation of extreme tension which is very
unlikely to come about.""We should keep in mind we are not talking
about how much capital an entity needs to survive. We're talking about how much
capital an entity will need to confront a situation of extreme stress," he
added.Economy Minister Luis de Guindos, in Luxembourg with eurozone colleagues
to discuss Spain's aid request, said a formal petition would be made within few
days. Eurozone finance ministers offered Spain a bailout loan of up
to (EURO)100 billion on June 9. The terms of the loan for which Spain, rather than banks, will
ultimately be responsible for still have
to be negotiated.A more thorough series of audits by four other companies is
scheduled to be completed by the end of July.Oliver Wyman Inc, gave a
worst-case range of (EURO)51 billion-(EURO)62 billion in new capital needs
while Roland Berger Strategy Consultants GmbH gave a single figure of (EURO)51
billion.The release of the audits Thursday will probably not eliminate market
nervousness about Spain because more thorough audits of the nation's banks are
now being conducted and those results are not expected until September, said
Mark Miller, an analyst with Capital Economics in London."At face value it
looks as if there is a reasonable safety margin given that up to (EURO)100
billion is potentially available," he said. "Having said that, the
extent of the economic situation in Spain could even
deteriorate beyond what is being described as an adverse scenario."Some
investors will likely still be nervous over whether the auditors' reports
discovered most if not all of the toxic assets on the balance sheets of Spain's
banks, Miller said. And their fears are compounded by concerns that Greece
might still end up having to leave the single currency, further destabilizing
the eurozone and especially Spain.The results of the audits are good news for
Spain because both companies came up with similar numbers and the overall
figures were lower than some estimates of the banking sector's recapitalization
needs, said Gayle Allard, an economist with Madrid's IE Business School."I
think it's a fantastic result because there was talk of needs of (EURO)70
billion to (EURO)80 billion and that the loan could have been for (EURO)100
billion," she said.Investors could still easily find something to scare
them about the results, Allard said, "but I don't think there's any reason
to do so."She added: "The audits have come in better than anyone has
expected, there's still some uncertainty, but if both of them are coming to the
conclusion of those numbers we've got to be in the ballpark."
Eurozone
Crisis Causing 'Deeper And More Broad-Based' Economic Downturn
The downturn in the euro zone's private sector is becoming entrenched,
business surveys showed on Thursday, as falling new orders and employment
levels dent confidence.June is the fifth consecutive month activity across the
17-nation bloc has declined, dragging down heavyweights Germany and France and
likely increasing calls for the European Central Bank to take action to support
the economy.Markit's Eurozone Composite Purchasing Managers' Index, a
combination of the services and manufacturing sectors and seen as a guide to
growth, held steady at 46.0 this month, the lowest since June 2009 when the
bloc was mired in a deep recession.That was better than a slide to 45.5
predicted by economists but the index has been below the 50 mark that divides
growth from contraction in all but one of the last 10 months."It is a
worryingly steep downturn we are seeing and it is spreading from the periphery,
which has been falling at an increased rate, through to Germany. It is becoming deeper and more broad-based," said Chris Williamson,
chief economist at Markit.The data pointed towards a second quarter contraction
of around 0.6 percent, Markit said.Having held steady at the start of the year,
the bloc's economy will contract 0.2 percent in the current quarter and
narrowly escape recession by stagnating again in the next, according to
economists.While the ECB is not seen cutting
interest rates from their record low of 1.0 percent anytime soon, a growing and
significant minority are saying the bank will be forced to act as the outlook
worsens.The danger of Greece crashing out of the euro zone eased after
pro-bailout parties won weekend elections, but risks are mounting that Spain,
the euro zone's fourth-largest economy, will need a full-blown international rescue.The
two-and-a-half year old crisis has hobbled the global economy, and world
leaders meeting in Mexico piled pressure on the euro zone to move towards a
fiscal and banking union to fix the crisis that now threatens to engulf Spain.With
uncertainty reigning, optimism among survey participants dwindled to its lowest
level since March 2009. The business expectations index for services firms
slumped to 50.8 from May's 57.4, the biggest one month drop since the aftermath
of the Lehman Brothers collapse in late 2008."Companies are getting
increasingly rattled by the crisis that is engulfing the region, and there are
clear knock-on effects for the real economy," Williamson said.COUNTING THE
COSTThe PMI for the dominant service sector nudged up to 46.8 from May's 46.7,
beating expectations for 46.4, but chalking up a fifth straight sub-50 reading.It
was a similar picture in the manufacturing sector, which drove a large part of
the bloc's recovery from the last recession, where activity declined for the
11th straight month.Its 44.8 reading was the lowest since June 2009 and missed
the 44.9 forecast. The output index for the sector fell to 44.4 from 44.6, the
lowest since May 2009.And things are unlikely to improve anytime soon as
composite new business declined for the 11th month, with the index coming in at
45.2, just up from May's 44.6. The survey also showed that firms have been
running down old orders for a year.To reduce costs, and giving an indication of
their prospects, factories reduced headcount for the fifth month, with the
employment sub-index falling to 46.5 from 47.1, its lowest since January 2010."It's
a sign that companies are expecting things to get worse and not better,"
Williamson said.Earlier data from Germany, Europe's largest economy, showed its
manufacturing sector contracted at its fastest pace since June 2009 while its
service sector barely expanded, posting its lowest reading in seven months.In
neighbouring France activity declined in both sectors, albeit it at a more
moderate pace than last month.
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