The Star Malaysia

Spanish banking rescue in trouble

Germany refuses to agree on repeat bailout

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Spain seems condemned to pay for its own banking rescue after Germany flatly refused to let the eurozone’s future bank supervisor do so, analysts say.

MADRID: Spain seems condemned to pay for its own banking rescue after Germany flatly refused to let the eurozone’s future bank supervisor do so, analysts said.

That is bad news for Spain’s soaring public debt.

But it was only one of a series of concerns now emerging from a eurozone bailout of Spain’s banks, which had been bogged down with bad loans since a 2008 property crash, diplomatic sources and analysts said.

Madrid had battled for a eurozone banking supervisor to be allowed to pump capital directly into its weak banks as part of a planned banking union for the 17-member single currency bloc.

That would have relieved Spain of the need to pay back an estimated 40 billion euros it plans to use from a 100-billion-euro eurozone credit line.

But German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who faces general election next year, left no room for doubt about her position on direct recapitali­sation for banks that have already been bailed out.

“There will not be a retroactiv­e direct recapitali­sation,” she said on Friday after a European Union (EU) summit, which agreed to work on setting up a eurozone banking union with supervisor­y powers during 2013.

A French government source said the question of direct aid for Spain’s banks was not settled.

But after the EU summit, a European diplomat was clear: “Spanish banks won’t be recapitali­sed before the end of 2013, probably in 2014.”

That would leave Spain holding the bill for the rescue loan, which was agreed with the eurozone in June and signed in July.

“Spain is going to ask for about 40 billion euros from the liquidity line,” said Daniel Pingarron, analyst at Spanish brokerage IG Markets. “That means the Spanish public debt grows automatica­lly.”

In fact, Spain’s 2013 budget already takes into account a payment of 30 billion euros for the banking fix, pushing the level of public debt to 90.5% of gross domestic product from an expected 85.3% this year.

But the banking rescue was also running into other serious problems, analysts said.

Another European diplomatic source said Madrid was balking at the eurozone’s insistence that investors in stricken banks’ subordinat­ed debt and preference shares take losses before any bailout.

This is particular­ly sensitive in Spain where the banks sold billions of euros in preference shares to ordinary customers, many of whom believed the complex instrument­s were a form of savings.

“There is a stalemate here,” said Edward Hugh, an economist based in Barcelona.

Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy’s conservati­ve government and the eurozone authoritie­s were at odds over the preference shares because of Madrid’s reluctance to force the bank clients to lose their savings, he said.

At the same time, the two sides seemed to be struggling over the implementa­tion of a “bad bank”, created to mop up the bad assets held by commercial banks and then to sell them to investors, he said.

Latest data show more than one in 10 Spanish bank loans has gone bad, a new record.

The Spanish bad bank was set to launch on Nov 19 under the name of Sareb with a formal ceiling of 90 billion euros in so-called toxic assets, an economy ministry official said.

But the key unresolved question is how to value the bad assets.

The lower the price, the easier it is to attract investors. But a low price also could push up bank losses and force the Spanish government to pump in yet more money.

With the cost of the bailout being added to Spanish debt under the existing accords, Madrid was trying to handle the bailout “on a shoestring,” Hugh said.

“Europe is pressing them obviously for a lower price and is pressing them to do the preference shares but Spain seems to telling them to go and walk,” the analyst said.

In any case, Hugh said, the final cost of the banking bailout was likely to rise. “At some stage there is obviously going to be more,” he said.

 ??  ?? No repeat bailout: Brokers looking up at the informatio­n panel at Madrid’s stock market. Spanish banks may be in trouble as Germany has refused to agree on a repeat bailout. —EPA
No repeat bailout: Brokers looking up at the informatio­n panel at Madrid’s stock market. Spanish banks may be in trouble as Germany has refused to agree on a repeat bailout. —EPA

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