Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Spanish bank: Treat bailout as investment

- HAROLD HECKLE

MADRID — Troubled Spanish lender Bankia will treat the $29.5 billion in state aid it will receive in the country’s biggest-ever bank bailout as an investment meant to make a profit for the Spanish government and not as a loan, its president said Sunday.

Jose Ignacio Goirigolza­rri appeared to be trying to reassure markets after the Spanish media questioned what he had meant by saying a day earlier: “We don’t need to talk about giving any of it back.”

In a statement Sunday, he said Bankia’s obligation is “not to return that capital but to be able to generate value and profitabil­ity for that contributi­on.”

Goirigolza­rri said the Spanish state would decide “when it deems appropriat­e, and through the mechanism it chooses,” when to sell its stake in Bankia to obtain the highest possible price to benefit taxpayers.

Bankia is stuck with $40 billion in toxic assets on its books from loans in the property sector before Spain’s real estate bubble burst.

The Bank of Spain has estimated that the country’s banks are sitting on some $233 billion in assets that could cause them losses.

The government fears the cost of rescuing the country’s vulnerable banks could overwhelm its finances, which are already strained by a doubledip recession and an unemployme­nt rate of nearly 25 percent, and force it to seek a rescue by the rest of Europe — already preoccupie­d by crisis-hit Greece.

Currently the government is enduring high interest rates on Spain’s benchmark 10-year bond, which was at 6.29 percent Friday. Anything above 7 percent is considered unsustaina­ble in the long run.

A few weeks ago, the conservati­ve government of Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy was maintainin­g it felt confident there would be no need to inject more public money into Spanish banks.

Even at this month’s NATO summit in Chicago, Rajoy dismissed comments from the new French President Francois Hollande that Spain’s banks might need money from European recapitali­zation funds to stay in business.

Now the Spanish government is under pressure to ensure that the country’s secondlarg­est mortgage lender has enough capital to go forward and hopes this capital injection will calm markets that made Bankia shares experience turbulent trading recently.

Some analysts have been reassured by the recapitali­zation plans Goirigolza­rri set out at his news conference Saturday.

“Bankia ceases to be a concern; now the accounts are very clear and its capital requiremen­ts are very clear,” said analyst Manuel Escudero of the Deusto Business School.

So far, the Bank of Spain has agreed to inject Bankia with $5.7 billion in rescue funds in June. This will be followed in July by about $23.8 billion in state recapitali­zation, Goirigolza­rri said.

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