Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Reuters: Regulatory News: UPDATE 1-Spain's banks in focus ahead of Bankia rescue plan

Reuters: Regulatory News
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
UPDATE 1-Spain's banks in focus ahead of Bankia rescue plan
May 23rd 2012, 11:24

Wed May 23, 2012 7:24am EDT

  * Econ Min to address parliamentary committee at 1600 GMT      * He will outline plan to restructure nationalised Bankia      * Negotiations still under way on size, form of bailout          By Jesús Aguado and Sarah White          MADRID, May 23 (Reuters) - Spain may say on Wednesday how it  will plug a hole of at least 8 billion euros ($10.21 billion) at  Bankia, part of an effort to clean up a banking sector  laden with bad debts and stop the country sinking further into  the euro zone debt crisis.            Economists say Spain has little hope of emerging from  recession unless there is a wide-ranging bank recapitalisation  and many predict it will need an international aid package  similar to the ones handed out to Greece and Ireland.         Spain says it does not need outside money and government  sources told Reuters on Tuesday it would outline a rescue for  the country's fourth largest lender, formed from the merger of  seven banks during an earlier unsuccessful restructuring.             The government has just picked Goldman Sachs to value Bankia  and consultancies Oliver Wyman and Roland Berger were hired to  audit other banks' loan books, damaged by a property crash that  helped push bad loans to their highest in 18 years.           Economy Minister de Guindos is expected to give details on  the government's plans for Bankia in parliament at 1600 GMT but  economists said the focus was on the banking sector as a whole.        "The market has moved beyond Bankia. How much Bankia will  get in aid is not going to make a big difference," said Martin  van Vliet, senior economist at ING.           "The question is now about the long-term solvency of parts  of Spain's banking system, especially what is going to happen  with mortgage loan default. This concern is not being  addressed."           A leading banking industry group, the Institute of  International Finance (IIF), has said Spain's banks could need  another 76 billion euros to cover losses as bad debts might rise  as high as 260 billion euros.         Bankia needs to find about 7.5 billion euros by the year-end  to meet government demands to cushion itself against real estate  losses. It also needs to raise about 1.3 billion euros by June  to meet strict European Banking Authority capital rules.              Spain last week converted 4.5 billion euros of state loans  to parent company BFA (Banco Financiero y de Ahorros) into  equity, giving it a majority stake in Bankia and partly  nationalising the lender.             One source said de Guindos was likely to announce the final  taxpayer's bill of Bankia's rescue. He has estimated the state  will put less than 15 billion euros into the latest of the four  Spanish bank rescues in recent years.         A second source said talks on the size and form of the  bailout - through loans, equity or cash injection - were being  held between the economy ministry, the Bank of Spain, Bankia and  Goldman Sachs.                                      DOWNSIZING        Financial markets are closely watching the developments in  the banking sector to see whether Spain will become the next  casualty in the debt crisis that started in Greece. Four of  Greece's largest banks got an 18 billion euro recapitalistion on  Tuesday.              Spanish bond yields were trading at 6.16 percent on  Wednesday, not far off 7 percent, the level that is seen as  unsustainable for a country's finances. Bankia's shares were  little changed at 1.73 euros, against a blue-chip Spanish index  2 percent lower.              The appointment of outside auditors, as well as U.S. bank  Goldman Sachs on Bankia, has been seen as an effort to reassure  investors and European Union leaders, who will meet at a summit  on Wednesday, that Spain has the situation under control.             Banking sources questioned whether these external  consultants could wring more information from lenders than has  already been given to institutions like the International  Monetary Fund and the central bank.           One banker said the appointment of external auditors  indicated a lack of trust in the central bank.        "The Bank of Spain has a great team, they could always hire  some accountants. I don't understand why the government agreed  to outside auditors. It seems as if people don't trust the  central bank," said one investment banker in Madrid.          There have also been questions about the size of the fees  the companies would earn while the government is cutting  spending to improve its finances.             However, advisers who have worked on other government bank  restructurings said fees for Goldman Sachs would likely be lower  than for other deals, with most firms agreeing to do such work  for the prestige and in the hope that it brings new business.         Several financial and government sources told Reuters last  week that the strategy of the Spanish authorities would be to  clean up, downsize and sell Bankia within three years.        That plan could however derail if the several capital gaps  identified in the accounts by the lender's auditor Deloitte were  too large, the sources said.  
  • Link this
  • Share this
  • Digg this
  • Email
  • Reprints

You are receiving this email because you subscribed to this feed at blogtrottr.com.

If you no longer wish to receive these emails, you can unsubscribe from this feed, or manage all your subscriptions

0 comments:

Post a Comment

 
Great HTML Templates from easytemplates.com.