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Dublin: 8 °C Tuesday 18 June, 2013

Spain to add another €6 billion to bank bailout fund

The extra funds are being provided while ministers work on sorting out the formal bailout from European funding.

A man walks by a Bankia bank with its cash machine covered by a poster reading
A man walks by a Bankia bank with its cash machine covered by a poster reading "this bank cheat and fraud".

THE SPANISH GOVERNMENT will inject another €6 billion into its bank rescue fund to cope with growing problems in its financial sector as it awaits a loan from its 16 partner countries in the eurozone.

An official with the economy ministry, speaking only on condition of anonymity because of government policy, confirmed the extra cash will raise the capital base of the bank rescue fund to €15 billion.

The fund needs the new money to make an emergency cash injection of €4.5 billion into Bankia SA, the nationalised lender, by buying new shares.

Like many of Spain’s banks, Bankia is saddled with huge amounts of soured real estate investments left over from the 2008 property market crash.

Bankia has asked for a total of €19 billion in public aid. The total amount that will be injected into Bankia should be made public in coming weeks after audits of Spain banks are completed, according to the fund for the orderly restructuring of banks, or FROB, the bank rescue fund set up to help Spain’s financial sector.

Spain could finance the fresh injection of cash into the rescue fund by issuing bonds, but no decision has been made yet, the official said.

To manage the rising cost of helping its banks, Spain has formally asked for a loan from other eurozone countries of up to €100 billion. The government expects to get the loan by early November, once the banks’ restructuring plans are unveiled in the middle of this month.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel is due to visit Madrid for talks with Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy on Thursday, where Spain’s progress with austerity measures is likely to be high on the agenda.

Read: Spanish unemployment rises again to creep towards 25 per cent

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Comments (15 Comments)

  • If I were an investor, this would tell me to keep my money out of Europe for at least 10 to 15 years. The policy makers had Ireland, Greece and Portugal to learn from. Even though they managed to screw up in those 3 they are now doing the exact same with Spain.

    This will keep going until either the European economy completely collapses under the strain or politicians bother to try and learn from their mistakes. The former is much more likely.

    Reply
  • Whats the Spanish for Deja Vu…?

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  • It’s an endless nightmare. But sure the book doesn’t stop anywhere so why shouldn’t the spanish banks ask for a whopping cash injection from European taxpayers to gloss over their rubbish debts, everyone else has done it and got away with it, laughing!

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  • Have these clowns not learned that Austerity is NOT WORKING. Spain will go the same way as all the other countries that it has been forced upon.

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    • Austerity doesn’t work.

      Is there any more over-used cliche?
      What does it even mean?

      Alternative is to keep borrowing more to spend more – basic arithmetic says austerity is ultimately inevitable.

      Reply
    • Alien8 04/09/12 #

      Exactly… Austerity could work, if any of the countries tried to implement austerity policies. ‘increasing the tax base’ while giving increments is NOT austerity.

      Austerity would be reducing ALL spending by 20 to 30% instead of reducing some spending, here and there while increasing it over there.

      Austerity would mean Ballybay would not have the same size town council as the whole of south Dublin.

      Austerity would mean every teacher on 75k (I know 3, and I don’t know a lot of teachers) would be reduced to 50k to enable more young teachers to be employed at 25 to 30k.

      Austerity would mean you do not get a public pension if you are still working.

      Austerity would mean reducing council costs to zero before adding a household/local charge.

      If only we had a party that would implement true austerity, instead of the ‘mechanisms to move money around to help troika’ parties, we would all see that it might involve some sacrifices for families that are making do, it will help lots of families that are not. And our kids won’t have to emigrate for the next 15 years.

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    • Austerity is doing the exact job it’s intended to do – providing a means to asset strip EU countries one at a time while the general public guffaw at the incompetence of their respective governments. It’s all part of the plan people!

      If they really wanted to sort this mess then the whole system should have been let fall, gone out with a bang; instead they take everything, and it’ll go to the wall eventually anyway, just the general public will suffer most first, and countries assets will all have been sold off to private interests.
      The guys at the top are just making sure they’re still at the top when the dust settles.

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    • The reason it doesnt work is because if you keep taking tax by whatever means the taxable pot gets smaller and we stop spending and we finally reach a point where we have no pot to even piss in . you cannot tax your way out of recession…at worst and i mean worst we should be doing a deal with the troika and spreading the debt over a 100 years…the country is not going anywhere…growth and employment is the only way..and anyway austerity will be the least of our worries when the great mortgage default happens…we have to get the country back to work

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  • Manuel from Faulty Towers was quoted today……… “I Have nothing I’m from Barcelona”, when pressed on the issue Manuel said “knows nothing”…..

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  • Tthe majority of german people want out of the euro,as all posible outcomes of the euro crisis leads back to them ultimately paying for it..I cant see this happening,if the multinationals are making contingenency plans for a euro break up,you can bet the markets will want securiy for loaning money,and you cant really blame them after wacthing the pompous euro elite summit after summit agree to disagree…then move on to the next..summit..!

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  • They want 100 Billion? Really? 100 Billion?

    What’s Spanish for “Sod off”?

    Reply

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