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Two ratings agencies downgrade Spanish banks

Image: Mykl Roventine via Creative Commons

TWO RATINGS AGENCIES have announced downgrades to Spanish banks this evening.

Fitch announced the credit rating downgrade of four of the country’s main banks, while Standard and Poor’s said it was downgrading 15 financial institutions based in Spain.

Long-term debt ratings

Fitch cited last month’s downgrade of Spain’s debt as a move which would weaken the government’s ability to support its largest banks, making their debt more risky for investors.

The agency also said in its statement that the country’s weak property market and economy would depress the banks’ asset values and profitability, and said it was cutting the long-term debt rating on each of Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria, Bankia SA, CaixaBank SA and Caja de Ahorros y Pensiones de Barcelona.

S&P

Separately, Standard and Poor’s announced it was lowing its ratings for 15 Spain-based financial institutions. The ratings agency said its decision was also based its recent downgrade of Spain. The organisation cited its own assessment of the stand-alone credit profiles of ten of the banks as the reason for downgrading them by  one notch.

The other five were downgraded by two notches.

The banks involved in S&P’s downgrade this evening include BBVA, Bankia SA, CaixaBank and Caja de Ahorro y Pensiones de Barcelona (as above with Fitch), as well as Santander.

Both Fitch and S&P downgraded Spain’s debt last month.

- Additional reporting by the AP

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Comments (8 Comments)

  • JibberIrish 13/02/12 #
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    I just started up an rating agency, and I think they are doing super, and just gave them a little gold star. Up yours S&P

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    • john g mcgrath 13/02/12 #
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      The trick now is to get the banks to pay you to rate them.
      As a former bond trader I will show you how to draft the reasoning for rating up or down for a % fee of course (old habits die hard).

    • JibberIrish 13/02/12 #
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      No problem John. Think the banks will buy into “because I said so” reasoning.

  • Shit you not 13/02/12 #
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    Ah yes, as soon as the markets begin to settle after the Greek deal with the IMF / ECB the vultures move in to f**k things up once again and nosedive the markets again. On the same day too..Jesus, these agencies I’m convinced are betting on downward spirals on the stock exchange.

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  • Report this comment

    Agreed!,

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  • Diari Liffey 13/02/12 #
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    “Caja de Ahorros y Pensiones de Barcelona” was the Spanish name used during Franco’s dictatureship as by then Catalan was forbidden. Its current name is in Catalan, “Caixa d’Estalvis i Pensions de Barcelona” (Savings and Pensions Bank of Barcelona) and it’s commonly known as “la Caixa”. “la Caixa” means “the savings bank” and it would have some similarities to Irish credit unions. It’s a financial institution controlled by local authorities and it uses a part of its profits to social causes.

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  • 1 Human Being 14/02/12 #
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    Keeping the chaos going good old Moody’s and standard and poors what we need is a anti corruption agency to step in and find the out why sovereign nations have been turned into corporate entities. I didn’t realise that’s all country’s are now is money laundering machines. How silly of me not too notice.

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  • Jimmy Bennett 14/02/12 #
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    I don’t rate either of those agencies

    Reply

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