Bankia has again told customers that their deposits are safe in its hands
12:00am UK, Friday May 18, 2012
Sixteen Spanish banks have been downgraded by credit rating agency Moody's, as the country's government intervened to deny reports of a run on troubled lender Bankia.
The agency said the decision to downgrade the banks - which includethe eurozone's largest, Banco Santander - was due to a weak economy and the government's reduced ability to support struggling lenders.All the banks' long-term debt ratings were downgraded by at least one notch, and some suffered three-notch cuts.
Meanwhile, shares in Bankia - which was recently part-nationalised - plunged 27% after Spanish newspaper El Mundo reported 1bn euros (£800m) worth of deposits had been withdrawn in the last week.
In a separate development, the bank's chairman released a statement in an attempt to reassure customers their deposits were safe.
There is a wealth of pressure on the Spanish economy - largely stemming from the collapse of its property bubble four years ago - which badly damaged its financial system.
Bankia has lost two thirds of its stock market value since July last year
The biggest concern for the Spanish government is its own borrowing costs, which have been forced up by contagion from Greece.
Its 10-year debt yield hit 6.5% on Wednesday, prompting prime minister Mariano Rajoy to voice worries about the state's ability to finance itself.
He appealed for the eurozone to come together.
"It's a difficult and complicated situation," he told reporters in parliament as traders wondered whether Madrid might one day, like smaller Greece, Portugal and Ireland, need a bailout.
Spanish Economy In Numbers
- :: Unemployment stands at 24.4% - highest rate in EU.
:: The yield on its 10 year bonds has hit 6.5%.
:: GDP shrank by 0.3% in first quarter of 2012.
:: £27bn of Bankia assets are deemed 'toxic'.
That was realised again on Thursday at a sale of short-term bonds, which raised its target of 2.5bn euros (£2bn) but at sharply higher yields.
Spain is in such trouble because of the perilous state of its financial sector, which many say is damaged beyond self-repair by bad loans made over 10 years to 2008 that saw house prices shoot up more than 200%.
It part-nationalised Bankia, its fourth largest bank, as part of wider efforts to rescue the sector last week.
On Wednesday, Bankia delayed releasing its first quarter results which also knocked confidence.
European markets are continuing to bleed value
However, a wider lack of confidence in the Spanish financial sector has indicated that its government's intervention to date has been judged by investors to have fallen short of the mark.
The example of Greece has weighed on investors' willingness to lend to Spain and the prospect of yet more state liabilities appearing in the Spanish banking system have also hurt.
Some market analysts believe Spain - or Europe - will have to inject funds into the financial sector to avert a collapse.
In an attempt to boost confidence, the government has asked external auditors to analyse the banks' balance sheets and put a cost on their liabilities.
However, markets may not like what they find.
Stock markets on Thursday resumed their falls as investors shed more risk over the wider euro debt crisis.
In London, the FTSE 100 joined other main European markets in shedding value.
It was more than 1% lower by late afternoon.
:: What would happen to the markets in the event of a euro break-up? Watch an analysis by economic risk expert Dr Laurence Wormald
SOURCE: http://news.sky.com/home/business/article/16229721
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