This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.

You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-19763756

The article has changed 8 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.

Version 1 Version 2
Spain's banks 'need 59.3bn euros of eurozone loans' Spain's banks 'need 59.3bn euros of eurozone loans'
(35 minutes later)
Spain's banks will need an injection of 59.3bn euros ($76.3bn; £47.3bn) to survive a serious downturn, an independent audit has calculated.Spain's banks will need an injection of 59.3bn euros ($76.3bn; £47.3bn) to survive a serious downturn, an independent audit has calculated.
The amount is broadly in line with market expectations of 60bn euros, and follows so-called stress tests of 14 Spanish lenders.The amount is broadly in line with market expectations of 60bn euros, and follows so-called stress tests of 14 Spanish lenders.
Spain is expected to get the money from the eurozone rescue funds, the current EFSF and the future ESM. Much of the money is expected to come from the eurozone rescue funds, the current EFSF and the future ESM.
Spain said in July that it would request eurozone support for its banks.Spain said in July that it would request eurozone support for its banks.
The plan is now for the most toxic assets of the Spanish banks to be taken off their balance sheets and placed into a state-run "bad bank".The plan is now for the most toxic assets of the Spanish banks to be taken off their balance sheets and placed into a state-run "bad bank".
'Transparent'
An independent audit of the banks confirmed on Friday that the banks are short of some 59bn euros, or almost 6% of Spanish GDP.
This "hole" is the amount of capital that must be injected by the authorities to absorb the losses that the banks (especially regional savings banks) might suffer on all the loans they made to property developers and mortgage borrowers during the housing boom of the last decade.
Some of the 59bn may also be provided by private sector investors, or by writing off the amount owed to some existing investors in the banks.
The housing bubble has burst and many of those loans cannot be repaid.
The eurozone has already made 100bn euros available from its rescue funds to plug this hole, although many investors suspect that the banks' needs may (eventually) exceed even this total.
For Spain, the question isn't just the size of the banks' losses.
It is still not clear who will ultimately bear them. Will it be the entire eurozone, through its 100bn-euro investment (as Madrid hopes), the Spanish government itself, or the (mostly Spanish) private sector investors in the banks?
The Irish government was sunk by the losses incurred by its own banks after it foolishly offered to guarantee them. Spain hopes to avoid the same fate.
The European Commission welcomed the announcement, saying in a statement that it "is a major step in implementing the financial-assistance programme and towards strengthening the viability of, and confidence in, the Spanish banking sector".The European Commission welcomed the announcement, saying in a statement that it "is a major step in implementing the financial-assistance programme and towards strengthening the viability of, and confidence in, the Spanish banking sector".
It added: "The necessary state aid provided to Spanish banks will be determined in the coming months."It added: "The necessary state aid provided to Spanish banks will be determined in the coming months."
Friday's announcement comes a day after the Spanish government set out an austerity budget as it seeks to avoid having to follow Greece, Portugal and the Republic of Ireland in requesting a full bailout. Christine Lagarde, managing director of the International Monetary Fund, praised the independent valuation of Spain's banks, saying it had been "thorough and transparent".
The budget, which came against a backdrop of violent protests, spelled out new spending cuts, but protected pensions. She added: "Public funding of the banks' actual capital needs, which are expected to be lower than the amounts identified in the stress tests, can be financed comfortably under the recapitalisation programme supported by Spain's European partners."
The audit calculation that Spain's banks will need 59.3bn euros is a worst-case scenario, and does not take into account any future plans by the lenders themselves to raise their own capital.
It is also based on expectations that Spain's economy will contract by 6.5% between 2012 and 2014, a much bigger contraction than is expected.
Government bailout?
The bigger question remains whether the Spanish government will have to follow Greece, Portugal and the Republic of Ireland and request a full international bailout, involving loans that have to be paid off by the state, as well as close monitoring of its economy by its international creditors.
While Madrid continues to publicly deny this, the markets consider it only a matter of time.
On Thursday, the Spanish government announced its latest austerity budget. Against a backdrop of violent protests, it outlined new spending cuts, but protected pensions.
Spain is struggling with a shrinking economy and 25% unemployment.Spain is struggling with a shrinking economy and 25% unemployment.
Comments from its central bank earlier this week indicated that the country's recession deepened in the past three months.