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Economy
In reply to the discussion: STOCK MARKET WATCH -- Wednesday, 18 April 2012 [View all]xchrom
(108,903 posts)34. Spain's bad loans back to 1994 levels
http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/breaking/2012/0418/breaking21.html
Spanish banks' bad loans rose to their highest level since1994 in February, to 8.2 per cent of their credit portfolios, Bank of Spain data showed today, as the sector continues to battle sliding house prices and a looming recession.
Banks are facing a new wave of loan defaults as an economic crisis deepens and analysts say some may not survive as the government implements sweeping budget cuts that will only add to Spanish households' problems with repaying debt.
Non-performing loans increased by 3.8 billion to 143.8 billion in February from the previous month. They totalled 7.9 per cent of total debt portfolios in January.
That picture - driven by the collapse of a housing boom in the global financial turmoil of 2008 - is at the heart of problems for Spanish banks that have seen other institutions refuse to lend to them and forced some to rely on the European Central Bank for funding.
Spanish banks' bad loans rose to their highest level since1994 in February, to 8.2 per cent of their credit portfolios, Bank of Spain data showed today, as the sector continues to battle sliding house prices and a looming recession.
Banks are facing a new wave of loan defaults as an economic crisis deepens and analysts say some may not survive as the government implements sweeping budget cuts that will only add to Spanish households' problems with repaying debt.
Non-performing loans increased by 3.8 billion to 143.8 billion in February from the previous month. They totalled 7.9 per cent of total debt portfolios in January.
That picture - driven by the collapse of a housing boom in the global financial turmoil of 2008 - is at the heart of problems for Spanish banks that have seen other institutions refuse to lend to them and forced some to rely on the European Central Bank for funding.
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