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Spanish banks’ bad loans hit record high in December

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Spanish banks reported on Tuesday record-high bad loans in December as lenders continued to pay for the country's real estate bust even as the financial sector prepared to exit a 41-billion-euro ($56 billion) bailout.

Doubtful loans -- those at risk of not being repaid -- rose in December to 13.6 percent of all credit extended by Spanish banks, up from 13.07 percent the previous month, a Bank of Spain report showed.

It was the highest bad-loan ratio since records began in their existing form in 1962.

The bad loans in December amounted to 197 billion euros, up from 192.5 billion euros in November.

Spanish banks are burdened by bad loans made during a decade-long property bubble that burst in 2008, tipping the nation into recession and throwing millions out of work.

Despite shoring up their balance sheets with a 41.3-billion-euro rescue loan from Spain's eurozone partners, the banks' bad-loan levels have broken new records month after month.

Spain, the euro zone's fourth-biggest economy, exited the financial sector rescue programme on January 23.

Under the programme, Spanish banks have transferred many of their dodgy assets to a "bad bank", called Sareb, which aims to pool the bad assets and sell them at a discount.

But the bad loans, mostly linked to the property sector, remain a deep concern.

In December, the European Commission warned Spain to be vigilant as the bailout winds up, saying the sector was on the way to recovery but economic risks remained.

Spain crawled out of recession with 0.1-percent economic growth in the third quarter, and Economy Minister Luis de Guindos has estimated fourth-quarter growth of 0.3 percent.

Economists say the unemployment rate -- 26 percent in the third quarter of 2013 -- will remain painfully high for years to come.

Analysts expect Spanish banks' bad loan ratio to keep rising over the coming months as borrowers struggle to repay their mortgages and corporate loans amid high unemployment and weak domestic demand.

Spanish banks reported on Tuesday record-high bad loans in December as lenders continued to pay for the country’s real estate bust even as the financial sector prepared to exit a 41-billion-euro ($56 billion) bailout.

Doubtful loans — those at risk of not being repaid — rose in December to 13.6 percent of all credit extended by Spanish banks, up from 13.07 percent the previous month, a Bank of Spain report showed.

It was the highest bad-loan ratio since records began in their existing form in 1962.

The bad loans in December amounted to 197 billion euros, up from 192.5 billion euros in November.

Spanish banks are burdened by bad loans made during a decade-long property bubble that burst in 2008, tipping the nation into recession and throwing millions out of work.

Despite shoring up their balance sheets with a 41.3-billion-euro rescue loan from Spain’s eurozone partners, the banks’ bad-loan levels have broken new records month after month.

Spain, the euro zone’s fourth-biggest economy, exited the financial sector rescue programme on January 23.

Under the programme, Spanish banks have transferred many of their dodgy assets to a “bad bank”, called Sareb, which aims to pool the bad assets and sell them at a discount.

But the bad loans, mostly linked to the property sector, remain a deep concern.

In December, the European Commission warned Spain to be vigilant as the bailout winds up, saying the sector was on the way to recovery but economic risks remained.

Spain crawled out of recession with 0.1-percent economic growth in the third quarter, and Economy Minister Luis de Guindos has estimated fourth-quarter growth of 0.3 percent.

Economists say the unemployment rate — 26 percent in the third quarter of 2013 — will remain painfully high for years to come.

Analysts expect Spanish banks’ bad loan ratio to keep rising over the coming months as borrowers struggle to repay their mortgages and corporate loans amid high unemployment and weak domestic demand.

AFP
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