Business

Fitch cuts ratings for 18 Spanish banks

English.news.cn   2012-06-13 06:00:58            
 • Fitch on Tuesday cut the ratings of 18 Spanish banks.
 • Fitch slashed Spain's sovereign debt rating to BBB and downgraded Spain's two biggest banks.
 • The Spanish economy would remain in recession this year and in 2013, Fitch said.

 

MADRID, June 12 (Xinhua) -- The international ratings agency Fitch on Tuesday cut the ratings of 18 Spanish banks.

"The institutions affected by today's rating actions are purely domestic banks. Thus, their revenue generation capacity, risk profile, funding access and cost of funding are highly sensitive to the evolution of Spain's economy and its housing market," Fitch said in a statement.

The decision came after the ratings agency slashed Spain's sovereign debt rating by three notches last week to BBB and downgraded the country's two biggest banks Santander and BBVA on Monday.

Santander and BBVA are the most solvent banks in the country at the moment. They have been qualified by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) as the banks that could resist a worsening of the economic situation in Spain.

Spain would not achieve its budget deficit goals in 2012 and 2013 and the Spanish economy would remain in recession this year and in 2013, Fitch said.

Last Saturday, the Spanish government decided to ask for a bailout for its banking system which could reach up to 100 billion euros (about 125 billion U.S. dollars).

However, the Spanish stock market so far has not registered good results.

Uncertainty still puts pressure on the IBEX-35 stock market in Madrid, where the risk premium passed the 500-point mark on Tuesday and the interest rate on the Spanish 10-year-bond reached 6.8 percent, the highest level since the country started to use euro.

Related:

Spain's 10-year-bond yield hits euro-era high

MADRID, June 12 (Xinhua) -- The interest rate of Spanish 10-year-bond hit an all euro-era high at 6.81 percent on Tuesday despite the international bailout program to rescue its banks agreed last weekend.

Meanwhile the IBEX-35 stock market in Madrid saw the Spanish risk premium rise by 10 points over the course of the day, closing the session on 529 point, while the index stood at 6,523 points.   Full story

Special Report: Global Financial Crisis

 

Editor: Liu
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