Investors
flee Spain as financial crisis worsens
Investors
are fleeing Spain as the financial crisis worsens while Madrid
battles to contain fears of an economic collapse.
30
May, 2012
The
European Central Bank said on Wednesday that private individuals and
companies are withdrawing their money out of Spanish Banks.
Data
shows private deposits at Spain's financial institutions fell by more
than 30 percent in April.
The
interest rate on Spain's 10-year bonds rose to 6.703 percent as the
country battled to avoid being the next victim of the eurozone
crisis.
Stock
prices fell all over the world and Madrid's IBEX-35 index slumped
2.58 percent to a nine-year low at 6,090.4 points.
The
euro slumped to a two-year low versus the US dollar amid fears that
Spain could be forced into asking for a bailout for its ailing banks.
The
European single currency sank below USD1.24, touching a low point
last seen on July 6, 2010.
Also
on Wednesday, the European Commission said Spain is on top of the
list of the eurozone 12 critical economies due to the countries’
deepening financial crisis.
Spain’s
central bank reported on Tuesday that Spain’s economy would shrink
in the second quarter of 2012, with the recession expected to
continue until at least mid-2012.
Battered
by the global financial downturn, the Spanish economy collapsed into
recession in the second half of 2008, taking with it millions of
jobs.
The
worsening eurozone debt crisis has raised Spain's financing costs and
raised concerns that the country might have to seek a European Union
bailout, like Greece.
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