Spanish
deny report of €1bn bank run
Reports
of depositors withdrawing funds from Spanish banks were met with
hasty denials from the country's government yesterday, as
policymakers rushed to scotch talk of bank runs spreading across the
continent
17
May, 2012
Shares
in Bankia, the Spanish lender that combined many of the country's
troubled regional lenders, fell 9.7 per cent to €1.493 after
reports in Spanish newspapers that Spaniards had withdrawn €1
billion (Dh4.66bn) from the nationalised bank in the past few days.
However,
Fernando Jiménez Latorre, Spain's deputy economy minister, denied
the report in the tabloid El Mundo, telling Bloomberg News that the
country had no concerns about capital flight from Spanish banks.
Later
in the day, Bankia said that the withdrawal was "seasonal"
and was not a cause for concern.
The
reports followed a warning to Greek party leaders from Karolos
Papoulious, the country's president, that €700 million had left the
country's banking sector since May 7.
Markets
were still betting that a Greek exit from the euro zone was imminent
as previous measures to stem the crisis started to come undone, wrote
Steen Jakobsen, the chief economist at Saxo Bank, in a note to
clients.
"We
have moved from a situation where no one publicly wanted to talk
about the Greek exit, to one where everyone is making plans for the
reintroduction of the drachma," he said. "The path from
here is very uncertain … with the G8 [Group of Eight] meeting and
politicians finally realising they called off the crisis way too
soon."
Uncertainty
surrounding Greece's future in the euro zone hammered European stocks
yesterday, as markets weighed the possible outcomes from a rerun next
month of this month's parliamentary elections.
Brent
crude futures fell US$2.40 to $109.03 per barrel, the first time they
have fallen below $110 per barrel since January.
The
FTSEurofirst 300 Index fell 1 per cent to 982.05 as most European
indexes declined. The MSCI Emerging Markets index dropped 2.3 per
cent to 924.26.
Later
in the day, Spain's borrowing costs rose, with yields on 10-year
government bonds rising to 6.34 per cent after a bond auction.
Worries
from Greece were felt as far afield as Russia, where the Micex index
slid 2.5 per cent to enter a bear market, having fallen 20.5 per cent
from its March highs.
The
UAE's markets fared better, with the Dubai Financial Market General
Index rebounding 0.6 per cent to 1,475.58, and the Abu Dhabi
Securities Exchange flat at 2,467.85.
But
as markets crumbled, ratings agencies warned of greater pressures on
big lenders to shore up capital, further reducing their capacity to
lend to euro-zone economies.
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