It's
been a while since Spain was in the headlines
Capital Flight in Spain Hits 15-Year High
28
August, 2012
If
Spain is going to be saved, someone better convince Spanish citizens
because Deposit
flight from Spanish banks hits 15-year high as bailout rumours grow
Spanish banks lost €1 out of every €20 deposited with them in July, making it the worst month for deposit flight in 15 years as rumours grew that the country is edging closer to a full bailout.
News that banks were losing deposits came as Spain's statistics institute revealed the current recession is worse than thought, with the economy shrinking at an annual rate of 1.3% in the second quarter.
"The downturn in the Spanish economy is deeper than previously thought and accelerating," warned Robert O'Daly of the Economist Intelligence Unit.
Tuesday's revised figures showed recession started three months earlier than previously indicated. "The data shows the recession started in the third quarter of last year," secretary for state for the economy, Fernando Jiménez admitted.
A collapse in internal consumption in a country squeezed by government austerity and massive unemployment is largely to blame for the recession, as this fell at an annual rate of 3.9% in the second quarter.
Unemployment is already at 25% but the speed at which jobs are being destroyed quickened to an average rate of 800,000 jobs a year in the second quarter, according to the statistics institute.
That helps explain why Spaniards, and their companies, are both reducing spending and putting less money in the bank.
The
amount of money Germany is going to lose when Spain and Italy decide
to exit the euro grows leaps and bounds every month.
A
New Run On The Banks?
Spaniards Pulling Cash Out
At Record Rates
Spanish
consumers are pulling their cash out of banks at
record levels,
according to figures released on Tuesday.
28
August, 2012
Private
sector deposits fell by nearly 5 percent in July to €1.509, the
Telegraph reported, citing European Central Bank data, as public
confidence in the banking system reached all-time lows amid a
worsening economic situation.
The
news comes after bond markets continued to hammer the debt-ridden
euro zone nations Spain and Italy last week.
On
Friday, the interest rate on a 10-year loan to the Spanish government
briefly topped 6 percent -- a level that forced Greece into a default
earlier this year, despite massive financial support from
international sources -- before settling back to 5.96 percent.
"The
pick-up in yields is a clear negative headline for Spain," Jo
Tomkins, an analyst at 4Cast, a consulting firm, told the New York
Times. "The country is facing a double-whammy of low growth and
tough austerity, and [there are] doubts that it will be able to hit
already optimistic deficit targets."
The
surge in bond yields was followed by a two-notch credit downgrade by
Standard & Poor's, which slashed the country's rating to BBB + on
worries about the government's exposure to the nation's ailing banks.
The current reduced rating is still considered to be investment
grade.
The
yield on Spain's two-year notes surged to the highest level in 18
years, Bloomberg News said.
Meanwhile,
Spanish unemployment climbed to 24.4 percent of the workforce, the
government said.
Italy's
cost of borrowing was close behind its western neighbor: The yield on
a 10-year note rose Friday to 5.84 percent from 5.24 percent.
"These
... results certainly came at a price which, in turn, leaves a
question mark over how long Italy will be able to finance itself at
levels that can be deemed sustainable," Richard McGuire, senior
fixed income strategist at Rabobank, told the Wall Street Journal.
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