Bailout to be 'cushion' for Spain

Euro zone finance ministers have agreed to lend Spain up to €100 billion to shore up its teetering banking system.

Euro zone finance ministers have agreed to lend Spain up to €100 billion to shore up its teetering banking system.

Madrid said it would specify precisely how much it needs once independent audits report in just over a week.

After a conference call of the 17 finance ministers yesterday afternoon, which several sources described as heated, the Eurogroup and Madrid said the amount of the bailout would be sufficiently large to banish any doubts.

"The loan amount must cover estimated capital requirements with an additional safety margin, estimated as summing up to €100 billion in total," a Eurogroup statement said.

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Minister of State Brian Hayes insisted today Spain is not getting a better deal on its bailout than Ireland.

He told RTÉ the Government Ireland still has "unfinished business" on its bailout and will seek more favourable terms on the cost of rescuing the former Anglo Irish Bank.

Spanish prime minister Mariano Rajoy said today the bank aid package will allow Madrid to avoid a full bailout.

"Yesterday, the credibility of the euro won, yesterday the future won," Mr Rajoy said at a press conference in Madrid. "Yesterday, the European Union won."

Without planned reforms and deficit reduction what happened "last night would have been an intervention" instead of "the opening of a credit line," Mr Rajoy said.

The government will continue with its economic and financial reform programme, he said. "This gives us a cushion, it gives us security, and logically the message it sends to the market is much clearer and more forceful," Mr Rajoy said.

A bailout for Spain's banks, beset by bad debts since a property bubble burst, would make it the fourth country to seek assistance since Europe's debt crisis began.

With the rescue of Greece, Ireland, Portugal and now Spain, the EU and IMF have now committed around €500 billion to finance European bailouts.

Spain said last night it wanted aid for its banks but would not specify the precise amount until two independent consultancies - Oliver Wyman and Roland Berger - deliver their assessment of the banking sector's capital needs some time before June 21st.

"The Spanish government declares its intention to request European financing for the recapitalisation of the Spanish banks that need it," economy minister Luis de Guindos told news conference in Madrid yesterday. He said the amounts needed would be manageable and that the funds requested would amply cover any needs.

Washington, which is worried the euro zone crisis could drag the US economy down in an election year, welcomed the announcement. "These are important for the health of Spain's economy and as concrete steps on the path to financial union, which is vital to the resilience of the euro area," US treasury secretary Timothy Geithner said.

The Group of Seven developed nations - the United States, Germany, France Britain, Italy, Japan and Canada - heralded the move as a milestone as the euro zone moves toward tighter financial and budgetary ties.

Officials said there had been a heated debate over the International Monetary Fund's role in Spain's bank rescue, which Madrid wanted kept to a minimum. The IMF will not provide any of the money.

In the end it was agreed that the IMF would help monitor reforms in Spain's banking sector, while EU institutions would ensure Spain stuck to its broader economic commitments.

IMF managing director Christine Lagarde said the euro zone's plan was consistent with the fund’s estimate of the capital needs of Spain's banks and should provide "assurance that the financing needs of Spain's banking system will be fully met."

Sources involved in the talks said there had been pressure on Madrid to make a precise request right away, but Spain had resisted.

Euro zone policymakers are eager to shore up Spain's position before June 17th elections in Greece which could push Athens closer to a euro zone exit and unleash a wave of contagion. Spain's auditors could report back after that date.

While Spain would join Greece, Ireland and Portugal in receiving a European financial rescue, officials said the aid would be focused only on its banking sector, without taking the Spanish state out of credit markets.

That would be crucial to avoid overstraining the euro zone's rescue funds, which would struggle to cover Spanish government borrowing needs for the next three years plus possible additional assistance for Portugal and Ireland.

Conditions in the plan did not appear to add to the austerity measures and structural economic reforms which prime minister Mariano Rajoy's government has already put in place.

"Since the funds being asked for are to attend to financial sector needs, the conditionality, as agreed in the Eurogroup meeting, will be specifically for the financial sector," Mr de Guindos said.

EU and German officials have cited national pride in the euro zone's fourth largest economy as a barrier to requesting a full assistance program.

Minister for Finance Michael Noonan said the funds would be provided through the EFSF or ESM at the same interest rates that apply to funds provided to other bailout countries.

Analysts said financial markets may be calmed by the announcement when they reopen tomorrow.

"The figure of up to €100 billion is more encouraging and pretty realistic; it's an attempt to cap the problem," said Edmund Shing, European head of equity strategy at Barclays.

"The issue, however, is there is still a lack of detail about where the money's coming from, which is crucial. The market will treat it with some caution until they see how it will be funded."

The Eurogroup said the funds could come from either from the euro zone's temporary rescue fund, the EFSF, or the permanent mechanism, the ESM, which is due to start next month. Finland said that if money came from the EFSF, it would want collateral.

EU sources said there was a preference to channel money to Spain through the ESM, rather than the EFSF. Under the ESM, an approval rate of 90 per cent or less is needed to trigger aid, and the fund also has more flexibility in how it operates.

"That's why it's so important that the ESM ... be ratified quickly," German finance minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said.

The Spanish government has already spent €15 billion bailing out small regional savings banks that lent recklessly to property developers. Spain's biggest failed bank, Bankia, will cost €23.5 billion to rescue and its shareholders have been wiped out.

"Whatever the formula being used, we need to say two things: first the innocent should not suffer for the guilty, second public money should come back to public coffers," said Socialist opposition leader Alfredo Perez Rubalcaba after speaking with Mr Rajoy yesterday morning.

The race to resolve the banks' troubles comes after Fitch Ratings cut Madrid's sovereign credit rating by three notches to BBB, highlighting the Spanish banking sector's exposure to bad property loans and to contagion from Greece's debt crisis.

It said the cost to the Spanish state of recapitalising banks stricken by the bursting of a real estate bubble, recession and mass unemployment could be between up to €100 billion .

Italy could yet get dragged in too. Its industry minister, Corrado Passera, said the economic situation in Italy had improved since the end of 2011, but remained critical.

"Europe was more disappointing than we had expected, it was less capable of tackling a relatively minor problem such as Greece," the minister told a conference yesterday.