Saturday, September 22, 2012

how will Spain budget 2013

World Economic outlook - how will Spain budget 2013 : In addition, the government is now also looking to toughen the levy further by lowering the tax's minimum threshold to EUR108,000, according to Expansion.

Spain will not rush to seek external aid to finance its debt, Economy Minister Luis de Guindos said on Saturday, adding that the country’s banks would need €60 billion (Dh286 billion) to clean up the toxic property assets on their balance sheets.
De Guindos said deficit-cutting efforts would remain a priority for the government, which next week presents its draft budget plan for 2013, new structural reforms and the results of stress tests on its wobbly banking sector.

Spain is at the centre of the Eurozone debt crisis, now in its third year, and investors believe a high deficit, soaring debts, a banking sector brought low by the bursting of a real estate bubble and a deepening economic contraction will eventually force Madrid to seek more external help.

The government sought a €100 billion European credit line to recapitalise troubled lenders in June. It has been in talks for weeks over a bond-buying programme from the European Central Bank (ECB) and the Eurozone rescue funds, which it is hesitating to request because of concerns over the strings attached.

This is not about rescuing Spain but about making sure that the euro currency project is a project for everybody. Spain will do what it has to do but with no rush,” De Guindos said when asked about the possibility of seeking this assistance in the next few days.

Contraction likely

But with mounting funding needs, big repayment humps looming and an economy which, according to De Guindos, is set to contract by another 0.4 per cent in the third quarter of the year, Spain may have to move sooner rather than later.

Spanish officials have been talking discreetly to the European Commission since at least early August about possible conditions and supervision for a precautionary programme that would keep Spain in capital markets and bring down its borrowing costs.

While some sources suggest Madrid could make the move along with the budget package to pre-empt a credit review by ratings agency Moody’s, which might otherwise downgrade Spanish debt to junk status, EU officials said they did not expect Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy to seek an assistance programme before a regional election in his native Galicia on October 21.

EU paymaster Germany said on Friday that Spain did not need a European bailout, contrasting with French pressure on Madrid to avail itself of ECB help.

De Guindos also confirmed that he expected the results of an independent stress test of Spain’s banking sector conducted by consultancy Oliver Wyman to be in line with preliminary estimates released in June of €60 billion.

Credit line for banks

It will not be possible to allocate any unused money from the €100 billion credit line for other purposes, such as financing the state, De Guindos added.

“The credit line we’ve got is strictly for the banks... You’ll see the results of the Oliver Wyman report at the end of next week. I believe that they will not be far from the maximum amount Oliver Wyman showed in its first estimates, which were of around €60 billion,” De Guindos told journalists after meeting officials of the ruling People’s Party in Madrid.

Several lenders, including state-rescued Bankia and systemic lender Popular, are expected to be especially in focus.

A banking source told Reuters on Saturday that Oliver Wyman had told the Spanish government it would not take into account tax credits when determining the final capital needs, confirming a report in daily El Pais.

That could increase Bankia’s needs by €6 billion, pushing them to €29.5 billion in total, including €9 billion of cash already injected, while the three other nationalised banks — CatalunyaCaixa, Novagalicia and Banco de Valencia — would also see their capital shortfall increase.

“The issue of tax credits is still under discussion but they are very likely to be left out of the final numbers,” the banking source said, adding that any figure was preliminary.

Capital needs

Banco Popular, whose credit rating was cut to junk status by Fitch on Friday, is set to register the biggest capital needs of the banks that have not received public money yet, other banking sources said.

Two of the sources said the shortfall would be of at least €3 billion while Spanish newspaper El Mundo said on Saturday the stress tests would show needs of €3.7 billion.

Sources from the bank, however, dismissed these findings and said the needs would be less than €1.95 billion and could be addressed without requesting public help.

El Mundo also said Banco Mare Nostrum, which said earlier this month it was in talks with Popular about a possible merger, would need €1.9 billion.

The Bank of Spain, in reaction to these reports, said in a statement on Saturday that the final results of the stress tests would be published on September 28.

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