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A demonstrator holds a banner reading in spanish "Bankia is a wild animal" during a demonstration next to a Bankia bank branch in Barcelona, Spain, Saturday June 2, 2012. (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti)
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EU fund plans $120B Spain bailout

Report: bailout fund working to help Spain's banks

Updated: Saturday, 14 Jul 2012, 4:02 PM CDT
Published : Saturday, 14 Jul 2012, 4:02 PM CDT

BERLIN (AP) — The European Union's bailout fund is working on a €100 billion ($120 billion) package to prop up Spanish banks, according to a report Saturday by German news weekly Der Spiegel.

A confidential draft plan by senior officials at the European Financial Stability Facility proposes an initial €30 billion payment to Spain at the end of July, the magazine said.

Of that, some €20 billion would go toward shoring up Spanish banks' short-term finances while another €10 billion would be reserved as a longer-term emergency buffer.

Three further payments totaling €45 billion would be made in November and December of this year, and in June 2013, Der Spiegel said. A Spanish Economy Ministry spokeswoman declined to comment on the report.

According to the report, up to €25 billion would also be made available to create a "bad bank" to buy up hard-to-sell debt.

This would be in line with a draft memorandum of understanding agreed by finance ministers from the 17 eurozone countries, which suggests that part of Spain's bank bailout should involve the segregation of billions in problematic assets to an "external asset management agency" to clean up Spanish banks' balance sheets.

Investors are becoming increasingly wary of placing money in Spanish banks, which are having to turn to the European Central Bank for financing. In June, Spanish bank borrowing from the ECB rose 17 percent from May. The accrued total as of the end of that month was €337 billion, 77 percent of all the money owed to the ECB and seven times the figure from June 2011.

The government on Friday approved its latest package of measures aimed at cutting €65 billion ($79 billion) off the budget deficit through 2015, the biggest deficit-reduction plan in recent Spanish history. The sweeping austerity measures include wage cuts and tax increases for a country struggling under a recession and an unemployment rate of near 25 percent.


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