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Spain's toxic assets

August 19, 2013

The banking sector in Spain has suffered another setback with the bad loan ratio in lenders' books climbing to a new high. The negative trend is a result of more defaults by households and firms.

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Office of Spain's Bankia in Madrid DW/Viktor Tscherezk
Image: DW/V. Tscherezki

The proportion of non-performing credits weighing on Spain's banking sector reached a record of 11.7 percent in June amid an unabated wave of individuals and small and medium-sized companies defaulting as recession lingered on in the debt-stricken southern European nation.

The country's central bank announced Monday that bad loans totaled 176.4 billion euros ($235.3 billion), up from 170.21 billion euros a month earlier.

Back in 2007 - before Spain's property market collapsed - the ratio stood at just 1 percent and has increased steadily since, with the nation being in recession for most of the past four years.

Volatile economy

Spain had been forced to apply for a huge bailout package for its bank. Ballooning budget deficits and the 40-billion-euro bank rescue measure have increased debt levels further. In June, public debt amounted to 943.7 billion euros, or 90.2 percent of the nation's gross domestic product (GDP).

Shares plummet in ailing Bankia finance group

The government hopes its austerity measures and labor market reforms will enable the country to struggle out of recession later this year, but international experts appear less optimistic.

Some Spanish banks at least have made big strides in leaving their crisis behind them. Santander, for instance, reported a half-year surplus of 2.3 billion euros, a rise of 29 percent.

hg/ipj (Reuters, AP, dpa)