Banca Española ... Emergencia

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Flip
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Registrado: 08 Jun 2012, 00:14

Banca Española ... Emergencia

Mensaje por Flip »

Noticia crucial de hoy que no se va a dar a conocer. Ha sido PIMCO a traves de un comunicado a sus clientes y recogidas por wsj

Los bancos españoles han pulsado el boton rojo. Los problemas en españa de mal a peor hoy los bancos secretamente han acudido al fondo de emergencia de liquidez ELA, los prblemas de liquidez empiezan a agravarse por las salidas de capital.

Los bancos han acudido directamente a un fondo de emergencia gestionado por el banco de españa, evitando solicitarlo por el canal normal que es el bce, dado que este exige una calidad minima de colateral para otorgar dicha liquidez.

Es el cuarto pais que activa este fondo por lo que podemos asegurar que el rescate total es inminente....

Vayan tomando sus ultimas decisiones ... Y espero que hayan leido bastante en el foro para no equovocarse....

...........
things are going fromworse to worserer as the problems in Spain - more specifically in its banking sector - are deepening as deposit flight accelerates. As the WSJ notes PIMCOs' comment: "A bank 'jog' is happening in Spain - the private sector is leaving the banking system." But the Bank of Spain isn't leaving anything to chance. The WSJ disconcertingly highlights that last month the central bank appears for the first time to have activated an emergency lending program that will enable its banks to borrow from the Bank of Spain directly, bypassing the ECB's relatively tough collateral demands.
The so-called Emergency Liquidity Assistance program is shrouded in secrecy, and the Bank of Spain won't confirm that it has been used. The Bank of Spain appears to have doled out about EUR400mm under the program, based on publicly available data. That would make Spain at least the fourth euro-zone country - following Greece, Ireland and Portugal - to use the ELA, which generally is reserved for situations when banks have exhausted all other financing options.

As we pointed out yesterday, this would appear to confirm a"full-blown bailout" is imminent, as the collateral problems mount.

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