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Stress Tests Seven EU banks fail Seven more US banks collapse
Stress Tests Seven EU banks fail Seven more US banks collapse on day of Europe's stress tests Georgia's Crescent Bank and Trust largest of seven to fail Number of US failures now expected to exceed last year's total
Seven of the 91 European banks that underwent stress tests have failed the healthchecks, the Committee of European Banking Supervisors (CEBS) has said.
They include five Spanish banks - Diada, Espiga, Banca Civica, Unnim and Cajasur. The other two were Germany's Hypo Real Estate and Greece's ATEbank.
The tests assessed banks' ability to survive future economic shocks.
The seven banks would need a total of 3.5bn euros (£3bn) of new capital to meet the standards required, CEBS said.
"[The failed banks] will have to agree with their respective supervisors a plan over a given time period which will explain how this weakness will be resolved," CEBS chairman Giovanni Carosio said.
BBC business editor Robert Peston said that on the face of it, the results appeared to be "good news", but questioned how severe the tests were.
The weekend will be an anxious time for banks, as they wait to learn whether it will become easier or harder for them to borrow, when markets open on Monday, he added.
Some analysts are already arguing that the tests were not strict enough.
"What seems to have occurred is a compromise amongst European banking regulators, with many questioning if the bar had been set way too low in testing the European banking sector," said Mark O'Sullivan of foreign exchange firm Currencies Direct.
"It seems the tests may have raised more questions than they have answered and in the coming weeks, it will be the interbank lending markets that will have the real answer as to whether real confidence has returned to the European banks."
But Vitor Constancio from the European Central Bank said the tests were very extensive.
Reassurance
The stress tests were conducted on a bank-by-bank basis, in a move designed to reassure investors over the health of Europe's financial sectors.
The most severe test looked at an adverse scenario, assuming a "double-dip" recession over the next two years, as well as a sovereign debt shock - some kind of financial crisis for European governments such as Greece.
The seven banks failed because in this scenario, it was deemed that their "tier one" capital ratios - the strictest measure of capital - would fall below 6%, the threshold set for the test.
In its report revealing the aggregate outcome of the tests, CEBS said that the 6% threshold was used as a "benchmark solely for the purpose of this stress test exercise".
"This threshold should by no means be interpreted as a regulatory minimum... nor as a capital target reflecting the risk profile of the institutions."
Banks that are supervised in the EU need to have a regulatory minimum of 4% tier one capital.
CEBS added that failing to meet the 6% threshold did not mean a bank was insolvent.
'Preparedness and resilience'
The UK's four major banks - RBS, Lloyds, HSBC and Barclays - were among the banks tested and all passed the tests, which were carried out by the Financial Services Authority (FSA) on behalf of the EU.
"As expected, the outcomes of the stresses demonstrate the preparedness and resilience of the UK banks under unlikely adverse economic scenarios," the FSA said.
"This resilience is a result of the considerable work that has been undertaken to strengthen UK banks in recent years."
The British Bankers' Association said: "UK banks have already put in the work to rebuild their businesses and put more money aside against future financial problems.
"It is no surprise to find they have exceeded the standards set out by CEBS."
'Sound Spanish system'
The five Spanish banks that failed, out of 27 tested, were regional savings banks, which racked up heavy losses following the collapse of the Spanish property market.
Cajasur was bailed out by the Bank of Spain in May.
Following publication of the stress test results, the central bank said in a statement: "The exercise confirms that the Spanish banking system is sound, and in turn substantiates the savings bank restructuring and recapitalisation process pursued over the past twelve months by the Bank of Spain."
Meanwhile, 13 out of 14 German banks passed the tests.
"The German banking system has shown itself to be robust and proved its resilience even under very pessimistic assumptions," financial watchdog Bafin and central bank, the Bundesbank, said in a statement.
It added that the only German bank that failed, Hypo Real Estate, "is currently undergoing a far-reaching restructuring process".
ATEbank was the only one of the six Greek banks that participated in the tests to fail.
Greek Finance Minister George Papaconstantinou said the results were positive and showed that "the Greek banking system can cope even in the extreme conditions of a stress test".
Seven more US banks collapse on day of Europe's stress tests
More than 100 banks in the US have now collapsed so far this year after another seven were taken over by regulators late on Friday – the same day that seven European banks failed a financial health check.
With rising bad debts tied to commercial and residential mortgages, the number of US bank failures this year is expected to exceed last year's figure of 140. The largest of the seven US banks just seized by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation – which acts as a receiver and protects depositors – was Crescent Bank and Trust Company in Georgia, with more than $1bn in assets. In all, the seven failed banks had total assets of $2bn.
In Europe, investors will have a first real chance tomorrow to react to the results of banking stress tests designed to ease concerns about institutions' financial strength and exposure to debt-laden countries such as Greece.
Regulators assessed how banks would stand up to a double dip recession and a sovereign debt crisis. But several analysts questioned whether the tests were tough enough, since, for example, banks were only required to simulate losses on sovereign debt held for trading purposes and not on bonds they might hold to maturity.
Five of the seven institutions that failed the tests were Spanish cajas, or regional savings banks, with Greece's ATE and Germany's Hypo Real Estate being the other two.
Christophe Nijdam at research firm AlphaValue said the failure rate was just 8% compared with 53% for tests conducted in America last year, when 10 of 19 banks tested needed to raise about $75bn (£48bn) in new capital.
Research firm CreditSights said it expected a benign market reaction to the European tests, given the amount of information divulged by individual banks: "Controversy remains over the treatment of sovereign risks, but private sector loan losses look to have been adequately factored in. [There was] better disclosure than we had expected, which allows observers to make further adjustments to the scenarios if they want to."
Britain's four biggest banks, Barclays, HSBC and the bailed-out Royal Bank of Scotland and Lloyds Banking Group, comfortably passed the tests.
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