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Rajoy mantiene su viaje con los Príncipes para el primer partido de EspañaNoticias EFEMadrid, 9 jun (EFE).- El presidente del Gobierno, Mariano Rajoy, mantiene de momento su viaje previsto para mañana a Gdansk (Polonia) para presenciar, junto a los Príncipes, el primer partido de la selección española en la Eurocopa, en el que se enfrentará a Italia.Fuentes del Gobierno, que está a la espera de la teleconferencia que mantendrán esta tarde los socios del Eurogrupo para tomar decisiones sobre la recapitalización de la banca, han informado a Efe de que por el momento no hay cambios en la agenda de Rajoy.En el descanso del partido, el jefe del Ejecutivo tiene concertada una entrevista con el primer ministro polaco, Donald Tusk.En el palco también estarán los Príncipes, que ampliarán su viaje a Polonia para presidir en Cracovia la inauguración oficial de la sede que posee el Instituto Cervantes en la ciudad.El pasado 12 de abril, Rajoy presidió con Tusk en Varsovia la VIII cumbre hispano-polaca y ya entonces se comprometió a hacer todo lo que estuviera en sus manos para asistir al primer partido de la selección española.Hace una semana despidió a los jugadores en la Ciudad del Fútbol de Las Rozas (Madrid) y les deseó suerte en el campeonato porque los españoles, dijo, necesitan "una alegría ahora, en estos tiempos tan complejos y difíciles". EFE
Spanish banks need more than 40bn eurosUnfinished development Spain's banks have been hit hard by the property crashMore from RobertThe International Monetary Fund's estimate that Spanish banks need to raise around 40bn euros (£32bn; $50bn) of additional capital as protection against potential future losses is already out of date and too low - or so the IMF concedes.There are two and a half reasons why, when in the coming days Spain finalises how much additional capital its banks need to find, the number will turn out to be greater.First, the IMF did not fully estimate the possible losses on loans in what bankers call "forbearance" - which is where banks have allowed borrowers in difficulty to temporarily cease payments. A separate independent assessment of Spanish banks' assets, commissioned by the government, is likely to show that the value of some of these loans is less than the IMF has assumed.Second, there will be further costs for banks from the rebuilding and reorganisation they require to make themselves viable once more.Third, (actually this is the second-and-a-half reason, because I am unclear about how the Spanish government will address it), the independent assessors may conclude that the banks should make greater provisions for possible losses on their loans to the Spanish government - because the price of Spanish government bonds has deteriorated since the IMF determined the haircut or discount that should apply to these bonds.What the IMF report confirms is that the finances of the Spanish government and of the Spanish banks live and die together - in that the banks hold around two-fifths of Spanish central government debt, which is equivalent to 8% of all the banks' loans and investments. Or to put it another way, the Spanish government would have struggled to finance itself without loans from the banks and the banks would be bust if the government were to go bust.All of which reinforces the likelihood of the Spanish government receiving a substantial bailout package from the eurozone's European Financial Stability Facility - because it cannot borrow the sums required by its banks from its banks (doh!) and right now other investors are increasingly reluctant to lend to it.For what it's worth, about 10 days ago I said on the Ten O'Clock News that Spanish banks may need around 85bn euros of additional capital, including the 23.5bn already requested by Spain's fourth biggest bank, Bankia.By the way, it is worth noting that the IMF concludes that Spain's two biggest banks, Santander and BBVA, do not need to raise any additional capital.The bulk of the hole in Spanish banks is in seven former savings banks, including Bankia, that already rely on financial support from the government, and collectively represent more than a fifth of all loans in Spain.These banks have a high share of mortgage lending and are heavily exposed to commercial property and construction lending - which is what has done for them, because Spain's housing market is weak and becoming weaker, and its commercial property sector is a basket case
Soria: "El Gobierno no se plantea pedir ayuda hasta recibir nuevos informes"
El Eurogrupo abordará el protocolo o mecanismo jurídico para canalizar el rescate: la decisión podría no tomarse hoy
La Eurozona prevé que el rescate podría llegar hasta los 100.000 millones de euro, según informan Reuters y France Presse. En The Wall Street Journal también recoge en su edición online esa misma cifra http://cort.as/254R
Eso no lo firma José Luis Sampedro.
Lo que está sucediendo es que nos están sometiendo a un proceso de *saqueo* CALCADO, a los procesos neoliberales que practicaron con latinoamérica con la excusa de la "crisis de la deuda" desde los 70, 80 y 90
La venganza es buena para la salud (fuera de moralinas católicas), estoy convencido.Hale..