Amid the Spanish FinMin’s “concerns about the pace of the increase” in government debt, and PM Rajoy’s confidence that the nation would exit the eurozone-fueled banking bailout by January, bad loans in the still disastrously-troubled nations have re-accelerated to an all-time record high of 12.68% of total loans. Mostly linked to the collapsed property sector, bad loans climbed by 6.9 billion euros from the previous month to an unprecedented 187.8 billion euros ($254 billion) in September. Having almost completed the drawdown of its 41 billion bailout – and with the situation fundamentally worse than ever (e.g. record high unemployment), Spanish bond spreads have collapsed to 250bps – their lowest in 29 months.
Chart: Bloomberg
via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/Hd4CwY1LUsg/story01.htm Tyler Durden