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Fresh downgrade for Spanish debt

BBC Published May 28, 2010 Reviewed Jul 3, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
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Fitch downgraded Spain's credit rating from AAA to AA+.
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Six regional Spanish savings banks said they were negotiating alliances to avoid insolvency.
6 · regional Spanish savings banks
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According to Goldman Sachs, Spanish lenders face debts worth 445bn euros ($550bn; £380bn).
445 billion euros · lender debts550 billion USD · lender debts380 billion GBP · lender debts
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The government approved a 15bn-euro ($18.4bn; £13bn) austerity package.
15 billion euros · austerity package18.4 billion USD · austerity package13 billion GBP · austerity package
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The Spanish government aims to cut its public deficit to 3% of GDP by 2013, from 11.2% in the prior year.
3 · public deficit11.2 · public deficit
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Spain's unemployment rate is 20%, twice the eurozone average.
20 · unemployment rate10 · eurozone unemployment rate
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Fitch stated Spain's economic recovery would be 'more muted than that forecast by the government'.
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A second agency has downgraded Spain's credit rating, citing the country's poor growth prospects.

Fitch cut Spain's rating from the maximum AAA to AA+.

Standard & Poor's took the same step a month ago but Fitch's move is a fresh blow to the government which wants to ease market fears about its economy.

Also on Friday, six regional Spanish savings banks said they were negotiating alliances to avoid insolvency.

Many of the 45 savings banks operating in Spain have struggled after investing heavily in the property sector, causing a boom in construction before its collapse following the financial crisis.

But the market's collapse has now left lenders with debts worth 445bn euros ($550bn; £380bn), according to Goldman Sachs.

One of them, Cajasur, was taken over by Spanish authorities earlier this month after talks to merge it with a profitable bank ended.

Investor concerns that Spain could face a Greek-style debt crisis have prompted the government to approve a tough and unpopular 15bn-euro ($18.4bn; £13bn) austerity package to shore up its public finances.

The government wants to cut its public deficit to 3% of GDP by 2013 from 11.2% last year.

Many Spaniards fear the effect the cuts will have on the economy in a country already struggling with an unemployment rate of 20% - twice the eurozone average.

The country moved out of recession in the first quarter of this year, with growth of 0.1%.

But Fitch said the economic recovery would be "more muted than that forecast by the government".

"The economic adjustment process will be more difficult and prolonged than for other economies with AAA rated sovereign governments, which is why the agency has downgraded Spain's rating to AA+," it said.

"The inflexibility of the labour market and the restructuring of regional and local savings banks will... hinder the pace of adjustment, particularly in the aftermath of the real estate boom," it warned.

The European Union has been anxious to see more fragile European economies - including Spain, Portugal and Greece - impose tougher austerity measures.

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