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    Official: EU banks have to raise $140 billion

    BRUSSELS (AP) — EU finance ministers neared agreement Saturday on forcing banks to raise just over euro100 billion ($140 billion) to ensure they have enough cushion to weather further losses on their Greek bonds as well as market turmoil, a European official said.

    In order to help Athens dig out of its debts — and hopefully keep a cap on the amount of money they have to loan Greece — the 17 countries that use the euro agreed Friday to ask banks to take bigger writedowns on Greek bonds. A new report suggests the value of Greek bonds might need to be slashed as much as 60 percent.

    Taming Greece's debts is an important part of the euro debt crisis puzzle, but it could make banks across the continent — not just in the eurozone — more vulnerable at a time when they're already facing declining stock prices and finding it difficult to get regular loans for their day-to-day operations.

    So when the eurozone finance ministers decided to reopen negotiations on Greek debt with the banks, the EU had to force its banks to reinforce their rainy-day funds.

    Strengthening banks and slashing Greece's debts are critical to solving Europe's crisis, which is now threatening to engulf larger economies like Italy and Spain and is blamed for dampening growth across Europe and even the world.

    "The crisis in the eurozone is doing real damage to many of the European economies, including Britain," George Osborne, Britain's chancellor of the exchequer, said as he headed into Saturday's meeting. "We have had enough of short-term measures, sticking plasters that get us through the next few weeks."

    The European official said EU leaders meeting Sunday should sign off on forcing the continent's biggest banks to raise just over euro100 billion in capital. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the discussions between ministers were still ongoing.

    The figure is likely to disappoint some analysts. A report by the International Monetary Fund has called for up to euro200 billion ($280 billion) to be poured into banks.

    The new rules would force systemically important banks to raise their core capital ratios to 9 percent, compared with just 5 percent to 6 percent they needed to pass EU stress tests this summer. The ratio measures the amount of capital banks hold compared to their risky assets.

    Greece, of course, has it far worse: The country is struggling through a third year of recession and record unemployment, which reached 16.5 percent in July. Deep anger is building against the Socialist government's repeated rounds of new austerity measures. A two-day general strike against the new cuts and taxes shut down much of the country this week and led to violent protests on the streets of Athens.

    Pressure to contain the Greek crisis ramped up Friday after a new report from the country's debt inspectors — the European Commission, the European Central Bank and the IMF — showed that its economic situation had deteriorated dramatically even since the summer.

    If banks don't take bigger losses, the report said, Greece's debt would peak at a massive 186 percent of economic output in 2013 and only decline to 152 percent by the end of 2020.

    That would prevent Greece from raising money on the markets until 2021 and require the eurozone and the IMF to fund an extra euro252 billion ($350 billion) in new loans to Greece through 2020, according to the report, which was marked confidential but was seen by The Associated Press.

    Those funds would be in addition to Greece's first bailout of euro110 billion ($152 billion), which has been keeping the country afloat since May of last year, and another euro109 billion ($150 billion) rescue agreed to in July.

    The report said that Greece's debts would have to be cut by 60 percent if the eurozone wants to avoid lending it more money. It did not make policy recommendations, and the European Central Bank opposes cutting Greece's debts further.

    But finance ministers are clearly paying close attention to the experts' document. Austrian Finance Minister Maria Fekter told journalists Saturday that the eurozone's chief negotiator, Vittorio Grilli, had been asked to restart negotiations with banks.

    That means the July deal, under which banks would have taken writedowns on their Greek bond holdings of about 21 percent, is definitively off the table.

    Despite that significant progress, agreement on arguably the most important measure has remained elusive to eurozone leaders: boosting the firepower of the currency union's euro440 billion ($600 billion) bailout fund to keep the crisis from spreading.

    Increasing the effectiveness of the fund — called the European Financial Stability Facility — is meant to help prevent larger economies like Italy and Spain from being unable to afford to borrow money from markets. That's exactly what happened to Greece, Portugal and Ireland and why those three EU countries needed bailouts.

    Germany and France still disagree over how to do that and failed to make much progress on that front Friday night. German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy are meeting Saturday evening in the hopes of moving toward a deal.

    The Greek crisis and its threat of contagion have led to calls for more robust intervention when it becomes clear that an EU country is in financial trouble.

    German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle said Saturday that the EU along with the IMF should be able to directly intervene in the budgets of member states if they are receiving financial aid but failing to meet fiscal targets.

    But not all EU nations share his view. The foreign ministers of Luxembourg and Finland cautioned that changing the EU treaty is too big a task to tackle now and the bloc should try instead to strengthen budget rules through existing channels.

    Significant changes to the EU treaty would require national referendums in some countries, and winning approval for the current treaty from 27 nations took 10 years.

    ___

    Elena Becatoros contributed to this report from Brussels.

     
    • Mr Frost  •  7 mths ago
      It's a planned crash of world economies, I mean how long can you sustain a currency backed by nothing? Globalists all over are creaming their corrupt panties awaiting the final moments of their fiat currency and replacing it with another digital dollar.
      • Mephistopheles 7 mths ago
        I don't know if it's planned but it doesn't matter because that's exactly what they have done with their greed and corruption: crash the economy of the world. Join OWS. We are the 99%!
      • Mephistopheles 7 mths ago
        I don't know if it's planned but it doesn't matter because that's exactly what they have done with their greed and corruption: crash the economy of the world. Join OWS. We are the 99%!
      • JAMES 7 mths ago
        Aha. It's a conspiracy.

        Which has yet to prove out for a century.
    • Semellyecoli2  •  Baton Rouge, United States  •  7 mths ago
      Euro banks need $140 billion ?? Nothing to worry about !!! The USA will will borrow the $140 billion from china and donate the money to you. But remember you must stuff some of this money in the pockets of elected and appointed Washington slop hog politicians !!
      • Mephistopheles 7 mths ago
        I don't think so. The US only borrows from China to wage war against the ME. They don't stand to make any money by giving it to the EU.
      • Mephistopheles 7 mths ago
        I don't think so. The US only borrows from China to wage war against the ME. They don't stand to make any money by giving it to the EU.
      • Mephistopheles 7 mths ago
        I don't think so. The US only borrows from China to wage war against the ME. They don't stand to make any money by giving it to the EU.
    • David  •  7 mths ago
      They will need a lot more money than that to safeguard the several situations where the benefit tit has gotten bigger than the benefit cow.
      • Julia 7 mths ago
        Your explanation kind of reminds me of breast cancer...
    • Turnitupsidedown  •  New Orleans, United States  •  7 mths ago
      We just print more $ here! Then the Fed buys or debt which will create more inflation. It time for real reform. I'm voting out every incumbent every time I go to polls. Not one of them represent us, the people!
      • We the people 7 mths ago
        DEATH TO THE FED! Occupy the FED!
      • william 7 mths ago
        The politicians have represented the industrialists and financiers for over 120 years. They have all sold out to corruption.
    • John  •  Islip, United States  •  6 mths ago
      I can only hope the Greek people vote themselves out of the Euro-Zone and avoid becoming the first country to be conquered by the Bankers and Money lenders
    • melanie  •  7 mths ago
      This will be America if the government doesn't stop all the wasteful spending. The "time-out"generation have no clue what is ahead of them.
    • DanielK  •  7 mths ago
      This $100 Billion, is far too little to reasure markets. With the EU banks exposure to Greece and Portugal at $500 billion and a 60% markdown, they need at least $300 billion plus another $100 billon for reserve. Thus anything short of a $400 Billion package is just pretend.
      Further this money is a bail out for European banks holding Greek debt. But Greece needs real entitlement reform like Portugal has implemented before any other funds are given to Greece. If Greece does not comply then after the banks are bailed out Greece should be shown the door.
      • neal 7 mths ago
        What will likely really happen is the strong economic countries will do is revert back to their original currency and leave the weak bankrupt countries in the Euro and let the euro float against each individual countries currency. Basicly death of the EU but maybe not if Greece and others recover. Right now the Brits and Scandies are sooo happy not to have the Euro currency.
    • Wolf  •  7 mths ago
      What gimmicks and deception...the Greek debt needs to be totally absorb as default...there is no way Greece can ever repay this debt nor service the debt...Greece needs to exit the EU now and move on...the banks will need to be closed in many cases in an orderly manner just like the banks here are liquidated by the FDIC...there exposure to many of the banks is to large to survive ...the faster the actions are taken the faster the problem can finally be resolved...it should be noted that all the EU countries are broke except Germany at this point so this is a massive financial crisis that only will get worse with the insane plan to infuse more funds or have the ECB print money...it looks like the EU leaders are as incompetent as the US leaders in addressing the massively mismanaged public sector operations that have bankrupted these nations...
    • robert  •  7 mths ago
      I would like to think we'll just let the phone ring and ignore them when they call but I know better.
    • MichaelA  •  7 mths ago
      The banks will get the money by fleecing the people. Greed.
    • Ricky  •  7 mths ago
      Why should other countries pay the dept in a country htat is allowing their peple to retire at 50 years old and then all they did was raise that to 52 years old. This is insane, other countries that manage their debt and spending bailing out another country because they are spreading the wealth, Obama economics...give me a break. Germany for one should split and go on their own.
    • dhans  •  Chicago, United States  •  7 mths ago
      I have two words for you, "BAKE SALE". Works everytime!
    • Timothy  •  Rock Hill, United States  •  7 mths ago
      Really, fractional reserve banking is the root of all this. The fact that there are different ways of counting the money supply; MB, M0, M1, M2, M3; should illustrate a scam going on. It is physically impossible to pay down these debts because not enough money actually exists to do it.

      The "money supply" example at Wikipedia is good at explaining things. If someone has $1000 then the MB, M0 - M3 money supply statistics are all $1000. If that person deposits the money in a bank then M0 goes down as the money is not in circulation. However the bank inflates the money by saying it can lend a portion of it, $900 while keeping $100 in reserve, while also promising the original person their $1000. So M1 goes up to $1900 even though MB, the actual money, is still $1000. That one simple move by the bank is where fraud occurred. It can't lend someone's money to someone else and still say the have it.

      While it's easy to jump on Greece and other debtors, in many ways it's the banks that are the real troublemakers. They lent money they didn't actually have the right to. This aspect of our economy hardly ever gets the attention it deserves.
    • investor  •  7 mths ago
      How are these banks going to raise the capital? Selling what? Any guesses?
    • e.  •  Richmond, United States  •  7 mths ago
      Well another fine mess created by the satanic allaince between the socialists and moneychanger and shylock. They will get their pound of flesh one way or the other. If not from the poor people whose countries were run by self-serving crooks and cads they from unsuspecting fools they get the "new" capital from. Either way the moneypit vipers will not lose anything.
    • Thomas  •  7 mths ago
      And exactly WHO do you think these banks are going to take this money from? The citizens of course!!
    • BRONCO  •  Los Angeles, United States  •  7 mths ago
      The GDP of the European Union is greater than that of the United States. They can afford it.
      We gave more than $180 billion just to AIG, one insurance company, to keep it afloat. They should take their lumps, learn their lessons and lend with more prudence in the future.
    • beowulf  •  7 mths ago
      i'm more than certain the wealthy will do their part.
    • Hated By Liberals  •  Greenville, United States  •  7 mths ago
      Somebody will have to go without Ouzo. But maybe Geithner and Bernanke will give them the money...
    • Lord Humungus  •  7 mths ago
      And how much of our children's money has Timmy Geithner already promised them? Borrowed on our credit from the Bank of China, given to Europe so they can make good on the promises politicians from decades past made to appease their constituents.
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