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- Liva & Laia : 15th November
The government's latest move to help out the banking sector has ballooned beyond all expectations. A November decree that transformed some of the banks' deferred tax assets (DTAs) into state-guaranteed tax credits means that the sector may save as much as 40 billion. This is 10 billion more than the original government estimate, according to figures collated by EL PAΝS from Spain's major lenders.
DTAs are used to reduce future income tax expenses, often in connection with bank losses or provisions. Generic provisions reduce a lender's profits, but they are not tax deductible until the losses materialize. If the profit was not large enough for the bank to save itself that tax, then the DTAs were lost. But under the new rules, the state backs them with public debt.
The 40.5 billion in state-backed tax credits held by Spain's 15 main lenders is 35% higher than the original estimate of 30 billion offered by Economy Minister Luis de Guindos when he presented the decree.
The banking group that benefits the most is BFA, with nearly 7 billion in state-backed tax credits, followed by La Caixa (the total figure is not known, but CaixaBank alone holds nearly 5 billion), Santander (around 5.4 billion in Spain), Sabadell (4.8 billion) and BBVA (4.4 billion). The banks under the control of the Orderly Bank Restructuring Fund (FROB) add around 14.8 billion of these assets.
These figures are mostly taken from the lenders' annual reports; in some cases the banks provided the information. Several of them warned that these are still estimates that could change.
But the total amount including other lenders besides the top 15 will certainly be in excess of the 41.3 billion that was funneled into the sector as part of the banking bailout of 2012.
The International Monetary Fund recommended that this new measure come with conditions forcing banks to increase their capital ratios through other means, but the Spanish government ignored that suggestion and has offered the state guarantee with no strings attached.