Re: Pulso de mercado
¿Por qué queremos desde la zona euro dar autoridad, a los que desde fuera, quieren o preferírian que no existiera?
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Aún así vamos a las fuentes originales:
The IMF now reckons that Spain's largest banks have enough capital to withstand most shocks, although its smaller and weaker ones remain vulnerable.
As a result of the write-downs, regulators have achieved one objective.
Few investors now fret about property-development loans blowing up Spanish banks.
The worry now is about all the other loans on banks' balance-sheets, against which there are almost no provisions (see chart).
Take residential mortgages, which have so far held up remarkably well.
Less than 3% of residential mortgages have started to wobble, a surprise in a country where unemployment is close to 25%.
Spanish officials argue that mortgage losses are so low because the loans were mostly issued to creditworthy borrowers with low loan-to-value ratios and no incentive to walk away from their debts.
Affordability has been helped by low interest rates.
The proportion of wobbly mortgages in Spain looks low when compared with those in Ireland.
Some investors (algunos INVERSIONISTAS) reckon €60 billion-80 billion is required to restore confidence.
http://www.economist.com/node/21553499
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Sé que hay medios nacionales, que se han hecho eco de lo que dice The Economist, en los términos de que es un argumento de autoridad si lo dicen ellos, pero ellos no lo dicen.
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LOS MEDIOS NO AYUDAN SINO A TERGIVERSAR EL MENSAJE
Un saludo