ECB lending push may founder as toxic assets loom
By Krista Hughes and Douwe Miedema - Analysis
FRANKFURT/LONDON (Reuters) - A bold change of tactics in the European Central Bank's efforts to kick-start everyday lending still looks helpless in the face of the mountain of bad assets crippling banks' capital.
In the last two weeks the ECB has dumped close to half a trillion euros in 12-month money into markets, and central bankers and politicians have ramped up exhortations for banks to lend the cash on and allow Europe to spend its way out of recession. But banks still have a long way to go cleaning up the pool of toxic assets left behind by the credit crunch, and there is little visibility on who is most exposed, making the lenders wary to put further capital at risk.
"It's only a short-term solution, it means they have enough liquidity but this can never be a solution to problems of inadequate capital," Fortis economist Nick Kounis said.
The ECB estimates euro zone banks still face another $283 billion (174.3 billion pounds) in write-downs by the end of the next year, as complex fixed income products that helped cause the crisis continue to fester, while the downturn causes bad loans to soar.
Banks would have to raise 240 billion euros (206.4 billion pounds) extra in top-grade capital to reach benchmark debt-to-asset ratios and shed 6 trillion euros of assets, according to estimates in the ECB's latest Financial Stability Report.
As a result companies have had to sell shares and bonds rather than borrowing money from cash-starved banks to rebuild their balance sheets, refinance maturing debt, or expand.
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