European banks may need more than 100 billion Euros to withstand the sovereign debt crisis, Ireland estimated, ahead of a meeting between German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy to work out how to recapitalise the lenders.
The falling value of banks' holdings of government debt from Greece and other Euro zone periphery states has already prompted the implosion of Belgian lender Dexia, adding urgency to the Merkel-Sarkozy talks on the crisis.
Germany and France have so far been split over how to strengthen shaky lenders and fight financial market contagion that may follow a possible Greek default.
Paris is keen to tap the Euro zone's 400 billion rescue fund, the EFSF, to recapitalise its own banks, while Berlin is insisting the fund should be used as a last resort.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has said European banks need 200 billion Euros in additional funds.
Irish Finance Minister Michael Noonan said the capital needed to bolster banks cushions was likely to come from a variety of sources but the bill would be large.
”I think there is general agreement that it will be significantly in excess of 100 billion (Euros), Noonan told reporters on the sidelines of an economic forum in Dublin.
I know that some of the big German banks that I was talking to personally intend raising money on the market so it will be private funding. Other banks would like to avail of the EFSF fund. Other banks will rely on their sovereign governments to provide the capital so there is going to be a range of ways of doing it,” he said.
Regulators worry that forcing a raft of major lenders to take state aid would not be the best use of Europe's capital resources, while banks fear than singling out only some lenders for extra support could heighten market worries about weaknesses at individual banks.
German newspaper Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung on Saturday cited financial sources as saying France's five-biggest lenders would agree to take 10-15 billion Euros in funding from the French state but also wanted to see Germany's No. 1 lender Deutsche Bank plump its capital cushion.
Deutsche Bank Chief Executive Josef Ackermann is against any role for the state in his own bank's capital position and has ruled out a capital increase.
A Deutsche Bank spokesman on Saturday referred to Ackermann's long-standing public position and declined further comment.
Sarkozy is due to arrive in Berlin late on Sunday afternoon and hold a working dinner with Merkel in the evening, amid signs that conditions for resolving the crisis are getting no easier.
Top Comments
Disclaimer & comment ruleswhile the big boys dither, the little boys are drowning,
Oct 09th, 2011 - 03:15 pm 0and the lenders sit on the fence,
the experts are split in two. should france and germany, give over 100 billion, and watch it go up in smoke, or will it save their bacon,
do they wait at watch the inevivable that greece can and will go under,
what a senario, but the mainquestion is, will the british goverment, stay
and go with them, or jump ship , and let them drown, the yanks are just as confused, and the rest of the world sits and shivers,
this could turn out to be worthy of a great story and book,
but in this case, the end will come before the book can be written .??
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