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Instituto Valenciano de Investigaciones Económicas

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Spanish banks’ preparedness for the COVID-19 crisis: A European comparison
Maudos, J.
Fuente: SEFO (Spanish and International Economic & Financial Outlook)
Resumen
With a capital adequacy level 4.2 percentage points higher than in 2008, Spanish banks appear better positioned to withstand the economic fallout from COVID-19 than during the previous financial crisis. Notably, Spanish banks boast above-average profitability and efficiency compared to their eurozone peers, their loan-to-deposit gap has improved, and they have a healthy buffer of liquid assets. That said, the IMF and the European Commission are forecasting a bigger contraction in GDP in Spain (8%-9.4%) than in the eurozone (7.5%-7.7%). Although government-backed guarantees, the aid rolled out to prop up business and household income and the easing of bank regulations may help cushion the impact of the crisis on the banks, a GDP contraction of that magnitude will drive non-performance higher and require the recognition of provisions. Moreover, although the Spanish banking sector’s solvency ratio is significantly above regulatory requirements, it is 2.3 percentage points below the eurozone average. Furthermore, even though a deep restructuring effort has left Spanish banks among the most efficient in Europe, efficiency has deteriorated in recent years. As a result, Spain’s banks will need to continue with their cost-cutting efforts and reduce their capacity even further in order to weather the COVID-19 crisis.

Cómo citar este artículo

Maudos, J. (2020). «Spanish banks’ preparedness for the COVID-19 crisis: A European comparison». SEFO – Spanish Economic and Financial Outlook 9, n.º 3 (mayo): 45-54.