Source: Forbes
While investors across the globe applaud Bernanke and other central
bankers for pushing stock markets to record highs, retail investors and
savers in Spain are facing massive losses. Markets appear
to have forgotten Europe’s sovereign debt crisis and the woes in Spain:
on Tuesday, new shares in nationalized financial institution Bankia Bankia began
trading, closing the day at €0.57 ($0.74), marking a more than 80% drop
from their floating price in 2011 when the banking group was formed.
The average Spaniard is suffering, and the situation has gotten to the
point where on Sunday, a police officer stabbed a former Bankia employee
four times after a heated discussion related to the sale of preferred
shares in the failed banking group.
It’s not pretty in Spain these days. A contracting economy and a
spiraling unemployment rate are taking its toll on the population. And
few things can illustrate that as well as Bankia, the nationalized
financial group that is currently the fourth largest bank in Spain by
market capitalization.
After having received more than €15 billion ($19 billion) in capital from the federal government, Bankia executed a recapitalization plan that
culminated in floating 11.5 billion shares which began trading on
Tuesday. Conditioned by the Troika (IMF, European Central Bank, and the
EU Commission), Bankia forced its shareholders to take losses to
finance a bailout, and after engineering an exchange of preferred shares
and convertible bonds, priced the new stock at €1.35 last month
($1.75).
All along, the exchange was a trap for retail investors. Last week,
the stock fell more than 50% when institutional investors were allowed
to sell out of their already losing positions. Savers and retail
investors had to wait until Tuesday, when the stock fell as low as
€0.475 ($0.61) at one point. Spanish daily El Mundo reports that
institutional investors held positions worth about €1.85 billion ($2.4
billion) in Bankia, compared to nearly €5 billion ($6.5 billion) for the
190,000 people that bought up the preferred stock and hybrid
instruments, convinced they were making a good investment with their
savings.
Bankia’s story is a tragic one. Begot from the merger of seven
regional banks or cajas, Spain’s fourth largest bank unveiled the
largest ever corporate loss in the country’s history in March, at €19.2
billion ($25 billion) for the full year. Shares in Bankia had
originally been floated at €3.75 ($4.85) in 2011, with investment banks
targeting domestic buyers after seeing limited interest from large
institutional investors. With a construction and property-related
portfolio that hit €37 billion ($48 billion), and having become the
third-largest holder of Spanish debt, Bankia collapsed under the weight of its books as the European sovereign debt crisis, and Spain’s own real estate implosion, intensified.
While tourists flock to the beautiful city of Barcelona, or the sandy
beaches of Mallorca to enjoy the European summer, the average Spaniard
is hurting. I have previously reported of suicides due to bank foreclosures. Over the weekend, a police officer directly attacked a former Bankia employee who reportedly sold him €300,000 worth of preferred shares. El Mundo reported
the cop, nearly 40, stabbed the 55-year old former bank employee four
times after a heated discussion in Valencia, Spain’s third largest city;
Bankia issued a statement repudiating the aggression.
The Spanish financial industry is in tatters, but it’s also
recovering. Having gone through one of the most intense restructuring
of any nation across the Eurozone, the largest institutions are
beginning to stake their ground and take advantage of a decimated
opposition. Banco Santander Banco Santander,
BBVA, and CaixaBank have emerged as the three largest players. Yet
they have dramatically underperformed markets, major European peers like
Deutsche Bank and UBS, and their American counterparts like Citigroup
and JPMorgan Chase.
Bankia is in a league of its own. It has survived because of a
European bailout in the heat of last year’s intensification of the
sovereign debt crisis plaguing the Old Continent. Regulators, fearing a
new Lehman Brothers-like situation could throw off the entire Eurozone,
moved to secure financing and keep the bank alive. They changed
management and injected capital. Beyond facing massive losses, Bankia
has taken with it hundreds of thousands of Spanish savers. Regulators
are hoping the institution can be turned around and eventually made
profitable. Spanish retail investors better keep their fingers crossed,
if they can hold on to their shares for long enough.
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