Eurostat, the European Union’s statistic agency, has weighed in on the question of whether a government should still have to retain final liability for any losses that may arise from a “direct” recapitalization of its banks from the euro-zone bailout fund, The Wall Street Journal Brussels Beat blog reported. When euro-zone leaders decided at their most recent summit to soon allow their rescue fund to “directly” bail out struggling lenders, their aim was to prevent that bank funding from also turning their host government into a bad investment.
Read more
Resources Per Country
- Albania
- Austria
- Belarus
- Belgium
- Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Bulgaria
- Croatia
- Czech Republic
- Denmark
- Estonia
- Finland
- France
- Germany
- Gibraltar
- Greece
- Guernsey
- Hungary
- Iceland
- Ireland
- Isle of Man
- Italy
- Jersey
- Kosovo
- Latvia
- Liechtenstein
- Lithuania
- Luxembourg
- Macedonia
- Malta
- Moldova
- Monaco
- Montenegro
- Netherlands
- Norway
- Poland
- Portugal
- Romania
- Russia
- San Marino
- Serbia
- Slovakia
- Slovenia
- Spain
- Sweden
- Switzerland
- Ukraine
- United Kingdom
- Vatican City
With millions of euros in debts and an inability to pay back its loans, the operator of Germany's fabled Nürburgring racetrack, home to many of the country's Formula One races, could declare bankruptcy next week. It may be the end of the legendary racecourse, which first opened in 1927, Spiegel Online reported. The Nürburgring is facing bankruptcy because its private operating company, Nürburgring GmbH, is no longer able to pay the interest on a €330 million loan it was provided by the ISB investment and structural bank, which belongs to the state.
Read more
The economic impact of sodden summer was laid bare on Thursday by dire news from major retailers showing that torrential rain had hurt already weak demand in an economy showing few signs of pulling out of recession, Reuters reported. Shops selling everything from home-improvement items to sportswear and goods for mothers and babies were hit. Official retail data also indicated that celebrations to mark Queen Elizabeth's Diamond Jubilee failed to provide the much hyped and hoped-for boost to spending, raising the question of whether the London Olympics will get the shop tills ringing.
Read more
Germany's parliament is expected to give broad backing on Thursday to a European aid package for ailing Spanish banks, but the government left nothing to chance this week and appealed to citizens and lawmakers in Internet video messages and local media to support the bailout, The Wall Street Journal reported.
Read more
Spain's housing and banking sectors continue to deteriorate, government data showed Wednesday, providing the latest indication that the country's economy remains caught in a protracted recession, The Wall Street Journal reported. House prices in the second quarter declined at the fastest pace since the start of the crisis, the public-works ministry said, while bank deposits saw a record decline in May from a year earlier, and bad loans increased for a 14th month in a row, the Bank of Spain reported.
Read more
Greek political leaders have identified two-thirds of the spending cuts demanded by international creditors as a condition for resuming loan disbursements, but they sounded a warning over rising poverty levels as the country’s five-year recession continues unabated, the Financial Times reported.
Read more
MF Global's European administrator KPMG has won the backing of the British High Court to return 54 million pounds ($84 million) of client assets next month in an early victory for creditors seeking over 1 billion pounds of assets, Reuters reported. KPMG, made special administrator when the broker collapsed in October last year, said on Wednesday the High Court had approved its distribution plan, meaning the administrator can start returning the assets on Aug. 1.
Read more
German mail order company Neckermann said it will file for insolvency, after its private equity owner refused to stump up the cash for a restructuring, adding to woes in the German retail sector, Reuters reported. The insolvency follows that of drugstore chain Schlecker, and comes as retailers from Metro to Praktiker and Puma grapple with lower consumer spending in Europe as a result of the region's debt crisis.
Read more
Greece is seeking extra money from its international creditors to cover a coming bond redemption in late August, as a deeper-than-expected recession drives the country's fiscal-consolidation program off course for 2012, The Wall Street Journal reported. With Athens hoping to avoid introducing additional cutbacks for this year, which would further weigh down economic activity, the government is putting together a plan to save €11.5 billion ($14 billion) over the next two years in line with demands from international creditors.
Read more
Brendan Howlin, minister for Public Expenditure and Reform, yesterday announced the Government’s plans for an additional €2.25bn investment in job-rich public infrastructure projects in Ireland, Finfacts reported. He said the projects selected a number of sectors and will be spread throughout the country. This will help to maximise the benefits to communities and to meet clearly identified local needs. The 13,000 jobs appear to be a back of an envelope job.
Read more