Bank Debt Guarantee Programs
Spanish Guarantee Scheme for Credit Institutions
Announced: October 13, 2008
Purpose
To restore confidence in the financing mechanism of credit institutions and to support increased lending to businesses and households
Key Terms
- Announcement DateOctober 13, 2008
- Operational DateNovember 21, 2008
- Date of First Guaranteed Debt IssuanceFebruary 3, 2009
- Issuance Window Expiration DateOriginally June 30, 2009; Extended to December 31, 2011
- Program Size€100 billion (initial); Increased to €164 billion in 2009
- Usage€69.7 billion; total of 229 issuances by 44 credit institutions
- OutcomesNo defaults
- Notable FeaturesHigh fees relative to value of guarantee given low sovereign credit rating
Given Spanish banks’ heavy investment in the housing and construction markets in the lead-up to the global financial crisis (GFC), the collapse of the subprime mortgage market and Lehman Brothers’ bankruptcy on September 15, 2008, impelled the government to implement stabilization measures to calm, recapitalize, and restructure its domestic banking sector. The Spanish Guarantee Scheme for Credit Institutions (the Guarantee Scheme) was one of the first interventions to be enacted, announced by Spain’s Ministry of Economy and Finance on October 13, 2008, by Royal Decree-Law 7/2008 on “Urgent Economic and Financial Measures in relation to the Concerted Action Plan of the Countries in the Euro Zone.” The scheme entered into force upon the signing of Ministerial Order EHA/3364/2008 on November 21, 2008. The program, funded from Spain’s annual budget, initially committed up to €100 billion for the state guarantee of new and senior unsecured debt instruments issued by credit institutions, consolidated groups of credit institutions, and pools of credit institutions registered in Spain. Later it was expanded to €164 billion. Per the terms of the original Ministerial Order, debt with maturities ranging from three months to three years—or between three years and five years under special circumstances—was covered under the Guarantee Scheme. Between November 21, 2008, and December 31, 2011, the Spanish government guaranteed €69.7 billion in debt issuances. No defaults occurred.
Spain’s economy was severely impacted by the collapse of the subprime mortgage market and the subsequent bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers. One of the first steps the government took to calm markets and restore confidence in lending institutions was to introduce the Guarantee Scheme for Credit Institutions.
Announced on October 13, 2008, the Guarantee Scheme committed up to
€100 billion in funding for guaranteeing debt issued by participating credit institutions. Applicants to the program had to meet certain capitalization requirements, possess a share equal to at least 1/1000 of the domestic credit market, and have already issued debt similar to that covered by the Guarantee Scheme.
Initially, new and senior unsecured debt instruments, including promissory notes, bonds, and other obligations admitted to trade on the official secondary markets in Spain with maturities ranging from three months to three years were eligible for coverage under the program. Debt with maturities of up to five years could also be guaranteed if granted special permission from the Bank of Spain.
Although originally set to expire on June 30, 2009, the issuance window of the Guarantee Scheme was extended five times to conclude on December 31, 2011. Between December 29, 2008, and December 31, 2011, the Spanish government guaranteed a total of
€69.7 billion in debt issued mainly by regional Spanish credit institutions.
While there has not been much explicit evaluation of the Guarantee Scheme, the intervention was seen as having been an important and early step in the stabilization of the credit markets that later allowed for the vital restructuring and recapitalization of major Spanish financial institutions.
Background
Having been heavily reliant on the housing and construction markets in the lead-up to the height of the global financial crisis (GFC), Spain’s economy began to decline rapidly in the third quarter of 2008 and GDP continued to fall for five consecutive quarters during the remainder of 2008 and throughout 2009 (Ortega and Peñalosa 2012). This contractionary cycle reflected that of other EU member states, but it was especially impactful given the nation’s substantial exposure to the subprime loan crisis. Furthermore, a sharp increase in the external deficit, the widespread overvaluation of exports, soaring unemployment, and the inability of the Economic Monetary Union of the EU to adequately address Spain’s deteriorating economic condition collectively contributed to the severity of the recession that would outlast that of most peers (Ortega and Peñalosa 2012).
In response to this severe market disruption, the Spanish government sought to enact stabilization measures that would safeguard its domestic economy and relieve the negative impacts of the international credit crunch. One of the first interventions to be put into effect was the Spanish Guarantee Scheme for Credit Institutions (the Guarantee Scheme), announced by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Finance on October 13, 2008, and implemented upon the signing of Ministerial Order EHA/3364/2008 for the granting of State guarantees on December 29, 2008. Its dual purpose was to “[reestablish] confidence in the financing mechanism of credit institutions and to increase lending to businesses and households” (European Commission 2008b).
Program Description
Under the initial terms of the Guarantee Scheme, Spain committed up to €100 billion for the guarantee of new and senior unsecured debt issuances by credit institutions, consolidated groups of credit institutions, and pools of credit institutions registered in Spain. This funding was drawn down from the national government’s annual budgets for 2008 and 2009 and could be increased to €200 billion if the Bank of Spain deemed it necessary given current market conditions. In 2009, the overall budget for the scheme was adjusted to €164 billion for 2008 and 2009 pursuant to Royal Decree Law 9/2009.
To participate in the program, credit institutions needed explicit approval from the Directorate General of the Treasury and Financial Policy. Subsidiaries of foreign credit institutions were eligible for participation but were subject to the same regulations as those registered in Spain. Branches of foreign credit institutions were not covered under the Guarantee Scheme.
All applicants, regardless of type or association, needed to be “sufficiently capitalized in line with the national legislation” to qualify for admission.FNAccording to Law 36/2007, dated November 16 , 2007, modifying Law 13/1985, dated May 25, 1985, and Royal Decree 216/2008, dated February 15, 2008. Eligibility was further restricted to applicants that possessed at least 1/1000 of the domestic credit market and had issued, since October 13, 2003 (five years previous to the entry into force of Royal Decree-Law 7/2008), instruments “similar to the ones covered by the present Guarantee Scheme” (European Commission 2008b). For consolidated groups of credit institutions and pools of credit institutions, only one subsidiary had to meet the criteria.
Debt eligible under the Guarantee Scheme included new and senior unsecured debt instruments, including promissory notes, bonds, and other obligations admitted to trade on the official secondary markets in Spain, with maturities of between three months and three years. Under exceptional circumstances, the Bank of Spain reserved the right to guarantee debts with maturities of between three and five years. Securitization notes and subordinated debts were not eligible. Furthermore, although the original Royal Decree-Law 7/2008 initially provided for the possibility of covering such other financial instruments as interbank deposits, Ministerial Order EHA/3364/2008—which legally enforced the Royal Decree-Law and upon which the European Commission based its authorization—excluded interbank deposits, options, derivatives, and other instruments “for which the amount of risk might be difficult to assess by the guarantor” (European Commission 2008b).
Although there were no currency restrictions or limits on the issuance of non-guaranteed debt associated with the Guarantee Scheme, the original terms required that the notional value of each debt issuance covered be at least €10 million. Additionally, the Ministry of Economy and Finance imposed individual caps on participation based on the proportion of the participant’s domestic market share, but reserved the right to further limit the cap if deemed necessary to “reduce the risk involved with granting the guarantee” (European Commission 2008b).
Spain assessed individual participation fees according to the European Central Bank’s “Recommendations on government guarantees on bank debt” of October 20, 2008 (European Central Bank 2008). These fees would thus vary based on the soundness of the issuing institution—determined by five-year credit default swap (CDS) spreads between January 2007 and August 2008—and the maturity of the debt to be guaranteed. Credit institutions were required to pay the appropriate fees to the Spanish government upon each issuance of guaranteed debt.
As part of the terms of the Guarantee Scheme, the government agreed to waive the beneficium excussionis historically associated with Spanish guarantee programs.FNEmbodied in Article 1.830 of the Spanish Civil Code, the beneficium excussionis “refers to the right or benefit of the guarantor not to be compelled to pay as long as the principal has enough property” (European Commission 2008b). As such, in the case of a participating institution’s default on a covered debt issuance, the Bank of Spain was required to assume responsibility for the principal and interest through maturity. The associated interest rate could be either fixed or variable and had to “be placed within the market yield of emissions and issuers with similar characteristics” (European Commission 2008b). The principal amount had to be repaid to the Bank of Spain in a single payment.
Outcomes
Although the Guarantee Scheme was introduced as a temporary stabilization measure with an expiration date of June 30, 2009, the program’s issuance window was extended five times, each for a period of six months, until December 31, 2011 (see Appendix A).
While the government guaranteed debt issued throughout the three-year duration of the program, all issuances made were assigned to either the 2008 or 2009 annual budget according to Spain’s General Budget Law. Under the 2008 annual budget, 44 credit institutions issued €47.3 billion in guaranteed debt. Under the 2009 annual budget, 32 of the same 44 Spanish credit institutions issued €22.4 billion in guaranteed debt. A majority of these issuances were made by regional savings banks, while none of the Spanish Big Four—Bankia, BBVA, Caixabank, and Santander—took advantage of the Guarantee Scheme. All debts outstanding under the program were fully amortized by May 10, 2016.
The Guarantee Scheme was reintroduced, with slightly different terms, in February 2012, as part of a series of government stabilization measures designed to aid the domestic economy at the height of the eurozone crisis. The original terms of the Guarantee Scheme remained unchanged over the years, but amendments were included to reflect the ongoing consolidation of Spanish credit institutions and to facilitate a phasing-out of the program beginning in July 2010 (European Commission 2008c). The second iteration of the program concluded June 30, 2013 (see Appendix B).
Key Design Decisions
Related Programs1
Other interventions, implemented independently throughout an extended period spanning from late 2008 through 2014, included the creation of a fund for the acquisition of failing assets and a comprehensive recapitalization scheme for many major Spanish banks and credit institutions. A majority of the later actions were taken in response to deteriorating conditions exacerbated by the Eurozone crisis.
Legal Authority2
On October 13, 2008, the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Finance proposed the Guarantee Scheme in its adoption of the Royal Decree-Law 7/2008 of October 13 on “Urgent Economic and Financial Measures in relation to the Concerted Action Plan in the Euro Zone.” The Ministerial Order EHA/3364/2008 for the granting of State guarantees was then adopted on November 21, 2008, published on November 24, 2008, and amended and signed into force in its final form on December 29, 2008.
The European Commission authorized the passage of Ministerial Order EHA/3364/2008 on December 23, 2008. As discussed in more detail below, the need to structure the Guarantee Scheme in such a way as to ensure EC approval significantly influenced the design of certain program features.
Program Size1
This amount could be increased to €200 billion “if the Spanish authorities consider it necessary given market conditions” (European Commission 2008b). These funds were to be drawn down from and distributed equally over the Spanish government’s annual budget for 2008 and 2009, according to the General Budget Law. In 2009, the overall budget was adjusted to €164 billion for 2008 and 2009 pursuant to Royal Decree Law 9/2009.
Eligible Institutions1
Applicants to the program needed to receive explicit approval from the Directorate General of the Treasury and Financial Policy.
Subsidiaries of foreign credit institutions were also eligible for participation in the Guarantee Scheme but were subject to the same regulations as those registered in Spain. The Guarantee Scheme excluded branches of foreign credit institutions.
Credit institutions had to meet specific market share, issuance, and capitalization requirements in order to be fully eligible for the Guarantee Scheme. Each credit institution, or at least one subsidiary of a consolidated group or pool of credit institutions, had to meet the following criteria:
- Possess a share equal to at least 1/1000 of the domestic credit market;
- Have issued, since October 13, 2003 (five years before the entry into force of the Royal Decree-Law), instruments “similar to the ones covered by the present Guarantee Scheme” (European Commission 2008b).
Regardless of type, credit institutions needed to be “sufficiently capitalized in line with the national legislation.”FNAccording to Law 36/2007, dated November 16, 2007, modifying Law 13/1985, dated May 25 ,1985, and Royal Decree 216/2008, dated February 15, 2008.
Eligible Debt - Type1
Securitization notes and subordinated debts were not eligible. The original Royal Decree-Law initially provided for the possibility of covering other financial instruments such as interbank deposits. However, Ministerial Order EHA/3364/2008—which held legal force and upon which the European Commission based its authorization—excluded interbank deposits, options, derivatives, and other instruments “for which the amount of risk might be difficult to assess by the guarantor” (European Commission 2008b). There was a minimum issuance requirement for all debt issuances of €10 million.
Eligible Debt - Maturities1
Initially, debt with a maturity of up to five years could be guaranteed by the government only subject to European Commission approval based on a specific request and report from the Bank of Spain.
In 2009, Spain requested that the European Commission extend guarantees for debt with maturities of up to five years. The Commission approved the measure but limited these issuances to a maximum of one-third of the overall budget.
Eligible Debt - Currencies1
Though not explicitly stated in the implementation documents, the original Ministerial Order stipulated that if the debt were to be denominated in foreign currency, “the order of granting the guarantee will establish mechanisms to minimize the foreign currency risk the State might take” (European Commission 2008b).
Participation Limits for Individual Firms1
This provisionFNAs defined in epigraph 2.4 of the Statistic Bulletin from the Bank of Spain, September 2008. applied to participating credit institutions, consolidated groups, or pools. In accordance with Article 118 of Law 47/2003 of November 2003, the Ministry reserved the right to “limit the amount [of guaranteed debt] to reduce the risk involved with granting the guarantee,” particularly with regard to the capitalization requirements used to determine an institution’s eligibility (European Commission 2008b).
Fees1
The guarantee fee was determined according to the guidelines presented in the European Central Bank’s “Recommendations on government guarantees on bank debt” of October 20, 2008 (European Central Bank 2008). Fees were to be paid to the Spanish government by participating institutions upon each issuance of guaranteed debt. Debt issuances with a maturity of a year or less incurred a fixed annual guarantee premium of 50 basis points (bps) calculated on the nominal value. Those issuances with maturities of more than a year incurred a fixed annual fee of 50 bps “plus the variable fee corresponding to the relevant credit default swap,” to be calculated as follows:
- For credit institutions with representative CDS, the fee was the lower of either:
- The median value of the five-year CDS spread for the credit institution during the period between January 1, 2007, and August 31, 2008; or
- The median value of the five-year CDS spread during the same period, “depending on the relevant rating category of the bank concerned based on a representative sample of large banks in the eurozone” (European Commission 2008b). For a rating of double-A, the median was set at 36.5 bps; for a rating of single-A, the median was set at 44.8 bps.
- For credit institutions with a credit rating but no representative CDS spread, the debt issuance incurred a fee based on the median value of the five-year CDS spread for institutions with similar credit ratings during the period between January 1, 2007, and August 31, 2008, depending on the relevant rating category. For a rating of double-A, the median was set at 36.5 bps; for a rating of single-A, the median was set at 44.8 bps.
- For credit institutions with neither representative CDS nor a credit rating, the debt issuance incurred a fee based on the median value of the five-year CDS spread for the lowest rating category during the period between January 1, 2007, and August 31, 2008. The median for the lowest rating category of single-A was set to 44.8 bps, plus an annual add-on fee of 10 bps.
- For credit institutions with representative CDS, the fee was the lower of either:
In 2010, these fees were increased pursuant to new guidance from the European Commission as follows:
- 20 bps for institutions with a rating of A-plus or single-A,
- 30 bps for institutions with a rating of A-minus,
- 40 bps for institutions with a rating of lower than A-minus .
This increase in fees aimed to incentivize beneficiaries to scale down their guarantees or exit the program.
Other Conditions1
Program documents do not contain any such restrictions.
Process for Exercising Guarantee1
Embodied in Article 1.830 of the Spanish Civil Code, the beneficium excussionis “refers to the right or benefit of the guarantor not to be compelled to pay as long as the principal has enough property” (European Commission 2008b). Had such a provision remained in effect, investors holding guaranteed debt may have been required to pursue a claim against a defaulting issuer prior to realizing the guarantee. The waiver of beneficium excussionis thus provided holders of guaranteed debt with confidence that they would be able to trigger the guarantee more quickly in the event of default.
Program Issuance Window1
Although the original Ministerial Order EHA/3364/2008 specified an end date of June 30, 2009, the program was extended five times, each for a period of six months, to expire on December 31, 2011 (see Appendix A). This was due to the perceived weakness of the Spanish savings bank sector and the previous heavy investment in the failing housing market.
The Guarantee Scheme was reintroduced for a six-month period with slightly different terms in February 2012. This second iteration of the program was extended in June 2012 to February 2013 and ultimately concluded on June 30, 2013 (see Appendix B).
The implementation of the Guarantee Scheme was portrayed as an important initial step in restoring confidence in Spanish credit institutions and laying a foundation for other recapitalization and restructuring measures (European Commission 2008a).
Similarly, María González Fernández, Cecilia González Rodríguez, and Carmen Motellón García, the authors of a report in the CNMV Bulletin, assert that the Guarantee Scheme “allowed the financial institutions that availed themselves of this facility to face their financial commitments in 2009 more comfortably” (Comisión Nacional del Mercado de Valores 2010). They further conclude that “grant of the State guarantees succeeded in lowering the overall systemic risk, and the successive secured issues allowed the issuers to face 2009 more comfortably” (Comisión Nacional del Mercado de Valores 2010).
In contrast, José Caamaño Alegre and Mukhbira Komilova characterized the Guarantee Scheme as expensive and linked its high fees to the sovereign rather than to individual banks’ participation fees (Caamaño Alegre and Komilova 2013). Specifically, guidance from the European Central Bank called for a uniform fee structure across European countries with very different sovereign credit ratings meant that Spanish institutions had to pay the same guarantee fees as similarly rated institutions in other countries despite the guarantee they received being worth less. This may explain why larger banks, such as BBVA, used their foreign subsidiaries to issue debt guaranteed under US programs.
A Bank for International Settlements assessment (BIS 2009) found that the bonds issued under the Guarantee Scheme may have crowded out covered bonds on the national market, as the debt instruments eligible for guarantee were cheaper for banks to issue (180-200 bps in total cost versus a 260 bps spread for covered bonds) and were thus preferred by issuers.
Key Program Documents
Corrigendum to the Guarantee Scheme for Credit Institutions in Spain (European Commission 2008)
State Aid document describing the design and terms of the credit guarantee scheme.
Reintroduction of the Spanish Guarantee Scheme (European Commission 2012)
State Aid document describing the design and terms of the reintroduced credit guarantee scheme.
Key Program Documents
Recommendations of the Governing Council of the European Central Bank on Government Guarantees for Bank Debt (European Commission 2008)
Official ECB document containing guidance for EU countries designing credit guarantee schemes.
Ministerial Order EHA/3364/2008 of 21 November 2008 (Ministry of Economic Affairs and Digital Transformation 2008
Ministerial Order that brought the credit guarantee scheme into legal force.
Real Decreto–Ley 7/2008, de 13 de Octubre, de Medidas Urgentes en Materia Económico Financiera en relación con el Plan de Acción Concertada de los Países de la Zona Euro (Spanish Ministry of Economic Affairs and Digital Transformation 2008)
Royal Decree-Law announcing the implementation of the credit guarantee scheme.
State Aid N336/2009: Prolongation of the Guarantee Scheme for Credit Institutions in Spain (European Commission 2009)
State Aid document describing the terms of the first extension of the credit guarantee scheme.
State Aid N588/2009: Prolongation of the Guarantee Scheme for Credit Institutions in Spain (European Commission 2009)
State Aid document describing the terms of the second extension of the credit guarantee scheme
State Aid N 263/2010: Extension of the Guarantee Scheme for Credit Institutions in Spain (European Commission 2010)
State aid document describing the terms of the third extension of the credit guarantee scheme
State Aid N 530/2010: Extension of the Guarantee Scheme for Credit Institutions in Spain (European Commission 2010)
State aid document describing the terms of the fourth extension of the credit guarantee scheme.
Key Program Documents
State Aid: Commission Approves Spanish Guarantee Scheme for Credit Institutions (12/23/2008)
State Aid press release on the Commission’s granting approval to the Spanish government to implement the credit guarantee scheme
State Aid: Overview of Decisions and On-going In-depth Investigations of Financial Institutions in Difficulty (2/10/2016)
State Aid press release regarding the retrospective investigation of program usage during the financial crisis
Key Program Documents
El Otorgamiento de Avales del Estado a las Emisiones de Deuda de las Entidades Financieras: Una Aproximación al Caso Español (Caamaño Alegre and Komilova 2013)
Academic paper retrospectively analyzing the design and usage of the credit guarantee scheme.
The Design of Government Guarantees for Bank Bonds: Lessons from the Recent Financial Crisis (Levy and Schich 2010)
Report comparing the various credit guarantee schemes implemented by governments around the world in response to the GFC
The Pricing of Government-Guaranteed Bank Bonds (Levy and Zaghini 2010)
Academic paper describing the evolution and pattern of bond issuance across countries to assess the effects of credit guarantee schemes.
El Diluvio: The Spanish Banking Crisis, 2008–2012 (Tano 2017)
Academic paper detailing the Spanish financial crisis from 2008–2012, with particular emphasis on Spanish authorities’ responses.
Key Program Documents
An Assessment of Financial Sector Rescue Programmes (Bank for International Settlements 2009)
Report comparing the usage and effects of various international financial interventions.
Financial Stability Report (Bank of Spain 2008)
Report assessing the soundness of Spain’s financial system at the height of the GFC.
Report on the Financial and Banking Crisis in Spain, 2008–2014 (Bank of Spain 2017)
Report assessing the slate of financial interventions implemented by the Spanish government in response to the GFC
CNMV Bulletin, Quarter 1, 2010 (Comisión Nacional del Mercado de Valores 2010)
Report analyzing the outcomes of the Spanish credit guarantee scheme.
The Spanish Economic Crisis: Key Factors and Growth Challenges in the Euro Area (Ortega and Peñalosa 2012)
Report by the Banco de España assessing the aftermath of the Spanish economic crisis within the context of the eurozone.
Spain: Financial Stability Assessment (International Monetary Fund 2012)
IMF country report assessing the soundness of the Spanish economy following the GFC.
Spanish Guarantee Scheme for Credit Institutions: Spain Context | |
GDP (SAAR, Nominal GDP in LCU converted to USD) |
$1.5 trillion in 2007 $1.6 trillion in 2008
Source: Bloomberg |
GDP per capita (SAAR, Nominal GDP in LCU converted to USD) |
$32,550 per capita in 2007 $35,366 per capita in 2008
Source: Bloomberg |
Sovereign credit rating (5-year senior debt)
|
As of Q4, 2007:
Fitch: AAA Moody’s: Aaa S&P: AAA
As of Q4, 2008
Fitch: AAA Moody’s: Aaa S&P: AAA
Source: Bloomberg |
Size of banking system
| $2.4 trillion in total assets in 2007 $2.9 trillion in total assets in 2008 Source: Bloomberg |
Size of banking system as a percentage of GDP
| 166.1% in 2007 179.5% in 2008 Source: Bloomberg |
Size of banking system as a percentage of financial system
|
Data not available for 2007/2008
Source: World Bank Global Financial Development Database |
5-bank concentration of banking system
|
79.3% of total banking assets in 2007 77.8% of total banking assets in 2008
Source: World Bank Global Financial Development Database |
Foreign involvement in banking system |
2.0% of total banking assets in 2007 2.0% of total banking assets in 2008
Source: World Bank Global Financial Development Database |
Government ownership of banking system
| 0.0% of banks owned by the state in 2008
Source: World Bank Global Financial Development Database |
Existence of deposit insurance |
100% insurance on deposits up to $14,285
Source: Financial Crisis: Deposit Insurance and Related Financial Safety Net Aspects, OECD
|
Appendix A: European Commission Prolongations of the Scheme |
Spain Guarantee Scheme for Credit Institutions
| |||
Status | State Aid Case | EC Decision | End of Extension |
Initial Scheme | NN 54/B/2008 (ex-CP 277/2008) | Dec. 23, 2008 | June 30, 2009 |
1st Prolongation | N336/2009 | June 25, 2009 | Dec. 31, 2009 |
2nd Prolongation | N588/2009 | Dec. 01, 2009 | June 30, 2010 |
3rd Prolongation | N263/2010 | June 28, 2010 | Dec. 31, 2010 |
4th Prolongation | SA. 31921 - N530/2010 | Nov. 29, 2010 | June 30, 2011 |
5th Prolongation | SA.32990 (2011/N) | June 01, 2011 | Dec. 31, 2011 |
Reintroduction | SA.34224 (2012/N) | Feb. 09, 2012 | June 30, 2012 |
Source: European Commission. |
Appendix B: The 2012 Reintroduction of the Guarantee Scheme |
The Guarantee Scheme for Credit Institutions was reintroduced by the Spanish government in February 2012 as part of a new series of interventions intended to provide additional support to the domestic banking sector. The Spanish Ministry of Economy and Finance committed an additional €100 billion for the issuance of guaranteed debt by participating credit institutions.
The main terms and conditions governing participation remained the same as those stipulated in the original Ministerial Order EHA/3364/2008 of December 29, 2008. Under the terms of the reintroduced scheme, debt eligibility was restricted to maturities of between one year and five years. In addition, guarantee fees were calculated differently.
First, the total fee consisted of the following:
- For banks with credit default spread (CDS) data: A base fee of 40 basis points (bps) plus a risk-based fee equal to the product of 40 bps and a risk metric composed of:
- “50% of the ratio of the beneficiary’s five-year senior CDS spread over the three years ending one month before the date of issue of the guaranteed bond to the medial level of the iTraxx Europe Senior Financials five-year index over the same three-year period PLUS
- “One-half of the ratio of the median five-year senior CDS spread of all Member States to the median five-year senior CDS spread of the Member State granting the guarantee over the same three-year period” (European Commission 2008c ).
- For banks without CDS data or without representative CDS data, but with a credit rating, an equivalent CDS spread would be “derived from the median value of five-year CDS spreads during the same sample period for the rating category of the bank concerned, based on a representative sample of large banks in the Member States” (European Commission 2008c). This determination was to be made by the European Banking Authority.
- The guidelines listed under point (2) also applied to banks with neither CDS data nor a credit rating.
Second, the government charged an upfront fee of 0.5% of the total fee calculated in accordance with the guidelines. This fee, which was to be paid upon admission to the program rather than upon the first event of default, was introduced to increase efficiency and lessen demand for the Guarantee Scheme (European Commission 2008c).
The 2012 reintroduction of the Guarantee Scheme was originally set for a duration of six months, but was extended twice to conclude on June 30, 2013. Over the course of the program’s operation, 12 Spanish credit institutions issued a total of €41.2 billion of guaranteed debt. All debts outstanding under the program were fully amortized by March 14, 2017.
Taxonomy
Intervention Categories:
- Bank Debt Guarantee Programs
Countries and Regions:
- Spain
Crises:
- Global Financial Crisis