Seven EU banks fail stress test

— Seven of 91 European banks failed stress tests aimed at measuring their strength in case the continent’s government debt crisis takes a turn for the worse, regulators said Friday. European Union officials hope the results will reassure markets worried about hidden bank losses from the crisis.

The EU said the tests were tough and showed their banking system was resilient enough to weather a slower economy and more turbulance on financial markets.

The Committee of European Banking Supervisors said the seven banks would see their capital positions fall below levels deemed sufficient if there is a steep fall in the price of government bonds many of them hold, a worst-case scenario dubbed a “sovereign shock.”

Germany’s already-nationalized lender Hypo Real Estate Holding AG failed the strength test, but that had been widely expected. Five unlisted Spanish savings banks failed too, their finances battered by the collapse of a property boom: Diada, Unnim, Espiga, Banca Civica, and Cajasur, which was bailed out by the Bank of Spain in May.

Greece’s ATE bank failed too and confirmed that it would go ahead with a capital raising exercise.

In total the seven banks have to raise 3.5 billion to shore up their finances, CEBS said.

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Information for this article was contributed by Bloomberg News.

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