Santander buys struggling Spanish bank Popular for €1

Santander says it plans to raise about €7 billion of capital as part of transaction

Spanish economy minister Luis de Guindos briefs media on Santander’s acquisition of Banco Popular for one euro to prevent its collapse. Photograph: Emilio Naranjo/EPA
Spanish economy minister Luis de Guindos briefs media on Santander’s acquisition of Banco Popular for one euro to prevent its collapse. Photograph: Emilio Naranjo/EPA

Santander has purchased fellow Spanish lender Banco Popular for one euro, after Brussels warned that the bank was on the verge of collapse.

Banco Popular shares had lost more than half their value over the last week, as speculation mounted over the lender’s future driven by its liquidity problems.

The purchase, announced on Wednesday, means Santander will acquire 100 percent of the struggling bank’s shares and debt. Santander also plans its own capital increase worth 7bln euros in order to cover the absorption.

“This process has been triggered by the ECB after seeing the unviable situation of the bank,” said Spain’s Fund for Orderly Bank Restructuring (FROB).

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Popular’s lack of viability, it added, “is due to liquidity problems associated with the deterioration of its deposit base over recent months and the uncertainty about its own plans to face up to the possible deterioration of the bank’s balance sheet.”

The bank sustained losses worth 3.5 bln euros for the last financial year.

Popular has suffered a substantial deposit run in recent months, as reports of its difficulties have circulated. Last month, bank chairman Emilio Saracho admitted that the lender was in an “urgent” situation, telling local media: “We have liquidity until the end of this year…Is that urgent? Yes, because we have to take steps quickly. We’ve known that for months.”

However, several potential buyers lost interest, leading up to Wednesday’s deal with Santander.

Economy minister Luis de Guindos welcomed the development, describing it as “a good way out for the lender, given the situation it had found itself in recent weeks, because this means maximum protection for depositors and the continuation of activity.”

He also contrasted the purchase with the financial crisis of 2012, when lender Bankia required a massive state bail-out and Spain requested a 100-bln euro rescue for its banks from the European Union, of which it used just under half.

De Guindos said that “the current situation is very different from that of 2012, given the overall health of the financial industry and the Spanish economy in general.”

The Santander deal means that Popular avoids being the subject of the first bailout by the EU’s Single Resolution Board (SRB), which was set up in 2015 to help failing banks without impacting public finances.

However, while the deposits appear to be safe, Popular’s 300,000 shareholders will lose their investment.

Ahead of Wednesday’s sale, many branches of Popular saw frantic scenes as shareholders and other clients demanded information about the banks’ situation. On Tuesday, there were angry scenes at a branch of the bank in Marbella, where a group of shareholders demanded to be allowed to sell their investment. Security guards had to intervene when bank employees said they needed authorisation to carry out the requests.

Santander said the absorption will make it Spain’s largest bank in terms of assets and lending. Executive chairman Ana Botín said the buy would strengthen her group’s diversification “at a time of improving economic conditions in both Spain and Portugal, and will allow us to continue to deliver for customers and shareholders on all our commitments.”

Guy Hedgecoe

Guy Hedgecoe

Guy Hedgecoe is a contributor to The Irish Times based in Spain