Stress tests find 10 big banks need $75B more

WASHINGTON. May 8. KAZINFORM. The US government's long-awaited "stress-test" results have found that 10 of the nation's 19 largest banks need a total of about $75 billion in new capital to withstand losses if the recession worsened; Kazinform refers to China Daily.
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The Federal Reserve's findings, released Thursday, show the country's financial system, like the overall economy, is healing but not yet healed. Some of the largest banks are stable, the tests found. But others need billions more in capital -- a signal by regulators that the industry is vulnerable but viable. US government officials have said a stronger banking system is needed for an economic rebound. The banks that need more capital will have until June 8 to develop a plan and have it approved by their regulators. Among the 10 banks that need to raise more capital, the tests said Bank of America Corp. needs by far the most: $33.9 billion. Wells Fargo & Co. requires $13.7 billion, GMAC LLC $11.5 billion, Citigroup Inc. $5.5 billion and Morgan Stanley $1.8 billion. The other five requiring capital are all regional banks: Regions Financial Corp. of Birmingham, Ala., needs to raise $2.5 billion; SunTrust Banks Inc. of Atlanta $2.2 billion; KeyCorp of Cleveland $1.8 billion; Fifth Third Bancorp of Cincinnati $1.1 billion; and PNC Financial Services Group Inc. of Pittsburgh $600 million. The tests found that if the recession were to worsen, losses at the 19 stress-tested firms during 2009 and 2010 could total $600 billion; Kazinform cites China Daily. See www.chinadaily.com.cn for full version.
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