Spanish banks' bad loans hit the highest level for 50 years in October, data showed today, despite the sector getting good marks from creditors as it exits its bailout programme.
The level of bad loans -- ones judged highly unlikely to be repaid -- rose to 13 per cent of all outstanding credit from 12.68 per cent in August, figures from the Bank of Spain showed.
It was the highest rate since current records began in 1962.
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Last year, the eurozone offered a loan of up to 100 billion euros to shore up the balance sheets of Spain's banks, swamped in bad loans since a property bubble imploded in 2008 plunging the country into a recession.
Spain, the euro zone's fourth-biggest economy, has drawn 41.3 billion euros from the rescue loan, which expires at the end of January.
Two of the international bodies behind the bailout, the European Commission and the International Monetary Fund, on Monday warned Madrid to be vigilant as the bailout winds up.
They said the sector was on the way to recovery but warned that lending to businesses had yet to pick up as economic risks remain for Spain. They urged Spain to monitor the recovering banking sector carefully.
Spain crawled out of recession in the third quarter, but economists warn of threats to its recovery. They say the unemployment rate -- 26 per cent in the third quarter of 2013 -- will remain painfully high for years.