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And U.S. banks have limited direct exposure
-- $39 billion -- to the riskiest European countries, Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece and Spain, according to first-quarter U.S. government data analyzed by SNL Financial. That figure, a small fraction of U.S. banks' total assets, includes holdings of government debt and loans to banks and corporations. But many worry that European governments aren't prepared to solve their crisis. Germany and other healthy countries, for instance, are balking at putting enough money in the European Union's rescue fund to rescue one of the larger countries. The broader fear is that one of them, such as Italy, will default and damage European banks whose reach extends to the United States. All that "could trigger a chain reaction whose final repercussions would be very difficult to predict," says Domenico Lombardi, senior fellow at the Brookings Institution. Complicating the problem is that indebted European countries have tried to reduce debt by cutting spending. Those spending cuts tend to weaken their economies. The result is that their debt can get bigger, not smaller. White House spokesman Jay Carney expressed confidence Thursday that "Europe's institutions have the capacity to handle this situation."
Still, the vulnerability of U.S. banks goes beyond their direct holdings of European debt, said Christopher Whalen, managing director at Institutional Risk Analytics. U.S. banks also rely on fees from European bank and corporate clients. And they run the risk they won't be able to collect on financial bets they've entered into with European banks. Similar fears contributed to the panic that engulfed Wall Street in the fall of 2008. Troubles with money-market mutual funds also worsened Wall Street's crisis three years ago. Investors withdrew their money once they realized the funds were exposed to losses on Lehman Brothers. Short-term credit markets that corporations rely on froze up. Large U.S. money-market funds had 49.6 percent of their holdings in certificates of deposits, commercial paper and other instruments from European banks at the end of June, according to Fitch. U.S. money market funds have been slashing their exposure to banks in the Eurozone. Their holdings of Eurozone bonds declined about 10 percent in July, to $340 billion from $378 billion, according to research from J.P. Morgan Securities LLC. The Investment Company Institute, a mutual fund trade group, says U.S. funds have no holdings in the three bailed-out countries
-- Greece, Portugal, Ireland -- and little exposure to Spain and Italy. "Fund managers have been aware of these issues and have been taking actions for a long time to reduce their exposures to potential risks in Europe," said Sean Collins, senior director at the investment institute. But Fitch has warned that if credit froze up, money market funds would find it difficult to avoid losses.
[Associated
Press;
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