A group of 25 banks have failed European health checks, while up to 10 of those continue to have a capital shortfall, two people familiar with the matter said, providing a snapshot of the health of the region’s lenders.

The health checks, led by the European Central Bank (ECB), found that banks in countries including Greece, Cyprus, Slovenia and Portugal had fallen short of a minimum capital benchmark at the end of last year and that up to 10 remained in difficulty now, the sources said.

Banks in Spain and France had fared, by and large, better than expected.

The result, which has yet to be finalised by the ECB’s governing council today, provides the most complete picture yet of the robustness of the eurozone’s top 130 lenders.

In Malta, the review looked at Bank of Valletta and HSBC Bank Malta.

Those banks with shortfalls will now have two weeks to submit a plan to bolster their capital to the ECB, which will decide whether or not it gets the green light.

A spokesman for the ECB said the test results had not yet been finalised, describing reports in the meantime as speculative.

“The results will not be final until they are considered by the ECB governing council on October 26, after which they will be published,” he said.

Portugal’s Finance Minister Maria Luis Albuquerque said on Friday that the Lisbon government was confident that the country’s three largest banks had fared well in the stress tests.

The Austrian Finance Minister Hans Joerg Schelling said only Volksbanken AG was “stress burdened” and the test revealed no surprises, according to the Austria Press Agency.

Volksbanken had already said it would wind itself down.

Meanwhile, Deutsche Bank passed the ECB-led stress test by a wide margin with a core equity ratio of 8.8 per cent compared to a minimum requirement of 5.5 per cent, two sources familiar with the matter said on Friday.

Juergen Fitschen, co-chief executive of Deutsche Bank and president of the BdB association of German private-sector banks, said the results probably gave his country’s banks a clean bill of health.

Shares in the Italian banks considered most at risk of failing the eurozone health checks, including bailed-out lender Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena, were sharply higher on Friday as investors counted on them doing better than expected.

“Investors are betting that one of the most problematic banks in the eurozone could pass the stress tests with fewer problems than previously thought,” said Vincenzo Longo, strategist at broker house IG.

Sign up to our free newsletters

Get the best updates straight to your inbox:
Please select at least one mailing list.

You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking the link in the footer of our emails. We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By subscribing, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing.