Spanish bank puts up Cristiano Ronaldo as collateral. Cristiano Ronaldo,  the most expensive footballer in history, has joined the European  Central Bank (ECB) on a free transfer. Sources say the authorities want  his help on the sovereign debt crisis by kicking the can further down  the road.
Well, not quite. But Ronaldo could feasibly become ECB property after he  was pledged as collateral for emergency liquidity support by Spain's  struggling savings bank, Bankia. In 2009, one of the Spanish banks that  has since become Bankia lent Real Madrid €76.5m (£67m) to pay the  transfer fees for both Ronaldo and Kaka, the Brazilian forward.
It has now emerged that Bankia has put up the loan as collateral with  the ECB in return for vital funding. If both Bankia and Real Madrid go  bust, the ECB would own the two "galácticos".
The loan was rated AAA by Moody's, which judged the £80m Real Madrid  paid Manchester United for Ronaldo and the £56m fee to AC Milan for Kaka  a gilt-edged security as safe as US government debt for what that's  worth. It is not known whether the ECB imposed a haircut on the  collateral, though it is thought unlikely the Portuguese winker would  have consented without advice from a professional stylist.
Collateralising the footballers is part of a rescue plan that has  already seen Bankia take €4.5bn in state support. It was created earlier  this year from the merger of seven troubled regional banks, becoming  the country's largest savings institution. It plans a public listing to  raise funds and bolster its finances.
The board is hoping the shares don't take a dive.
 
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