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Originally published Tuesday, June 12, 2012 at 4:49 AM

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Spain bond yields head back up

The interest rate Spain would have to pay to raise money on the world's bond markets continued to rise Wednesday amid worries that a planned bank bailout might not be enough to save the country from needing an overall financial rescue.

The Associated Press

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MADRID —

The interest rate Spain would have to pay to raise money on the world's bond markets continued to rise Wednesday amid worries that a planned bank bailout might not be enough to save the country from needing an overall financial rescue.

The interest rate - or yield - on Spanish 10-year bonds started Wednesday six basis points to 6.73 percent, close to the 7 percent level that is seen as unsustainable over the long term.

On Tuesday the yield peaked at 6.81 - a record for Spain since it joined the euro in 1999 - before easing to close at 6.67 percent.

The benchmark Ibex-35 was up about 1 percent in early trading.

Spain has requested eurozone bailout money for banks laden with bad loans and other toxic assets from a burst real estate bubble. The eurozone says it will make (EURO)100 billion available, but Spain is waiting for audits to be completed before specifying its needs.

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