| "TUESDAY" production sign (Photo credit: Vaguely Artistic) |
Short-term lending costs fell slightly from last month but remained high at auction on Tuesday, offering little hope the country can finance itself at reasonable levels without seeking assistance.
The blue-chip Spanish index Ibex .IBEX had lost 1.57 percent by 6:45 a.m. EDT (1045 GMT), ending a two-week rally after the ECB said it was ready to help distressed euro zone countries.
Spain is at the center of the euro zone debt crisis, now in its third year, with investors concerned that Madrid is unable to bring down its massive public deficit and control its soaring debt levels.
The government has already requested a European lifeline of up to 100 billion euros for its banks, but investors are not convinced that the country can meet its financial obligations and return to economic growth without international financial assistance.
ECB Governing Council member Luc Coene warned Rajoy against delaying triggering the program on Monday, saying it would not take long for yields to rise if he did.
But Spain's Deputy Prime Minister Soraya Saenz de Santamaria said on Tuesday the government was still considering the terms of a European bailout, a condition of ECB help, weighing on investors' patience. ... Continue to read.

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