Madrid -The level of bad loans weighing on Spain's banks hit a new record in June, official figures showed Monday, a sign of persistent weakness in the bailed-out sector.
Doubtful loans rose to €176.42bn ($235.14bn), or 11.61% of total loans, some €6bn more than in May, the Bank of Spain said.
The June figure topped a previous record high ratio recorded for November 2012, which was 11.37%, according to adjusted figures from the bank.
Last year, the eurozone agreed to finance a rescue of Spain's banks, swamped in bad loans since a property bubble imploded in 2008 plunging the country into a double-dip recession.
Spain, the eurozone's fourth-largest economy, has so far withdrawn €41.3bn from the eurozone rescue loan.
As a condition of the rescue, Spain set up Sareb, a "bad bank", to buy bad assets from lenders and sell them for a profit.
Spanish banks' bad loans ratio fell in December 2012 for the first time in 17 months as banks began offloading troubled assets to Sareb, but it has since risen again.
Concern for Spain's finances has eased since mid-2012 when speculation peaked that it would need a full sovereign bailout, and its borrowing costs on financial markets have fallen.
But the International Monetary Fund warned in a report last month that Spain's financial sector still faces "elevated" risks and further financial tightening was needed.
Spain has been in its current recession since mid-2011. The unemployment rate is above 26%