The survey of 125 institutional investors from across the globe also found that nine of the 130 banks being tested were expected to fail, with capital shortfalls most likely at Italian, German and Austrian banks, according to a document circulated by Goldman Sachs on Tuesday night.

The ECB is examining whether banks have properly recognised losses in a bid to finally draw a line under doubts about euro zone banks' balance sheets before it becomes their supervisor on Nov. 4. Results are expected around Oct. 17.

Producing a result that is in line with market expectations is key for the ECB, since previous rounds of EU bank tests in 2010 and 2011 were roundly discredited for capital demands and failure rates that were far less than what investors deemed reasonable.

Investors' average expected capital demand is 23 billion euros higher than a previous Goldman survey in October 2013. The 51 billion euros is for capital needs that are outstanding after capital that banks have already raised, including 47 billion euros they have raised since October.

Expectations of an "extreme" outcome that would require banks to raise over 100 million euros fell sharply from 18 percent in October to 8 percent now. The exercise's credibility amongst investors has improved since then, the survey found, with 89 percent of investors now expecting the tests to be credible, up from 70 percent in October.

Three quarters of investors surveyed said they expected the exercise to be positive for bank valuations, with banks set to "outperform" the broader equities market once the results are announced. Euro-zone banks have traded at lower valuations than their U.S. peers in recent years.

The large listed banks seen by investors as most likely to have capital shortfalls include Italy's Monte dei Paschi (>> Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena SpA), Germany's Commerzbank (>> Commerzbank AG) and Portugal's BCP (>> B. COM. PORTUGUES). Three Greek banks - Piraeus (>> Piraeus Bank SA), Eurobank (>> Eurobank Ergasias SA) and Alpha Bank (>> Alpha Bank S.A.) - are also among identified by investors as most likely to need capital.

(Reporting by Laura Noonan in London; Editing by Leslie Adler)