Popular Articles

The sky's the limit
Branson: Richard Branson is making headlines on three continents. The serial entrepreneur is selling Virgin Mobile USA to partner Sprint-Nextel well below its IPO price. But his latest mediocre performance in the US isn’t stopping him elsewhere. Abu Dhabi is ponying up money for his loopy spaceship venture and his Aussie airline Virgin Blue is planning a rights issue. Branson"s record doesn"t give investors any certainty.

UPDATE:Phase-I of ONGC's Brazil project starts
State-run Oil and Natural Gas Corporation"s deep-sea project in Brazil has begun crude oil production and output is projected to touch 1,00,000 barrels a day soon.

News of the day

SRK detained at US airport, released after diplomatic intervention
Early Saturday morning, as India woke up to celebrate its 63nd Independence Day, Bollywood superstar Shah Rukh Khan was detained at Newark Airport in the US and questioned for over two hours. Later, the Indian Mission intervened and secured the release of the 43-year-old actor.
Public Company

Pandit 'near death' cash hoard signals lower US bank profits

Citigroup Inc and JPMorgan Chase & Co are hoarding cash as if another crisis were on the way. Citigroup has almost doubled its cash to $244.2 billion in the year since Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. filed for bankruptcy, the biggest such stockpile of any US bank. - Citi, Bank of America managers averaged $18 mn pay in 2008 - Credit Suisse posts third straight quarterly profit - JPMorgan profit rises 7-fold on surge in fixed income - Xerox to buy firm for $6.4 bn - GE seeks sale of security unit - JPMorgan takes aim at cardholders The lender, which last year came so close to a funding shortfall it had to get a $45 billion government infusion, is under pressure from the Treasury Department and regulators to keep more money on hand for emergencies, even as markets improve. The caution, which may help restore confidence in the financial system, offers little comfort to shareholders, who can expect to see shrinking returns as banks put money into liquid investments that yield one-twelfth the interest rates of loans. “It’s a smart longer-term move, but it will take down the rates of returns these companies can generate,” said Eric Hovde, chief executive officer of Washington-based Hovde Capital Advisors LLC, a hedge fund with $1 billion of financial-industry and real estate investments. “If you start to see more economic stabilisation, then liquidity levels would start dropping, but they’ll never go back to the insane level they were pre- crisis.” Regulators say banks got too aggressive in the years leading up to last year’s credit-market seizure, operating with too little equity capital and putting too much money into illiquid investments such as loans and complex, hard-to-trade securities and derivatives.


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