Popular Articles

S Tel to launch mobile services in few circles by year-end
S Tel, a joint venture between the Siva group and Bahrain Telecom, today said it will launch mobile services in a few circles by this year-end and announced tying up funds to the tune of Rs 2,000 crore for the purpose.

Goldman Sachs to repay $10 bn in govt funds
Goldman Sachs says it is ready to repay a $10 billion government investment today.

News of the day

NMDC to resume diamond mining at Panna in 3 months: Steel Min
NMDC, the country"s largest iron ore producer, is set to restart mining at the Panna diamond reserves in Madhya Pradesh in the next three months with the Supreme Court giving conditional nod to such activities at the site.
Public Relations

Citi nears deal with US to repay bailout fund

The Citigroup may cut a deal with the US government today that will allow it to repay the bailout fund the financial entity had received at the height of the global financial crisis, says a report. - US limits executives pay to $500,000 at 4 bailed-out firms - US stimulus gives Treasury more returns than expected - US to extend $700 bn bailout programme till Oct "10 - Citigroup in talks for $15 bn equity offering: report - BofA repays US govt entire bailout money - TARP costs likely to be cut by $200 bn: report The Citigroup had received $45 billion from the government"s Troubled Asset Relief Programme (TARP). Attributing to people familiar with the matter, The Wall Street Journal said Citigroup is nearing an agreement that would lay the groundwork for the bank to start freeing itself from government control. It said Citigroup executives are hoping to unveil the deal with the government, possibly as early as Monday. According to the publication, the deal is expected to allow the US-based bank to raise more than $10 billion in new capital by issuing common stocks. Those funds would help it pay back some of the $20 billion that the Treasury Department injected into the company last year. Citigroup executives are also hopeful that the Treasury would announce that it is preparing to sell at least a portion of the 34 per cent stake owned by the government, the daily said. If the government approves Citigroup"s repayment of taxpayer funds, it would free itself from pay restrictions for banks that received multiple bailouts. Bank of America had already repaid $45 billion in TARP funds last week.


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