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Shifting the goal-posts
Business Standard / New Delhi December 21, 2009, 0:38 IST

Life insurers' premium collection rises 21%
Life insurance industry logged a 21 per cent increase in premium collections during the first seven months of the current fiscal compared to the same period last year, indicating recovery in the sector.

News of the day

Force India releases Fisi, no 'financial settlement' involved
After four days of vehement denial, Force India on Thursday announced that its Italian driver Giancarlo Fisichella is joining Ferrari with immediate effect, while also insisting that there was no financial settlement involved in his move.
Corporate

US Treasury stops plan to sell Citi shares: report

The US Treasury has suddenly shelved its plan to begin offloading stocks worth $5 billion in Citigroup after an unlively response from investors, says a media report. - Wells Fargo to repay $25 bn bailout funds - US stimulus gives Treasury more returns than expected - Frank Sieren & Andreas Sieren: Obama"s Asian imbroglio">Frank Sieren & Andreas Sieren: Obama"s Asian imbroglio - Panel seeks regular updates on asset guarantee prog for Citi - A V Rajwade: Managing G3 currencies">A V Rajwade: Managing G3 currencies - Dealing with a weak dollar "The US government abruptly shelved plans to start trimming its 34 per cent stake in Citigroup, after investors demanded a price so low that the Treasury Department would have lost money on the deal," The Wall Street Journal reported. The reversal came two days after the Treasury said it planned to sell as much as 5 billion stocks in the New York company, as part of Citigroup"s plan to pay back $20 billion in taxpayer aid the troubled bank received last year at the time of financial crisis. According to the publication, the huge offering encountered a lukewarm reception on Wall Street, where investors were skeptical of the company"s earnings prospects and had already spent heavily on shares of rival banks this week. As a result, Citigroup had to sell its stock at a discounted price of $3.15 a share. That"s 10 cents below what the Treasury paid for each of its 7.7 billion shares, the report noted. "Faced with a potential paper loss of $770 million on Citibank investment," quoting the Treasury the report said, adding it had decided to hold off selling any of its shares until next year.


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