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Showing posts with label Auto insurance quote college loan consolidation car insurance quote federal loan consolidation online car. Show all posts

Won't seek credit line from IMF, says Finance Ministry

NEW DELHI: The finance ministry is not considering reaching out to the International Monetary Fund to shore up its reserves, two officials told ET, even as experts weighed in favour of such a move. "It is not even on the agenda," said a finance ministry official, dismissing the suggestion that India should go to the IMF to seek a credit line for any contingency. 

"Where is the need...There is no question," another official said. 

Finance minister P Chidambaram has given out a plan to rein in the current account deficit to 3.7% of GDP and its "full and safe" financing. The government also expects that there could be accretion to forex reserves unlike in 2011-12 when there was a drawdown. The plan clearly states how India will fund its CAD with specifics. 

World Bank chief economist Kaushik Basu, who a year ago was chief economic advisor to the government, also did not see any need to knock the door's of IMF, which is considered a sort of stigma not just in India but everywhere. "I don't think that we are in a situation where there is any need for that," Basu told reporters in Delhi when asked whether India should seek a credit line from the IMF. "India has enough foreign exchange reserves, so the question of having to turn to the IMF is not there." 

He pointed that when India went for a credit line in 1991, its reserves could finance imports for just a fortnight and the situation is a lot different now. 

Latest iPhone 5 Rumor Tips October Release Date


It's Monday, so why not kick off the week with another iPhone 5 rumor? The latest report, from All Things D, claims the next-generation Apple smartphone will make its debut in October, not September.
"So those rumors claiming the iPhone 5 will debut in late September? They're wrong," writes ATD's John Paczkowski.
Late last month, reports emerged about AT&T employees being banned from taking time off during the last two weeks of September, which some took to mean that the carrier would need all hands on deck for the iPhone 5 release. ATD, however, said those reports are "misinformed."
Citing a source with "knowledge of the situation," Paczkowski reports that the iPhone 5 will instead be unveiled in October, with other sources putting the launch date late in the month.
Like any other major Apple release, rumors have been swirling for months, with the latest reportputting the iPhone 5 release date on September 5. Other rumors about the fabled device: fully integrated voice control; a "baby iPhone" for emerging markets; a "radical" new shape; an iPod-likecurved glass display; an edge-to-edge screen; and more.
PCMag mobile analyst Sascha Segan isn't placing any iPhone 5 bets; he recently begged us all to Stop the iPhone 5 Rumor Insanity.
When the iPhone 5 does hit store shelves, it is likely to be popular, according to a recent survey. PriceGrabber found that 35 percent of U.S. consumers plan to buy the device, while 50 percent plan to do so within a year of its release.

U. S. Steel Announces Executive Appointments in Corporate Risk Management and Finance Organizations


PITTSBURGH, Aug. 1, 2011 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ -- United States Steel Corporation X +1.20% today announced two executive appointments in its corporate risk management and finance organizations that are effective today.
Larry T. Brockway, who currently serves as vice president and treasurer, has been appointed senior vice president and chief risk officer. Brockway will report to U. S. Steel Chairman and Chief Executive Officer John P. Surma. John J. Quaid, who serves as controller - North American flat-rolled operations, has been elected to succeed Brockway as vice president and treasurer. Quaid will report to U. S. Steel Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer Gretchen R. Haggerty. Both Brockway and Quaid will continue to be based at the company's Pittsburgh headquarters.
In the newly created role of senior vice president and chief risk officer, Brockway will be responsible for expanding the company's already comprehensive financial and business risk management practices to establish a more integrated, systematic and enterprise-wide approach to the assessment, analysis and monitoring of business risks and opportunities and the identification of strategies for managing risk. Quaid will assume executive responsibility for all of the company's treasury functions, which include cash and banking, credit and collections, corporate finance and corporate insurance.
Commenting on the appointments, Surma said, "Larry is uniquely qualified for the new role of chief risk officer and brings a deep understanding of the financial, commercial and operational facets of our business and the complex dynamics of the markets in which we operate. Larry is one of our company's most highly regarded executives, and the combination of his business acumen and strong intellectual and interpersonal skills make him a natural choice for this important new role.
"John's diverse financial and business background, international experience and proven leadership skills make him an outstanding addition to our team of highly talented accounting and finance executives," continued Surma. "John will be assuming leadership of an excellent treasury organization, and he brings a wealth of knowledge about our business and great credibility in the financial community to this critical function."
Brockway, 51, began his career with Marathon Oil Corporation in 1981 as an accounting intern in the Findlay, Ohio, office and advanced through various accounting posts there and in Marathon's Houston, Texas, office. In 1997, he transferred to Pittsburgh to serve as manager - structured finance for USX Corporation. Brockway was named director of corporate finance in 2000 and director of strategic planning in 2001. He was named assistant treasurer of corporate finance for U. S. Steel following the company's December 31, 2001, spin-off from USX Corporation. Brockway was elected to his most recent post, vice president and treasurer, in 2004.
Brockway, a native of Ashtabula, Ohio, graduated from Bowling Green State University in Bowling Green, Ohio, in 1982 with a bachelor's degree in accounting. He serves on the board of directors of the United States Steel and Carnegie Pension Fund and is a member of the Fund's Investment Committee. He is also a member of the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra's board of trustees.
Quaid, 39, joined U. S. Steel in 2002 as manager of investor relations after working at PricewaterhouseCoopers' audit and assurance practice from 1994 through 1999 and at FastForward, Inc., a high-tech start-up company, from 1999 through 2002. In 2004, Quaid advanced to director - facility marketing and business planning. One year later, he relocated to Serbia after being named director - finance for U. S. Steel Serbia with responsibility for accounting and analysis, tax, cash and banking, and credit and collections in Serbia. He returned to the United States in 2007 to serve as a lead project manager for the company's Enterprise Resource Planning project. He advanced to assistant corporate controller in the company's accounting and finance organization in 2008 and assumed his most recent position, controller - North American flat-rolled operations, in July 2010.
Originally from St. Paul, Minn., Quaid earned a Bachelor of Science degree in accounting from Lehigh University in Bethlehem, Pa., in 1994. He is a member of the board of directors of the United States Steel and Carnegie Pension Fund and serves on the Fund's Investment Committee. Quaid is also a member of the United Way of Allegheny County's board of directors.

State Bank allows relaxations in Export Finance Scheme to facilitate exporters


An exporter shall be eligible to avail financing under EFS Part-I and/or Part-II, if total amount of overdue export bills at the time of availing facility is not more than 5% of previous year’s export performance, says SBP circular issued Saturday.
In case overdue export position of an exporter is greater than 5% of previous year’s exports, exporter will not be entitled to avail EFS facility till such time that overdue position is reduced to 5% benchmark level, circular said, adding that these instructions, which will come into effect from October 01, 2011, have been issued by SBP to streamline procedure for availing finance under EFS by exporters who have overdue export proceeds.
Each exporter will be required to give a Certificate on a prescribed Form showing consolidated position of overdue export bills outstanding against all bank(s) {as per record of Foreign Exchange Operations Department (FEOD)}, as a percentage of total exports of preceding    year finalized in EE-1 statements. Certificate will be submitted through the bank to concerned SBP BSC office on a six monthly basis by 31st March & September 30, each year, circular said, adding that certificate will remain valid up to next six months. Process of submission of the certificate would commence from September 2011.
SBP has communicated necessary guidelines to banks for processing requests of exporters with overdue export proceeds for availing finance under EFS. Any misreporting/ misstatement shall attract imposition of fine on bank/exporter at the rate prescribed under the Scheme, it added.
Moreover, concerned SBP BSC office(s) shall verify export overdue position of exporter from relevant data and check 5% benchmark. In normal cases this practice shall be adopted twice a year before granting refinance.
The existing waiver for exporters with overdue export bills is being extended up to September 30, 2011 to cover the period until the certificate is submitted by exporters for the first time, circular added.

L&T Finance Holdings open to banking foray


L&T Finance Holdings Ltd today said the company has an open mind on foray into the banking business and awaiting regulatory guidelines on opening up of new banks.
Addressing newspersons here today ahead of the initial public offer next week, Mr Suneet Maheshwari, Chief Executive L&T Infra, said: “We look at growth opportunities wherever they come from. If it presents an opportunity to open a bank we will look at it. However, at the moment, it is too premature.”
“The investments we made into banks such as City Union Bank was in the form of portfolio investments and provide synergies for growth,” he explained.
Referring to their exposure to microfinance institutions (MFIs), he said: “L&T Finance has been lending to MFIs as we believe that this sector has immense potential to serve the unbanked section of population.”
“Notwithstanding recent developments and new laws and regulations in the MFI industry in the country, and in particular in Andhra Pradesh, we continue to believe in the medium and long term growth prospects of the MFI industry. However, in the short term, and owing to new laws and regulations and decline in collections from customers of microfinance in Andhra Pradesh, we have reduced disbursement of loans in general,” the L&T prospectus said.
However, Mr Maheshwari mentioned “the banks portfolio of MFI is generally doing well as the exposure is across eight States. However, we are cautious.”
“L&T Finance is also looking at infusion of funds into its arm India Infrastructure Developers Ltd to cater to new business segments. We may also consider infusing Tier II Capital in L&T Finance Holdings at a later date,” he said.

Obama meets Dalai Lama despite China's warning


China has responded angrily to a meeting between US President Barack Obama and Tibet's exiled spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama.
The Chinese foreign ministry described the meeting in Washington as a gross interference in China's internal affairs.
The White House said the talks underscored President Obama's strong support for the preservation of what it called Tibet's unique religious, cultural and linguistic identity.

U.S. AAA credit rating in jeopardy as risks get reality check

Nearly three years after the financial system crash, the concept of investment risk continues to be turned on its head.
Things have happened in the markets and the economy that have far exceeded most people's worst-case scenarios. What many Americans thought they knew about investing turned out to be dead wrong.
That learning experience is speeding up again. Investors are being forced to rethink a generally accepted financial principle of the postwar era: that the world's developed nations are inherently low-risk places to put money.
The debt problems that have mushroomed in the U.S., Europe and Japan since 2008 have "shattered the concept of the major economies being stable, dependable investments," said Sean Egan, head of Egan-Jones Ratings Co., a smaller rival to Wall Street's credit-rating giants.
This week, two bigger credit raters, Moody's Investors Service and Standard & Poor's, warned that they might soon cut the U.S. government's top-rung AAA debt rating because of the political battle in Washington over the federal debt ceiling and spending cuts.
Think of it. U.S. Treasury bonds are supposed to be the world's "risk-free" asset, in the sense that there should be zero doubt about the government's willingness and ability to pay promised interest and repay principal in full. Treasuries have long been the benchmark by which the risk of other investments is measured. Other interest rates, such as mortgage rates, are set based on Treasury yields.
So it's monumental that S&P, in an announcement Thursday, said that if Congress and the Obama administration failed to agree on a "credible" plan to rein in deficit spending, it might drop its U.S. debt rating from AAA "into the AA category."
That would put the U.S. in with a group of countries that includes Japan, ChinaSpain and Slovenia. And America would be considered less creditworthy than remaining AAA-rated countries including Canada, Germany, Switzerland,Finland, Norway and Australia.
Finland: The new risk-free asset?
Still, in the realm of debt-rating-speak, a AA rating is considered "high quality." By contrast, that description no longer applies to bonds of Ireland andPortugal, according to Moody's. The firm this month cut both of those countries' ratings to the Ba level, which is the top rung of junk status, or non-investment-grade — i.e., speculative.
A junk rating for Ireland would have been inconceivable to the Irish people just a few years ago. The country's once fast-growing economy, the Celtic tiger of Europe, held Moody's top Aaa rating, or close to it, for most of the last two decades. But since 2009 Ireland's rating has been on a fast slide. Ditto for Portugal and, of course, for Greece, the epicenter of Europe's financial crisis.
The ratings firms — and, belatedly, investors — have come to realize how heavy the debt burdens of these countries have become and how difficult it will be for them to grow their way out of that debt. The same borrowing that fueled their growth since 1990 now is a millstone.
Ireland's public debt equals about 94% of its annual gross domestic product. Portugal's percentage is 83%. Greece's is a stunning 144%. By comparison, U.S. public debt is about 60% of GDP, not counting what's owed to government agencies such as Social Security.
At the other end of the debt spectrum from Western Europe are countries such as South Korea, Slovakia and Brazil, which have public-debt-to-GDP ratios of 24%, 41% and 61%, respectively. Not surprisingly, their investment-grade credit ratings have been untainted by the 2008 global financial crash and its aftereffects.
Greece, Portugal and Ireland, each of which has gone to the European Union for financial aid, now are caught in a vicious cycle: Investors are demanding double-digit market yields on their bonds to compensate for the risk implied by low credit ratings. The annualized yield on two-year Greek bonds is a stunning 33.1%; on Irish two-year bonds it's 23.1%.
If those rates are sustained, the countries will be unable to borrow what they need from investors to roll over maturing debt. Moody's says that makes it more likely the countries will need further help from the European Union — and that the EU eventually will require private bondholders to bear some of the bailout pain by writing off part of the debt.
The U.S., nearly everyone presumes, is a long way from the fates of Greece, Portugal and Ireland. Even so, with both Moody's and S&P threatening credit downgrades this week, it would be logical for some investors to feel a bit unnerved about Treasury bonds and demand higher interest rates.
Yet so far, that isn't happening. The yield on two-year Treasury notes ended Friday at a mere 0.36%, down from 0.39% a week ago and near the 2011 low of 0.33% reached June 24. The 10-year T-note yield ended the week at 2.91%, down from 3.03% a week ago.
Byron Wien, a veteran money manager at Blackstone Group in New York, has been predicting for the last year that the 10-year T-note yield would rise to 5%. "I've been very wrong," he said. "I am astonished" that yields remain so low.
Wall Street, usually prone to overreaction, remains underwhelmed by the ratings-cut threats. Why? There is disbelief that the cuts really will happen. Congress must raise the $14.3-trillion federal debt ceiling by Aug. 2 or risk the Treasury running out of money, but by Thursday there was talk in Washington of a compromise between President Obama and Republican leaders that would avert that potential debacle.
What's more, investors rightly are suspicious of the ratings firms. There is the sense that Moody's and S&P are playing hardball with Uncle Sam because their reputations are so tarnished by the many AAA ratings they handed out to mortgage bonds that crumbled with the housing bust.
Wien adds another reason investors keep funneling cash to Treasuries: "U.S. rates are so low because there's so much fear around the world." U.S. consumer confidence in the economy is plummeting again, to lows last seen in 2009. Europe's debt crisis has spread to Spain and Italy. The Middle East remains racked by social upheaval.
Meanwhile, the developing world has a different set of problems. China, India, Brazil and other fast-growing developing countries are tightening credit to curb inflation. That has whacked their stock markets this year while the Dow Jones industrial average holds on to a 7.8% year-to-date gain.
But looking out a few years, global investors are presented with two starkly different choices: Developed countries' onerous debt burdens will continue to retard growth, and those burdens will grow heavier if interest rates rise. For the developing world, where debt levels are light, growth prospects remain bright and interest rates could come down if inflation recedes.
Boiled down to that, it doesn't look like much of a competition.

Google: 6 billion installed apps on Android


During Google's second quarter earnings call yesterday, the company announced it has now seen 6 billion apps installed on Android. The search giant also noted that Android was now seeing 550,000 device activations per day, up from 500,000 just over two weeks ago.
It took Google 20 months to reach the 1 billion apps installed on the Android platform. Five months later, the company had hit the 2 billion apps installed milestone. Two months later, the company was at 3 billion apps installed. That last milestone was reached three months ago. In other words, the company is seeing some 1 billion apps downloaded every month.
Because Android is open, however, the platform's users can download apps from more than one app store. For example, Amazon launched its own Android App Store just last month.
To put the 6 billion number into perspective, Apple announced earlier this month that it had seen 15 billion downloaded apps on iOS. Apple saw 1 billion apps downloaded in April 2009. In April 2011, the company passed the 10 billion apps downloaded mark. While Apple's app downloads are growing, Google's app downloads are not only growing, but they are accelerating as well.
In short, because Android phone sales are growing so quickly, Google's app downloads are going to soon catch Apple's numbers. That's impressive, given that Google's Android Market has over 200,000 apps as of December 2010 while Apple's App Store has over 300,000 apps as of September 2010. It's also expected that the number of apps for Android will eventually pass the number of apps available for iOS.