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Sensex touches 19K on positive global cues; ONGC spikes up


The benchmark Sensex has touched an important psychological 19,000 mark today, for the first time since May 3, supported by firm global cues post lawmakers passed the crucial second austerity vote for Greece. There was a bit of volatility in the market.
ONGC shot up 5% to Rs 288 a share on likely royalty payment from Cairn.
CCEA has cleared Cairn-Vedanta deal with some conditions yesterday, wherein Cairn India will have to pay royalty to ONGC.
AK Hazarika, Chairman ONGC said benefit to ONGC would be minimum of Rs 18,000 crore. However, Carn India was down nearly 2%.
Vedanta group companies like Sterlite and Sesa Goa gained 1.5-2%.
DLF, HCL Tech, Reliance Power, Reliance Communications, Reliance Infrastructure, ACC, Ambuja Cements, Hindalco, GAIL and M&M were on buyers' radar.
However, Bharti Airtel tumbled another 2% after downgraded by Kotak.
Maruti Suzuki and HUL too were down.
At 9:19 hours IST, the 30-share BSE Sensex was trading at 18,927, up 81 points and the 50-share NSE Nifty rose 17 points to 5,664.
The CNX Midcap went up 48 points to 8,019. About 627 shares advanced as against 183 shares declined on National Stock Exchange.
Jubilant Foodworks plunged 5% on profit booking after trading at crazy valuations in last few days.
Timbor Home lost 8%, below issue price of Rs 63.
Videocon tumbled 6.54%. GTL fell 1% to below Rs 90.
However, Dish TV rose 2.5%. TVS Motor gained 2% on monthly numbers.
Mukand gained 9% after a block deal.
Orbit Corp, Hangung Toys, Redington, Exide, Hexaware and IVRCL were up 2.5%.

German Banks Near Agreement on Greek Plan


German financial companies pushed toward an agreement to roll over their Greek debt holdings as Deutsche Bank AG (DBK) Chief Executive Officer Josef Ackermann predicted banks would contribute to help avert a “meltdown.”
Representatives of German banks and insurers hammered out a draft proposal to present at a meeting today with Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble and top industry executives, including Ackermann. The German firms, which are using a French proposal as a blueprint for discussions, are likely to commit to contributing to the Greek rescue, while calling for a Europe- wide solution, said people familiar with the plan.
Financial institutions would “offer our hand in a solution,” Ackermann told Chancellor Angela Merkel at a conference in Berlin yesterday. “Not because we’re doing it gladly, but actually to enable policymakers to do something so that we -- I’ll say it frankly -- so that we don’t have a meltdown.”
Commerzbank CEO Martin Blessing, speaking at the same event, said German financial institutions have reached a draft agreement on participation in a Greek rescue, although there are still “a few hitches.” The remarks by the CEOs of Germany’s two biggest banks coincided with the Greek parliament approving the first part of an austerity plan aimed at meeting European Union aid requirements and staving off default.

Debt Rollover

German and French lenders are the biggest foreign holders of Greek debt and their participation is key to the European Union goal of getting banks to roll over at least 30 billion euros ($43 billion) of bonds. German firms and the finance ministry are discussing the idea of rolling over bonds maturing until 2020, and not just those running through 2014, as had been first envisaged, said the people, who declined to be identified because the talks are confidential.
Talks yesterday centered on Greek holdings and how much debt firms are willing to roll over, the people said. Potential sticking points, including the maturity of the Greek bonds, whether investors would face writedowns on their current holdings, and how rating companies would view a rollover, were also discussed, they said.

Beyond Lehman

“If Greece goes into default, then we would have a disruption in Europe that could more quickly impact other countries in a way that goes far beyond what Lehman Brothers meant for us,” said Ackermann, 63.
The bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. in September 2008 set off a credit squeeze that forced governments from the U.S. to Germany to Britain to bail out financial institutions.
Ackermann, who is also chairman of the Institute of International Finance, which represents more than 400 financial companies, said they are “working around the clock” with special teams, rating companies and bodies overseeing credit- default swaps to test whether any agreement would trigger a credit event. He warned that any agreement is “highly complex” and could force investors to write down their Greek holdings by an estimated 30 percent to 45 percent if done incorrectly.
Lorenzo Bini Smaghi, a European Central Bank executive board member, called the French proposal to address the Greek debt crisis “interesting,” and said a credit event must be avoided. He spoke in a Les Echos interview.
Schaeuble will hold talks with the heads of German banks and insurers, his deputy, Joerg Asmussen, said June 28. The meetings are part of Europe-wide efforts to get creditors to share the cost of a second Greek bailout and prevent the euro- region’s first default, a year after a 110 billion-euro package failed to resolve the debt crisis.

French Plan

Schaeuble sees a French proposal to roll over Greek debt as a “good basis” for talks, Asmussen said.
Under the French plan, private investors would receive new Greek 30-year bonds worth 70 percent of their original holdings through June 2014, with the remaining 30 percent paid in cash on maturity. Greece would use 50 percent of the original amount to pay down its debt, with 20 percent invested in zero-coupon bonds through a special purpose vehicle that will be used as collateral to insure the banks get repaid.
Banks that roll over their debt under the French plan would receive 30-year bonds with a coupon of about 5.5 percent, which could be increased by as much as 2.5 percentage points based on the pace of Greek economic growth, the people said.
In a second option, investors would reinvest at least 90 percent of their redemptions into five-year Greek government debt with a coupon of 5.5 percent, according to the proposal.
Some German lenders may favor the first option, while others with shorter-term Greek debt may prefer the second.
The plan depends upon credit-rating firms not cutting their grade on Greece and existing or newly issued government securities to default, according to the French draft proposal.
The French plan to roll over Greek sovereign debt has the backing of most of France’s banks and insurers, and it’s now up to investors in Germany and elsewhere in Europe to agree to a strategy, according to two people familiar with the matter.

Lender proves to be a costly buy for Bank of America

Countrywide Financial Corp. turns out to be a huge miscalculation as red ink keeps flowing. The bank added $20.4 billion this week in expected costs to the tally.

When Bank of America Corp. acquired mortgage giant Countrywide Financial Corp. three years ago this week, cementing BofA's position as a consumer banking leader, the purchase price was a measly $2.5 billion in stock.
But the real cost could easily be 10 to 15 times that amount after the home lender incurred huge losses under BofA's ownership and the bank agreed to pay billions of dollars to settle litigation over bad loans made by Countrywide during the housing boom. On Wednesday alone, the bank added $20.4 billion in expected costs to the tally.
The mounting numbers have made the acquisition of Countrywide one of the most misguided takeovers in the history of banking, analysts say.
"The worst by a mile," FBR Capital Markets analyst Paul Miller said — or at least the worst since he began following the industry in 1992.
When the Charlotte, N.C., bank agreed in January 2008 to buy Countrywide, the nationwide mortgage meltdown was well underway in the wake of surging defaults on subprime and other high-risk loans written by the Calabasas company and other lenders.
Shortly after the takeover was completed the following July 1,Kenneth Lewis, BofA's chief executive at the time, acknowledged that Countrywide's losses were running at the high end of what his staff had projected.
But because accountants had aggressively written down the value of Countrywide's assets before transferring them to BofA's books, Lewis predicted the combined home-loan business, consisting mostly of Countrywide's operations, would immediately show a profit — and could see huge earnings growth once the mortgage industry recovered.
Instead, the unit has bled about $16 billion in red ink since the Countrywide takeover — with no real industry recovery in sight.
The $20.4 billion in bad news disclosed Wednesday includes $8.5 billion in payouts to 22 institutional investors to settle demands that Bank of America repurchase bonds backed by Countrywide mortgages. An additional $5.5 billion is to beef up reserves for similar demands by other investors.
The bank also said it would record $6.4 billion in additional mortgage-related charges for the second quarter. That amount includes a $2.6-billion write-off of its Countrywide investment and expenses for revising its mortgage-servicing operations to comply with orders from the Federal Reserve and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, which regulates national banks.
The Fed and the comptroller's office were acting in response to revelations that Bank of America and other large mortgage servicers had cut corners in their handling of troubled borrowers, including "robo-signing" documents supporting foreclosures without having the signers actually verify the information.
A coalition of state attorneys general and federal officials are negotiating a separate, broader settlement of the foreclosure fiasco with Bank of America and four other big banks that are major mortgage servicers.
Those authorities, who began their investigation in October, met with the servicers last week but were unable to reach an agreement with the banks on the penalty they must pay, a spokesman for Iowa's attorney general said. Estimates of the total to be paid by the five banks have ranged from $5 billion to $20 billion.
BofA said the newly announced costs meant it would report a net loss of $8.6 billion to $9.1 billion for the second quarter, instead of a profit of $3.2 billion to $3.7 billion. Wall Street seemed to breathe a sigh of relief that things weren't even worse. Bank of America shares ended the day up 32 cents, or 3%, at $11.14.
The new Countrywide-related costs are in addition to these previously announced items, some of which contributed to the operating losses at BofA's mortgage unit since the takeover:
A 2008 settlement with California to cut payments by as much as $8.6 billion on mortgages that state officials said were abusive.
A 2010 accord to forgive as much as $3 billion in principal for severely delinquent Countrywide borrowers in Massachusetts who owed more on their mortgages than their homes were worth.
An agreement last year to pay $600 million to former Countrywide shareholders to settle a securities-fraud lawsuit.
An agreement in April to pay $1.1billion to mortgage insurer Assured Guaranty Ltd. related to losses on Countrywide loans.
More than $6 billion in payments to government-controlled loan buyers Fannie Mae and Freddie Macto settle demands for buybacks of flawed home loans.
Bank of America can take some consolation, however small, in the fact that it paid for Countrywide entirely with BofA stock.
When it agreed to the deal in January 2008, those shares were valued by the stock market at $4 billion. When the transaction closed, their value had fallen to $2.5 billion as the global financial crisis had intensified. They are now worth about $1.2 billion.

Bank of America nears settlement of mortgage lawsuit


Bank of America is completing an agreement to pay $8.5 billion to settle a lawsuit by investors who purchased mortgage securities that soured when the housing bubble burst, representing what is likely to be the single biggest settlement tied to the subprime mortgage boom and the subsequent financial crisis of 2008.
The settlement would wipe out the company's earnings in the first half of this year, while encouraging powerful private investors to extract payouts from other banks that bundled troubled home loans and sold them as sound investments.
The proposed settlement is with a group of large investors including Pimco and BlackRock, as well as the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. Together they hold $56 billion in mortgage-backed securities from Bank of America, based in Charlotte, N.C.
The securities affected by the deal come from Countrywide Financial, the subprime mortgage lender whose practices have come to symbolize the excesses of the housing boom. Bank of America bought Countrywide in 2008.
The settlement goes beyond the securities owned by these investors, however. It covers nearly all of Countrywide's first-lien mortgages, which total $424 billion worth of original, unpaid principal balances. As a result, investors beyond those that are concluding the settlement stand to benefit.
Once it is approved by the company's board, the settlement will require court approval. Bank of America is expected to take a $5 billion after-tax charge in the second quarter to cover the payout.
The $8.5 billion settlement represents just a portion of the bank's total exposure to faulty mortgage bonds, much of which comes from the Countrywide loans.
Last fall, analysts warned that the toll of legal action from the investors and other private holders could total tens of billions of dollars, but the proposed deal would lift some of that uncertainty.
While the board has yet to approve the settlement, both sides are aiming to have it done by Thursday, according to a person close to the negotiations. Bank of America would deliver the money to the trustee for the securities, Bank of New York, which would distribute it to the institutional investors.
Bank of America does not anticipate having to raise capital or sell stock to raise the money for the settlement.
Still, other risks loom from the fallout of the subprime mortgage crisis — for Bank of America and its giant peers. All 50 state attorneys general are in the final stages of settling an investigation into abuses by the biggest mortgage servicers and are pressing the banks to pay up to $30 billion in fines and penalties.
What's more, insurance companies that backed many of the soured mortgage-backed securities are also pressing for reimbursement, arguing the original mortgages were underwritten with false information and did not conform to normal standards.
Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup and Wells Fargo have the greatest exposure to the legal claims over the faulty mortgage bonds. Together, they are likely to absorb roughly 40 percent of the industry's mortgage-related losses.
The huge settlement represents a sharp turnabout from the combative position that Bank of America's CEO, Brian Moynihan, initially adopted last fall when the legal effort by the investors began.
Not long after that, however, the bank started negotiations with the investor group, led by a Houston lawyer, Kathy Patrick. And in January, it reached a settlement with Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the government-controlled housing giants, to buy back $2.5 billion in troubled mortgages.