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LIC Housing sells 18.3% stake in LIC MF to Nomura
LIC Housing Finance today sold 18.3 per cent of stake in LIC Mutual Fund to Japanese Financial services company, Nomura, expecting to garner Rs 138-crore.

High-level committee to probe IOC fire
A high-level committee of the Petroleum Ministry will probe the causes behind the fire at the IOC fuel facility on the outskirts of the city and suggest future safety measures at oil and gas depots.

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Sensex down 50pts in early trades
The Sensex opened marginally (24 points) lower at 17,204 amid weak cues from the global markets. The index soon dropped to a low of 17,111, and is now down 47 points at 17,181.
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No room for lending rate cut now, says Kamath

Banks didn’t have room to further cut lending rates as of now and, in fact, they might look at raising them once credit offtake picked up, ICICI Bank’s Chairman KV Kamath said today. - ADR, GDR shouldn"t decide a bank"s nationality: Kochhar - Don"t count ADR, GDR to decide bank"s nationality: ICICI - FinMin has done good job in Govt borrowing: Kochhar - Prefer buying a domestic bank over global: ICICI - SBI, ICICI home loan rates even out eventually: Kochhar - Will prefer acquiring a domestic bank over global: ICICI “There is no scope (for more rate cuts) left any more,” Kamath told reporters on the sidelines of an event here. “Credit offtake is expected to pick up (in October-March), and then there will be a case for rates to harden,” he said in reply to a question. According to him, the home loan segment has shown a recovery. “I will say home loans are better, and are back to where they were last year,” he said. On Tuesday, OP Bhatt, head of the country’s largest lender State Bank of India, had said the bank’s new 8 per cent home loan scheme had evoked an “excellent” response. Typically, banks witness lacklustre credit offtake at the beginning of a financial year, which picks up around the festive season post-September. However, there is concern that a weak monsoon this year may dent rural income and banks’ credit offtake may fall short of the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI’s) estimate of about 20 per cent growth for 2009-10. Kamath said it was difficult to say whether RBI would reverse its easy monetary policy stance this financial year. “There are lot of indicators that need to be seen such as inflation. It’s difficult, therefore, to say whether RBI will change its stance,” he said. Since October, RBI has cut its benchmark repo rate by 425 basis points (bps), reverse repo by 275 bps and cash reserve ratio by 400 bps in a bid to infuse liquidity and fuel demand.


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