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May 28, 2007

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State Bank of Travancore (SBT) has launched a new loan scheme for pensioners from military and related services. The scheme titled `Jai Jawan pension loan', will cover pensioners who retired at an early age from armed forces, paramilitary forces, coast guards, Rashtriya Rifles, CRPF, BSF, ITBP, etc. The scheme provides for loan of up to Rs 2 lakh or 48 times the monthly pension, whichever is lower Utkal university, Bhubaneshwar, is tying up with the country's largest private sector bank ICICI to impart training to students in banking, insurance and finance related aspects. The two entities will shortly sign a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to introduce a one-year diploma course on banking, insurance and finance. The course would be sponsored by ICICI. With ICICI planning to expand its operations in Bhubaneswar to a large extent the need for expert hands might have prompted the bank to sponsor such a course. Initially the course would admit around 25-30 students. Students passing out from the course would be recruited by the ICICI bank. The financial market will soon see the country’s biggest junk loan deal. State-owned Indian Bank has decided to sell all its bad loans at one shot. The Chennai-headquaterted bank has put on block its entire distress loan portfolio amounting to Rs 1,500 crore. Indian Bank chairman and managing director KC Chakrabarty said, “We have received bids on the auction of Rs 1,500-crore bad loans. The bank will shut the asset recovery cell which would free around 250 people. These officials would then be deployed for marketing other products.” Sources said that the bank had received five bids, including three from asset reconstruction companies. These are ICICI-promoted Arcil, UTI-promoted Asrec and the privately-held Pegasus Assets Reconstruction. Till now, the single-biggest bad loan transaction was from ICICI, when the country’s second-largest bank sold over Rs 1,400 crore to British bank Standard Chartered. Bidders said Indian Bank has indicated that it would prefer not to receive the entire income upfront from the bad loans selloff. Instead, the bank would like to receive the income over a couple of years In a rising interest scenario, these banks which engaged in a neck-to-neck battle for gaining more deposits finally landed up managing close to 29% of the software services giant’s monies tied up as bank deposits. Infosys redeemed its holding of Rs 684 crore in liquid funds in FY07, while deposit accounts rose to Rs 4,827 crore in the same year as against Rs 2,735 crore in FY06 - showing a 76.48% year-on-year rise. Infosys expanded the relationship with banks like Bank of India (Rs 504 crore), Bank of Baroda (Rs 503 crore), Punjab National Bank (Rs 179 crore), SBI (Rs 151 crore) and Bank of Maharashtra (Rs 51 crore), which gained as a result. In FY06, Infosys had placed funds with two PSU banks - Corporation and Canara Bank. While in the case of Corporation Bank, the quantum of deposits rose to Rs 302 crore in FY07 from Rs 126 crore in FY06, there was a marginal dip in the case of Canara Bank to Rs 503 crore in FY07 against Rs 504 crore in FY06.

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