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'Goldman trades should not get US aid'
Goldman Sachs Group Inc, which took $10 billion in US bailout funds last year, shouldn’t get taxpayer support if the firm focuses on trading over banking, according to former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker.

'Barclays investment bankers to get 150% hike'
Financial services firm Barclays is set to award its 22,000 investment bankers pay rise of up to 150 per cent in an effort to beat government moves to clamp down on multi-million-pound bonuses, says a media report.

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Keeping Bush at arm's length
CPI(M) Politburo member Sitaram Yechuri was invited to participate in the Hindustan Times Leadership Summit. While giving him the invite, the organisers told him about the other participants, including former US president George Bush. When Yechury was asked the time that would be convenient to him, he made just one request — ensure the maximum possible time gap between his and Bush’s sessions. Bush addressed the summit on Saturday morning while Yechury, along with the Bharatiya Janata Party’s Sushma Swaraj and Shiromani Akali Dal’s Sukhbir Singh Badal, took the stage after a few hours.
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No frowns at Facebook

Facebook: Stock markets have wobbled of late, but has Facebook’s value really plunged by 35 per cent in just two months? For those unacquainted with Silicon Valley’s quirky financing that would be one conclusion to draw from the social networking website’s latest stock sale. - Rain divests stake in Petroleum Coke - PE, VC investments in healthcare dip - "We look at ways to change the world" - Rabo Equity to raise $25 mn more for agri fund by Dec - Now, VCs gear up to provide seed fund to Indian start-ups - Edible oil inventory surges 50% on import glut In May, the company said it sold a 1.96 per cent slice of itself to Russian internet investment group Digital Sky Technologies for $200 million. That implied a value to the entire enterprise of around $10 billion. Of course, Facebook didn’t go into the details of what DST actually got for its money, saying only that it bought preferred shares. Facebook’s still keeping mum on the details. But the company’s latest announcement gives some color on the subject. DST is now offering to buy $100 million of Facebook common shares from employees. The price it’s paying - $14.77 a share - gives an overall valuation of $6.5 billion to the company. THE implication, then, is that whatever extra rights are attached to the preference shares they’re worth paying a premium of more than 50 per cent to obtain. That may befuddle ordinary investors, but in Silicon Valley it’s sort of standard operating procedure. By giving certain privileges to different classes of shareholders – such as the right to cash out first in an IPO, or a seat on the board – tech financiers can offer differing valuations of the same enterprise. So in just the past two years, that’s meant Facebook has sold stock in sales that valued the company at $15 billion (in a deal with Microsoft), $10 billion in May and now $6.5 billion. But while that descending order of values may sound worrisome, don’t cry for Facebook. It’s still more than 13 times the company’s sales, on which it has yet to make a profit.


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