The ministry had earlier cited Qualcomm missing the deadline
for applying for the Internet service providers’ licence as one
of the reasons for rejecting the application. The ministry had
also said Qualcomm applied for four separate licences, whereas
it should have applied for just one.Chandrashekhar told Reuters the licence would be given to a
Qualcomm unit that would be the nominee for all the four zones
the company won spectrum for.
* Euro, stocks ease from highs after Berlin douses hopes* Sources say three-pronged recapitalisation plan eyed* France says even solid banks will be recapitalisedBy Matthias InverardiDUESSELDORF, Germany, Oct 17 (Reuters)- - Germany warned on
Monday that a summit of EU leaders next Sunday would not produce
a miracle cure for the euro zone’s sovereign debt crisis,
pushing down markets that have risen in the past week on
expectations of a breakthrough.German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble told a conference
in Duesseldorf that European governments would adopt a
five-point plan at the Brussels meeting to address the turmoil
that has clouded the outlook for the global economy.This is expected to include a plan to recapitalise banks and
reduce Greece’s debt mountain by asking the country’s private
creditors to accept steeper writedowns on their holdings than
the 21-percent losses agreed last July.But Schaeuble cautioned that the meeting would not yield a
“definitive solution” for the crisis that started in Greece two
years ago and has since spread across the 17-nation bloc,
leading some experts to predict a breakup.His comment weighed on the euro , which fell one
percent against the dollar after hitting a one-month high
earlier in the day. European stocks also fell .Ahead of a 48-hour general strike in Greece that is expected
to bring the country to a standstill just as parliament votes on
a new set of controversial austerity measures, Greek Prime
Minister George Papandreou appealed for unity.”This is maybe the most crucial week for Greece and Europe,”
he said during a meeting with the Greek president.Hours later, however, a deputy from Papandreou’s party quit
his seat in protest against what he called “unjust” steps. The
lawmaker will be replaced by another socialist, so Papandreou’s
4-seat majority in the 300-strong assembly remains unchanged.Greece’s overall debt is forecast to climb to 357 billion
euros this year, or 162 percent of annual economic output — a
level economists agree is unsustainable.To reduce this mountain, euro zone leaders are racing to
convince banks to accept “voluntary” writedowns of up to 50
percent on their sovereign holdings. At the same time, they are
trying to agree on a blueprint for recapitalising financial
institutions at risk from the deepening crisis.”Determining how the writedowns will be applied and the
source of funds to recapitalise the banks will require arduous
negotiations between now and the deadlines the EU has set for
itself,” said Dan Morris, global strategist at J.P. Morgan Asset
Management.”We remain optimistic an agreement will be found but returns
have been so strong over the last few weeks there is a risk of
disappointment if it takes longer to work out the details than
investors expect.”LITTLE CHOICECharles Dallara of the Institute of International Finance
(IIF), a lead negotiator for the banks, told Reuters that bigger
writedowns could only happen if policymakers addressed broader
sovereign debt issues in Europe.”If the official community is interested in asking the
private sector to take another look at Greece then it will have
to be only as part of a broader process of addressing the full
range of sovereign debt issues in Europe,” Dallara said.Privately, bankers say addressing Greece’s woes alone will
accomplish little. They are pushing policymakers to come up with
a stronger plan for addressing the woes of the entire euro zone,
fearful that governments might come back with new demands in a
matter of months if their latest steps fail.One solution under discussion is leveraging the bloc’s 440
billion euro rescue fund — the European Financial Stability
Facility (EFSF) — to give it more firepower. But it is unclear
whether Germany and other northern European members of the
currency bloc will agree to this.EU officials say the banks have little choice but to accept
“voluntarily” the losses requested by governments, since the
alternative would be a disorderly default that would trigger
wider financial market chaos and bigger writedowns.European finance ministers will meet on Friday to prepare
the EU summit and sources told Reuters that they would consider
a three-pronged plan for shoring up banks, which have restricted
interbank lending in the crisis, exacerbating market worries.The plan foresees a higher minimum capital requirement for
banks, an additional temporary buffer for those exposed to
troubled euro debt, and a requirement that banks have adequate
“term” funding, even if this means state-backed guarantees.Leading German and French banks have said they will resist
forced recapitalisations, but the French government made clear
on Monday that this is what policymakers wanted.”French banks will be recapitalised even though they are
solid because we are in a climate of extreme nervousness,
extreme tension and lack of confidence so we must strengthen all
the banks,” French government spokeswoman Valerie Pecresse said
on French radio.”We are going towards a collective European solution,” she
added. “We will ask all European banks to have 9 percent capital
ratios by 2013 to be more solid to face risk.”The deadline Pecresse mentioned was much later than EU
officials have suggested. They want banks to be given three to
six months to reach the target.German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s spokesman said the
government was working “intensively” to define how German banks
would participate in a second rescue package for Greece and how
to make best use of the EFSF.But like Schaeuble, he cautioned against high expectations.
Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy promised last week
that they would unveil a new comprehensive plan by the end of
the month, boosting investor hopes.”The chancellor has pointed out that the dreams building up
that this package will mean everything will be solved and over
by Monday cannot be fulfilled,” spokesman Steffen Seibert said.
He would cash the checks, which amounted to about $241,000, often at a local bank, investigators said. Investigators said they interviewed bank staff, who recalled Rosa often preached about God to other customers while waiting in line.Sicardo died in April 2000 at age 75.A report by the New York City’s Department of Investigation said in the years after her death, someone sent fraudulently notarized documents to the Teacher Retirement System, purportedly signed by Sicardo, affirming that she was still alive.In 2010, Rosa received a call from the Teacher Retirement System and told the caller that Sicardo had died three months earlier, in June 2010, in Puerto Rico, the report said.He said he would return the checks for July, August and September, it said.Investigators said they caught Rosa cashing the checks at a bank in the city’s Bronx borough on security camera footage.He was arrested last week in Orlando, Florida, where he now lives, and is slated to face prosecution by the office of the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York.(Corrects reference to defendant as a pastor in headline and first paragraph)
* Will advance Obama’s jobs bill in piecesBy Andy Sullivan and Alister BullWASHINGTON, Oct 12 (Reuters) - Fresh from a defeat at the
hands of Republicans, President Barack Obama and his fellow
Democrats said on Wednesday they will move their jobs bill in
pieces to convince voters that they are a better choice to spur
the sluggish economy.One day after Republicans blocked the $447 billion
job-creation package in the Senate, Obama said he was not
giving up.”We will keep organizing and we will keep voting until this
Congress finally meets its responsibilities,” Obama told a
Hispanic forum in Washington.Senate Democratic leaders said they will hold votes on
individual components of the package over the coming months, to
convince voters that Republicans are preventing the government
from taking action to lower the 9.1 percent unemployment rate.”It’s a win-win for us. If they support us, we get
something done for the economy,” Democratic Senator Charles
Schumer said at a breakfast roundtable. “The idea that
Republicans seem to want to block everything and have no ideas,
that Tea Party economics is dominating what they do, I think
will bode very well for us in 2012.”Obama’s re-election chances next year may hinge on whether
he can convince voters he is helping the U.S. economy dig out
from the worst recession since the 1930s. Democrats also face
tough odds as they try to hold on to their Senate majority and
win back the House of Representatives from Republicans.Democrats have spent much of the year playing defense as
Republicans aligned with the conservative Tea Party movement
have won record spending cuts in a series of high-stakes budget
battles.With the economic recovery stalling out, Democrats have
sought to shift the focus from austerity back to stimulus.
Obama has spent the past month barnstorming around the country,
pressuring Republicans to back his package of tax cuts and new
spending in order to bring down the jobless rate.Its defeat on Tuesday has given Democrats new ammunition.”Republican obstructionism has once again cost this nation millions
of jobs,” Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid said on the Senate floor.
“It seems as if Republicans don’t really want to put Americans back to
work.Republicans say Obama is more interested in demonizing them
than working together on free-trade agreements and other
economic measures that can actually pass Congress.”If President Obama were willing to work with us on more
bipartisan legislation like this, nobody would even be talking
about a dysfunctional Congress. There wouldn’t be any reason
to,” Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell said.”But, as we all know, that doesn’t fit in with the
President’s reelection strategy. The White House has made it
clear that the President is praying for gridlock,” he said.Republicans have coalesced around a job-creation agenda of
their own centered on rolling back pollution rules and other
regulations on business.DETAILS UNCLEAR SO FARSenate Democrats said they have not determined yet which
pieces of Obama’s defeated bill they will bring up for a vote
starting next month, or whether the pieces will be paired with
tax increases on the wealthy or other tax hikes to offset the
cost. They may offer ideas of their own as well.Republicans have backed some components of the package,
such as a payroll tax cut, in the past, but have not said
whether they will do so again. Payroll taxes, paid by every
U.S. worker, are set to rise at the end of this year if
Congress does not act, which could create additional headwinds
for the struggling economy.Republicans are certain to reject other components, such as
$120 billion in new spending to rebuild schools and highways
and avoid layoffs of teachers and other public employees.Schumer said he might pair one element Republicans don’t
like — an infrastructure bank to fund construction projects —
with a repartition measure that would allow multinational firms
to bring earnings back to the United States tax-free, which is
backed by Republican allies in the business community.A group of business leaders led by GE chief
executive Jeffrey Immelt delivered a report to Obama this week
proposing steps to foster U.S. innovation and make the country
more attractive to foreign investment. It was not clear if any
of the ideas would be advanced by Democrats in the near term.