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Mumbai:
Merchant
bankers Goldman Sachs, Deutsche Bank AG, Merrill Lynch
& Co are among 13 firms that will share more than
$200 million in fees as Mittal Steel closed his five-month
battle to acquire Arcelor SA.
Mittal,
whose €26.9-billion ($33.7 billion) revised bid was
accepted by Arcelor''s board, is paying five banks about
$100 million while Arcelor will give an equal amount to
eight banks. JPMorgan Chase & Co and Lazard will get
fees from the Belgian government.
Mittal''s
advisers included teams from Citigroup, HSBC, Credit Suisse
Group and Societe Generale SA''s Laurent Meyer. Arcelor''s
advisors were led by Deutsche Bank, Morgan Stanley, Merrill,
BNP Paribas SA and UBS AG.
Banks
are now increasingly gaining from mergers and acquisitions
around the world, which touched a record 1.7 trillion
amidst continuing profit growth for companies.
Auto
stocks stumble: In Mumbai, stocks of automobile companies
dived amidst the euphoria at the success of Mittal Steel''s
battle for Arcelor, on expectations of an imminent surge
in steel prices.
Share
prices of the domestic automakers and auto component firms
plunged as much as 9 per cent on Tuesday on the Bombay
Stock Exchange in a panic reaction to an expected consolidation
and price increase across the global steel market.
Car
majors Maruti Udyog and Tata Motors shed more than five
per cent, while auto component firms Rico Auto and Amtek
Auto lost between 3.5 per cent and 6 per cent. As many
as 22 stocks on the BSE auto index closed in the red.
Hindustan Motors moved down 8.6 per cent to Rs 30.20.
Among others, Hero Honda dropped 4.3 per cent to Rs 733
and Bajaj Auto moved down 4.1 per cent to Rs 2,595.30.
The
combined entity after the merger between Mittal Steel
and Arcelor, the world''s two largest steel makers, collectively
holds more
than 10 per cent of the global steel market and the deal
is expected to pave the way for further consolidation
in the industry, market observers said.
The
automobile industry will be hit hard if cartelisation
in steel industry causes further rise in prices, analysts
say.
Steel
stocks also ended down as market had already factored
in consolidation in the steel industry.
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