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The Fed board approved the deal in a 32-page order issued Thursday. Countrywide had said previously that it will hold a special meeting of shareholders on June 25 to approve the proposed sale.               Â
In its order, the Fed board said that after the proposed deal BoA would remain the largest depository institution in the country, controlling approximately $773.4 billion in deposits, which represent 10.9 percent of total insured bank deposits in the country.      Â
When the deal was first announced in January, BoA said it would pay about $4 billion in an all-stock deal for Countrywide, exchanging 0.1822 shares of BoA for each share of Countrywide outstanding.Â
In recent months, some analysts have speculated that the deal may be completed at a lower price because of further deterioration in the mortgage market and a continued rise in mortgage delinquencies and defaults.
Experts have said that the deterioration of the mortgage market and Countrywide's loan portfolio could lead to costly write downs and create a drag on BoA’s earnings.
But on Monday, Ken Lewis, the chief executive of BoA, told analysts in a conference call that he believed buying Countrywide was still a good deal even though the housing market had continued to falter since the deal was announced.  Â
Lewis said he believed that housing conditions would improve by early next year. He said that Countrywide and its professional sales force would give the bank a boost as it pushes to increase market share in the mortgage sector.
In a statement commenting on the Fed decision, BoA said that it expected the sale to close in the July-September quarter.
"This transaction represents a rare opportunity for Bank of America to significantly gain market share in the mortgage business, allowing it to expand in a cornerstone financial product," Lewis said in a statement.