PSU SLAUGHTER Being Legalised without any RESISTANCE Whatsoever! Betrayal at EVERY Level! Hunting For LIFE and Killing Life as well as LIVELIHOOD!
The ministry is eyeing a cap of 10% on government equity that can be sold at a time and 15% on fresh equity that can be issued, a senior finance ministry official told ET. "By putting a cap on the stake that can be offloaded in one go, we are expecting to generate a better price discovery mechanism," said the official, who requested anonymity.
The move to discourage big-bang public floats is expected to ensure that there is enough liquidity and appetite in the market for a flurry of issues expected if the government clears a proposal for minimum 25% public holding in all listed companies.
The move is in line with the government's measured approach towards reforms, said DK Joshi, director and principal economist at credit rating agency Crisil. "It was expected that disinvestment in state-owned companies would be gradual... This fits into our overall scheme of things."
As reported by ET last week, the finance ministry is planning to make it mandatory for all listed firms to park at least a quarter of their equity with the public, including investment and financial firms.
The move will lead to a deluge of issues as there are 150 big firms, including 25 state-run enterprises, where promoters own more than 75% stake.
The cap on one-time stake sale, if it gets the government's approval, will ensure that public sector companies up for divestment will resort to parcels of small issues over a period. The gradual approach would also reduce any downside risk, said some market experts.
India's stalled disinvestment programme got a fresh lease of life under the new UPA government, which is not dependent on Left parties.
In the past five years, the government raised just Rs 8,500 crore from disinvestment as against Rs 28,000 crore raised by the BJP-led NDA government in the preceding five-year period.
This year's Economic Survey, in contrast, set a selloff target of Rs 25,000 crore for the current fiscal although finance minister Pranab Mukherjee proposed only a modest Rs 1,120-crore target in the Union Budget.
But the government is taking aggressive steps to revive the process and finance secretary Ashok Chawla recently said the government will soon come out with a disinvestment road map.
NHPC, the country's largest hydropower generator, closed the first public issue by a PSU in 17 months last week. The government divested 5% of its equity while the company issued a fresh capital of 10%. The $1.25-billion issue was oversubscribed 23 times.
"I am complimenting the way in which one is managing finances, given the constraint that we are in", said Kochhar, ICICI Bank CEO and Managing Director, when asked if Mukherjee, a seasoned politician who holds masters in history and political science, deserves praise for his financial wizardry.
When the government announced plans to borrow Rs 4.5 lakh crore from the market this fiscal, up from Rs 3.1 lakh crore last fiscal, the industry started worrying that its credit needs would not be met.
"When the number (quantum of government borrowing) came out, all of us were worried. We needed more clarity on how it will be managed. Very soon clarity came," she said, pointing out that as much as 70 per cent of the government borrowing will be completed during the first half, leaving credit for the industry in the second half.
The government had stepped up borrowing in order to provide stimulus to the economy by increasing public spending.
Admitting that the government borrowing was indeed large and could have impact on financial system and interest rates, Kochhar said, "There was a lot of thought behind it. Almost 70 per cent would be completed in the first half.
The World Bank board would meet in the second-half of September in Washington to approve a USD 2 billion loan for the recapitalisation of the PSU banks and another USD 1.2 billion loan for the IIFCL.
The Bank's External Affairs Advisor, Sudip Mazumdar, said "negotiations for the two loans have concluded. USD 2 billion loan for state-run banks and USD 1.2 billion loan for IIFCL would now be taken up for the board's approval."
The loans are expected to be formally signed in New Delhi within a month after the approval from the bank's board.
Both the loans form part of the USD 14 billion loan amount earmarked by the World Bank for India for three years, Mazumdar said.
Also, there are other projects for which negotiations are going on between India and the World Bank.
According to report titled on the 'New India Manager' by Deloitte, the new talent management model in companies would need a shift in outlook where the paradigm of 'scarcity of jobs' would convert into a 'scarcity of talent'.
"Talent deficit is likely to grow significantly in the coming years as universities and educational centres are not providing the adequate skills for the country to produce required number of talented managers," Deloitte Vice President (Strategy & Innovation) Manish Agrawal said.
Unless a fundamental shift occurs in the educational system it will continue to produce degreeholders but they will lack skills to operate in a corporate environment, he added.
Agrawal has authored a study on the evolution of the Indian manager from the pre-liberalisation period till now.
The report stated that globalisation, post 1991, has helped the Indian managers to develop their competencies and a global outlook unleashing a wave of creativity and innovation in the domestic industry.
"However not many managers in the country have required soft skills, like communication abilities for operating in a global environment among others. We need to build such skill sets to enhance our talent pools," Agrawal said.
The Deloitte report stated that it remains to be seen as to what extent the country would be able to enhance the competence level of its young population to make them employable.
And this is also a challenge which the Indian policymakers would have to deal with in the years to come, it added.
Asked if the Indian government were to make favourable changes in the educational system to focus more on innovative skill sets in the coming years, Agrawal said, "if the shift is made it will take five to 10 years to generate a good quantity of employable talent."
Other than the upgrade of skills, the challenges which managers have to face going forward include retention of existing talent in the company, support learning and development of employees.
The Indian managers also need to enhance outlook and mobility as with domestic companies making inroads into foreign shores the need for a global outlook and experience has increased many folds.
Moreover, there is growing talent gap in the developed world as well which will continue to target Indian managers. In the years to come US, Europe and Japan are going to see an ageing population and a reduction in available talent and workforce.
The report revealed that there was already an increasing recognition of the quality of Indian managers and there is very chance of this trend accelerating further.
In the latest edition of its 'world's 100 most powerful women' annual ranking, Forbes has named Kochhar, CEO and MD of the country's top private sector bank, at the 20th position.
Among the resident Indians on the list, Kochhar is ranked next only to Gandhi, chief of Congress party and chairperson of the country's ruling United Progressive Alliance.
In a separate list of four 'women to watch' in the next 12 months also, Forbes has named Kochhar alongside Xerox' CEO Ursula Burns, Iceland Prime Minister Johanna Sigurdardottir and Bank of America's Global Wealth Management President Sallie L Krawcheck.
"(Kochhar) created a stir after becoming the first woman boss of India's second-largest bank in May. Besides cutting costs, she has been very conservative: solicits deposits but doesn't spend a lot on marketing; issues bank credit cards sparingly. (ICICI Bank's) net profits rose 18 per cent in the last quarter over the previous one," Forbes said about Kochhar in the list of 'Women to Watch'.
On her ranking in the Forbes list, Kochhar has said "with great power comes great responsibility."
"It reminds me that there is a huge responsibility that I am carrying on my shoulders... So, in a way that each one of these things make me feel more grounded to say that there is a huge responsibility on your shoulder and please perform it with all responsibility and proactiveness," Kochhar said.
A long-time executive at ICICI Bank and instrumental in transforming it into a retail and corporate banking powerhouse, Kochhar became its CEO and MD on May 1 this year.
"Keep an eye on these leaders: The next 12 months could be exciting--and terrifying," the US magazine said about the four powerful women leaders from the main list.
About Xerox CEO, it said that Burns was the first African-American woman to head a big public company and also the first to succeed another woman.
About Iceland Prime Minister, it said "the onetime stewardess won election in February on a plan to save a nation in financial collapse. Has recapitalized banks, introduced tough regulations and cut the deficit.
She's trying to push entry into the EU and adoption of the euro, both unpopular and has warned Icelanders that their "standard of living will contract sharply", it added.
On the Bank of America executive, it said a year after being forced out of Citigroup, Krawcheck was back on Wall Street, leading Merrill's 15,000-strong "thundering herd."
"Will her independence mesh with a fiercely insular brokerage and bank? If she survives, she could end up running BofA," it added.
Indices | Current | Change |
---|---|---|
SENSEX | 15629 | 387.92 |
NIFTY | 4643 | 114.00 |
DOW JONES | 9571 | 64.61 |
FTSE 100 | 4851 | 39.23 |
HANG SENG | 20536 | 336.92 |
NASDAQ | 2035 | 13.69 |
NIKKEI 225 | 10581 | 342.85 |
Foreign Exchange | ||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||
As on Aug 24 2009 |
The new pension system was implemented for government employees who joined service on or after January 1, 2004. On May 1 this year, it was extended to all citizens.
State-owned Air India, the airline that operates domestic and international routes, is losing Rs 200 crore a month and urgently needs financial resuscitation.
Toyota launches diesel SUV Fortuner priced at Rs 18.45 lakhs
New Delhi: Japanese car maker Toyota Kirloskar Motor Pvt Ltd Monday launched its Sports Utility Vehicle (SUV) Fortuner here.
New Delhi: Terming as 'malicious, baseless, mischievous and ill-informed' the advertisment propaganda by Anil Ambani Group on its gas field capex, Reliance Industries has stated that the development cost was the lowest in the world and compares favourably to any other project in India.
Mumbai: Extending its gaining streak for the third session in a row, the Bombay Stock Exchange benchmark Sensex on Monday rose by 289 points in early trade on heavy buying by funds, driven by a firming trend in the global markets.
Geneva: Australia's trade minister Simon Crean has presented a set of "controversial" ideas to Commerce Minister Anand Sharma for the informal trade ministerial summit, to be held in New Delhi on September 3 and 4.
Mumbai: A host of state-run banks have lined up issues of about Rs 3,000 crore over the next week to 10 days to shore up their capital base. Likely to raise funds are Bank of India, Allahabad Bank, Oriental Bank of Commerce and State Bank of Hyderabad.
New Delhi: Having missed the bus to a planned global acquisition in 2008, ICICI Bank on Sunday said it was open for a buyout in India, as domestic takeover in the current environment made better sense than an overseas buy.
New Delhi: State-owned Air India, the airline that operates domestic and international routes, is losing Rs 200 crore a month and urgently needs financial resuscitation. As the new Chairman and Managing Director Arvind Jhadav tries to put together a rescue package, fingers have been pointed at Civil Aviation Minister Praful Patel for several decisions in his last five years as minister that allegedly damaged the struggling airline's competitive position. In a tete-a-tete, Patel discusses the airline's problems and defends his record.
Mumbai: If you have defaulted on a loan taken in your personal capacity, there is a chance that you might hear from the human resources department of the company you work for.
London: World's largest accounting firm, PricewaterhouseCoopers, is being sued for billions of pounds over its role as an auditor to one of the feeder funds that channelled huge amount of money to Bernard Madoff, the man behind the largest fraud in history, media report says.
WORDS AS SIGNS |
If words could make for industrialization, then West Bengal today would be twice industrialized. There was first the rhetoric of Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee and the effort, now failed, to bring industry to the state. At present, there is the rhetoric and the promise of Mamata Banerjee, who, with every good reason, sees herself as the chief-minister-in-waiting. Words, however, are good vehicles for sending out signals. Mr Bhattacharjee's words, three or four years ago, had completely altered perceptions about West Bengal among potential investors. This was replaced by despondency after the departure of Tata Motors from Singur. Despondency is again turning into hope with the words of Ms Banerjee. She is making it very clear that she is not against industry. Behind her words and promises perhaps lies the realization that without industrialization there cannot be any growth or progress in West Bengal. Mr Bhattacharjee, in his time, had also arrived at a similar conclusion. It would not be unreasonable to suggest that this is the reality of West Bengal that has to be accepted by anyone who wants to lead the state out of the morass. The critical question is the mode of making words into action. Or the issue of implementation. It goes without saying that industry needs land. To this extent, industry and agriculture are incompatible. Land for industry cannot but come from what is today agricultural land. Ms Banerjee has taken a political stand against the forcible acquisition of farmland by the State. She will have to devise a policy to facilitate the transfer of land from agriculture to industry. The preponderance of small and fragmented holdings and the proliferation of land rights have hindered the growth of a proper land market in West Bengal. Any industrialist will always need a consolidated unit of land to build a manufacturing plant. He may find it impossible to purchase the land required for such a venture from innumerable small holders and to cope with innumerable holders of usufructuary rights. Ms Banerjee, despite her best intentions and promises, will have to face some tough decisions. More importantly, society in West Bengal has to decide on the premium it places on industrialization and its inevitable price. In the beginning is the word, but it has always to be followed by the deed. Without the latter words come back to haunt those who utter them. |
For a bigger slice from government-owned companies
Many Indian companies have tiny public shareholdings. Pranab Mukherjee plans to force promoters, including the government, to part with more.
The annual government budget was largely derided by corporate India this year. Too much money going out, not enough coming in, they said. What about divestment? Reduce government holding in public sector units. Unlock hidden value. Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee said matters would be taken up in due course.
- There is No Such Thing as Perfect Justice
- India's China Problem
- India Panics Over Swine Flu Toll
- Climate Change And India
- India's IPO blues
The Finance Ministry is now pushing a proposal to enforce a 25% nonpromoter, public shareholding in all listed companies to ensure deeper markets and reduce price manipulation.
Now the corporates have been caught on the back foot. The measure has been talked about for the past decade, but nothing concrete ever came out. Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) chief C.B. Bhave says the change should not be made in a hurry and companies should be given enough time. This is probably because SEBI itself had allowed the companies to come out with 10% offers in 1999.
Why the new threshold after 10 years? Experts say the higher the float, the more transparent the company. But for manipulators, no threshold is too high. Satyam has high public shareholding and we all know what happened there.
Others fear diluting shareholding could adversely affect the share price. They say IT companies, most of whom are very transparent in their disclosures, will be the most impacted. Most are cash-rich and do not need the funds.
The dilution is likely to impact stock prices penalizing existing shareholders and making many of the companies even more averse to such a move. Yet, while in the short term, the share price may take a bit of a beating, in the long term, more dilution means more investors and that can never be bad for any company.
A huge plus point in the favour of dilution is that a lower float allows for easier manipulation of the stock price. A Harvard Business School research report by Rob Greenwood found several anomalies related to low float. The key finding was that prices rise when the fl oat is contracted and fall when the float is increased. India Inc.'s public float is less than global benchmarks.
The average public float in companies listed on Indian bourses is now around 15%. Most countries with vibrant financial markets have rules for minimum public holding. This is either in the form of percentage of shares listed on the market as in the UK, Singapore and Hong Kong, or it is in the form of a minimum number of shares -- 1.1m public shares for the New York Stock Exchange. Most markets ensure enforcement action like delisting if the public float is not maintained over a period of years.
Yet, there are fears that this move is the government's billiards carom shot. It is using one ball to ricochet off another to pocket the third one. A substantial impact of the new norm, when it comes into force, will be felt in the sheltered portals of the public sector companies.
Large government owned companies like Indian Oil, NTPC, MMTC and NMDC have a government holding of over 80%. The measure implies huge disinvestment in these companies.
Before the government can roll-out the new policy it will need to address a few issues. The SEBI exemption given in the past complicates the issue. In the 1980s companies were required to fl oat a minimum of 40%, a norm that was diluted in the 1990s.
"The government will have to find a way for 'grand-fathering' these companies, who were given this permission then," says Pranav Sayta, partner and national director, transaction tax services at Ernst and Young. In the bull- run over the last few years in India, all large initial public offers came with a float size of 10 per cent. The feeling now is that the Rs 100 crore threshold is very low and was set at a time when the market was smaller. Even market players agree there is a need to review this and push it higher.
A variety of other issues related to company shareholding will also have to be clarified. Currently, public shareholding includes shares held by individuals and financial institutions, foreign portfolio investors, mutual funds and non-resident Indians, employees and others. The finance ministry is likely to take a call on amending this definition.
The ministry's draft proposal said that the threshold public holding should be calculated without taking into account the stakes of non-promoters such as foreign portfolio investors, institutional investors and mutual funds. The inclusion of shares under employee stock option plans and those held by high net worth individuals, will also be reviewed. Whether American Depositary Receipts and Global Depositary Receipts should be included in the definition of public-holding also remains a contentious issue, between companies and the government.
So if the move makes the market more liquid and also gets the government some money for its own coffers it can't be too bad. And it can be a nice little stimulus package for financial market intermediaries like investment bankers and brokerages. Great shot Pranab Da!
Source: Forbes.com
HOBBY OR BUSINESS? - Private airlines in India run on flamboyance and impulse | |
- S.L. Rao | |
Airlines in India were started either by keen hobbyists of the air (J.R.D. Tata), drifters from related travel businesses (Naresh Goyal), or industrialists who wanted an airline to add to their diversification (Birla), and rarely on clear commercial considerations. In 1953, there were eight private airlines founded by J.R.D. Tata (hobby pilot), G.D. Birla (ambitious industrialist), Biju Patnaik (pilot, politician and adventurer), and some others. Nationalization, in 1953, was for financing the development of airlines in India. Particularly from 1991, state-owned airlines have been in constant crisis. Pawan Hans, the helicopter service, has almost closed down. Indian Airlines and Air India made modest profits even when others in the world were making excellent profits and periodically approached government for support. In 2008, they were merged without a plan for integration, cost reductions and efficiency improvement. Air India today includes Indian Airlines. But staff and crew are separate; neither maintenance nor routes are integrated. The last nonbureaucrat chairman-cum-managing-director of Air India was Y. Deveshwar, the successful chief of ITC, under whom Air India did pretty well commercially and in customer service. Since then, the chairmen of Air India have been joint-secretary-level IAS officers. Indian Airlines was worse off. Serving bureaucrats and defence officers have headed it almost all its life. Their concern is not with customer service and consistent commercial success, but pleasing the political bosses. Ageing and poorly maintained aircraft put off many customers who prefer the new craft of the private airlines. Decision-makers are said to have been handsomely compensated for procrastinating aircraft purchases by the Indian Airlines Corporation. The government says that no senior manager from the private sector is interested in heading state-owned airlines because of the meagre remuneration. The real reasons are constant pressure from ministers and bureaucrats for favours, and little authority to take any major decisions. Pilots, cabin crew, ground staff and others do not respond to training or discipline, backed by powerful unions. Purchases of aeroplanes are by government decision, not the airlines', and are delayed for years, giving first-mover advantage to private airlines. For J.R.D. Tata or Y. Deveshwar, in Air India, the customer was the focus of the airline. Tata is a mythological figure in Air India. Governments were respectful and left him free to run the airline. Stories abound of his personally serving passengers, checking aeroplane toilets for cleanliness and odour, disciplining cabin crew for being overweight. His example was electric on all employees. However, as a small airline from exotic India, with educated, upper-class women as cabin crew, it could attract a small loyal clientele. Air India's Maharajah was promoted as a symbol of luxury and service. Bobby Kooka's inspired and hilarious, but pointed, advertising and booklets for passengers enriched the image. Air India has declined since then. Soon it had to share its monopoly over government business with other carriers and then the skies were opened to foreign airlines. Air India lost business. Years of delay in replacing aircraft kept passengers in dilapidated craft while competitors offered the latest versions. Maintenance was given the go-by especially with passenger cabins. Overhead lights that did not work, toilets without water, smelly and unclean, and poor food and drinks were common complaints. Unlike in many private airlines, cabin crew never entered toilets after a passenger had used it, to spray it with air freshener and, perish the thought, clean it. The enchanting Air India hostesses gave way to sloppily dressed, mostly unkempt, overweight, ageing stewards and hostesses, with little training in customer service. On-time performance has been poor and baggage-handling worse. Indian Airlines had every ill of Air India, and more. There was no attention to detail, no manual for different staff to follow. Thus the IAC's dinner service in business class starts with lukewarm soup with bread (but served only after all have had the soup). The food is either cold, or overheated and dry. There is little training in spoken English. Announcements are inaudible or unclear. If there is video entertainment, it rarely works. The cabin music is always played at maximum volume. Newspapers are rarely fresh and with pages in sequence. Choice of magazines is limited. Cabin crew take their own time in responding to calls. Baggage is late at all airports. Priority labels serve no purpose. Disabled passengers asking for wheelchairs do not have the message sent to onward airports. Jackets are almost always hung in the open. Passenger buses at airports are old and rickety, with uncomfortably high steps and poor seating. Spasmodic improvement in performance is never sustained. Employees of the overstaffed state-owned airlines do not care if passengers like the airline or return to fly on it. Their jobs are secure and for them, the customer does not count and there is no desire to offer a friendly image of the airline. In this messy situation, the entry of private airlines with brand new planes and well-trained cabin and ground crew made a difference. At the time they entered, overseas funds were cheap and easily available. Borrowing and lease charges seemed low. Since then, the declining rupee has made repayment and interest very expensive. With many new aircraft on order, others on lease, foreign pilots at high salaries, higher wages to attract experienced airlines staff, commercial viability demanded high economic and passenger growth. India's economy and passenger traffic had to keep growing annually at 9 per cent and over 20 per cent. Delusions of grandeur made both Jet and Kingfisher buy with borrowed money the weak Sahara and Deccan, both unprofitable airlines with high debts. This additional capacity came just before the economy began to tank, and growth of passenger traffic dropped. Low-cost airlines destroyed airline market viability by excessively low pricing. The major cost factors of truly low-cost airlines (Ryanair, Asian Air) are reasonable airport charges, alternative cheap airports (for example, Newark instead of JFK in New York), alternative cheaper terminals, cheap aviation fuel and fast turnaround times of aircraft so that each craft spends more productive time in the air. None of these exists in India. Our airport charges are higher than most airports of similar size. There are no alternative neighbouring airports, nor cheaper terminals. Aviation fuel is very expensive because of high state taxes. Airport turnaround time is slow and each aircraft is less in the air than possible. To launch airlines or buy them with borrowed money (like Deccan, Sahara, Jet and Kingfisher) is highly risky. To aim for more passengers with tariffs comparable with railway fares is untenable, even stupid, and certainly un-commercial. Full-fare airlines were forced to reduce tariffs in response. Airline economics became untenable for Jet, Kingfisher and Air India. The subsequent decline in traffic made things worse. Airlines the world over are a cyclical business. Profitability requires tight management, discipline, efficiency, reasonably priced airport and fuel charges, alternative airports and terminals, and well-run airports. Yet, in many years, losses are inevitable. Airlines are a poor business proposition, and more so in India. Air India and Indian Airlines are poor investment propositions even if they integrate, combine routes, cut staff dramatically, improve efficiencies, invest in regular training, inculcate customer orientation and impose discipline. The bureaucrats and (even) businessmen-politicians, who run it directly and in the ministry, do not demonstrate a business culture. Privatization with a blank cheque to the buyer to rationalize on every count might help survival. For the airlines industry in India to be viable, airports must be made to offer cheaper terminals and greater efficiency in their operations, while the government must cut aviation fuel prices. The industry must be run as a business, with tough managers, on commercial lines, without too much flamboyance and impulsiveness. | |
|
Hunting for life | ||
Nasa's Kepler telescope promises to help scientists know soon if any earth-like planets exist, reports P. Hari | ||
The Kepler telescope opened its eyes in May 2009. It will not close them for three-and-a-half years, or more if we are lucky. The space telescope will look for earth-like planets in far-away stars, even thousand or more light years away. Scientists got the first set of pictures from the telescope 10 days after its launch. They showed a hot Jupiter-like planet, which is already known to us, literally hugging its star while in orbit. Scientists also saw evidence of the planet's atmosphere. In the first three months of its existence, the precision of the Kepler telescope's data literally awed its creators. Scientists had never before seen light and shade in such exquisite detail. Planets around other stars are impossible to see with even the most powerful telescopes, and scientists rely on indirect methods to deduce their existence. The Kepler telescope uses one such method, and is working so well that astronomers expect announcements about other earth-like worlds to come in a flurry after a few months. "We will be ready to make the first announcement by January 2010," says David Koch, deputy principal investigator of Nasa's Ames Research Center in California. The data from Kepler have sent a ripple of excitement through the astronomical community, especially planet hunters. In the last few years, they have been discovering planets around stars with extraordinary regularity. Planet hunters have so far discovered 365 planets around stars outside the solar system. Most of them are large gaseous worlds and are of only academic interest. However, astronomers believe that this is only because large planets are relatively easy to spot. They think that rocky planets like the earth are more numerous in our galaxy because they are easier to form. They are smaller and thus more difficult to spot. But not any more. In the next four years of its existence, the Kepler telescope will look for earths around stars in the Milky Way. The telescope is designed precisely to spot earth-like planets around sun-like stars. This is because they are the best places to look for life outside the solar system. They are hard to spot but the Kepler telescope is ingeniously built. It looks for slight variations in the brightness of stars when planets come in between the earth and the star. If a planet does so, the star dims slightly. For earth-like planets this dimming is much less than one per cent of the star's brightness, but the Kepler telescope can spot that, even in case of stars that are more than 1,000 light years away. By analysing the light, scientists can also find out whether the planet has an atmosphere. The Kepler telescope needs three transits of the planet in front of its star before scientists can be sure whether the dimming is caused by a planet. This means that planets with smaller orbits will be discovered first. A planet with an orbital period of one month will be discovered in three months. A planet with an orbital period of three months will be discovered in nine months. Those with one-year periods like the earth will be discovered in three years. There is no reason to suppose that an earth-like planet will have an earth-like orbital period. Orbital periods of planets have no relationship to their size. "The Kepler telescope will also search a good number of stars with both higher and lower mass than the sun," says Alan Boss, astrophysicist at the Carnegie Institution in Washington and a member of the Kepler Mission Science Working Group. "It should give us a good idea of the frequency of habitable planets around the most common types of stars in our galaxy and in the universe as a whole." Kepler is designed to look at more than 100,000 stars continuously at the same time. Once we discover an earth-like planet that is a candidate for life — in the habitable zone, as the astronomers say — scientists need to look at its atmosphere. This is very hard for planets more than 10 light years away. One method would be to use the Spitzer telescope that uses infrared radiation to look for water, carbon monoxide and methane in the atmosphere. Water is a prerequisite for life, which is why the planet needs to be at a temperature where liquid water can exist. "We can't prove life exists there with such measurements," says Geoff Marcy, professor of astronomy at the University of California in Berkeley. "We will also point radio telescopes at the earth-like planets, hoping to pick up radio transmissions from any intelligent civilisation that may be broadcasting." The discovery of their existence will be an extraordinary day in human history. |
Govt bid to end Reliance-NTPC row | |
R. SURYAMURTHY | |
New Delhi, Aug. 23: The petroleum and power ministries are exploring the possibility of an out-of-court settlement of the tiff between Reliance Industries (RIL) and state-owned power firm NTPC over the price of gas from the former's fields in the Krishna-Godavari basin. One of the option is to annul NTPC's 2004 global tender — the basis of the PSU's claim of gas from RIL at $2.34 per million British thermal unit (mBtu) — with a promise from the Mukesh Ambani company to supply gas at a higher price of $4.2 but without charging an additional marketing fee, which is applicable for other buyers. Since NTPC, in this scenario, would pay more than $2.34, the government would compensate it by some kind of a subsidy to the extent of the profit petroleum. The $4.2-price has been fixed by the government's empowered group of ministers (eGoM). Following the subsidy, NTPC will actually pay less than $4.2. Another option is to give gas not from Reliance's fields but from those whose price is fixed through the government's administered price mechanism, which is $1.98. The system of administered prices started in 1999 and is for state-owned oil and gas producers. For private producers, the prices are determined by production sharing contracts. Senior officials involved in the talks between NTPC and RIL said the discussions were at a preliminary stage, and the objective was to ensure the PSU did not suffer losses in the long run. Any settlement would be based on a legal opinion, so that it would not be challenged in the courts at a later date, they said. However, none of the officials, or industry persons, were ready to be quoted; nor were they willing to confirm the move on record. "If the global tender was annulled, it would kill two birds at one stroke. The price quoted by RIL to supply gas to NTPC is the price being quoted by RNRL (Reliance Natural Resources Limited) in its case with RIL to seek gas. If that price (NTPC) itself does not exist, where is the question of that reference price in the other case," sources close to those involved in the discussion said. NTPC and RIL are fighting a case in Bombay High Court over the price at which the latter will supply 12 million cubic metres per day (mcmd) of gas from its Krishna-Godavari fields to the former's Kawas and Gandhar facilities for 17 years. NTPC claimed the two had agreed to a price of $2.34, the price quoted by the Mukesh Ambani firm in the 2004 tender. RIL wants to sell at $4.20 as NTPC's price has not been approved by the government. Officials of the PSU are sceptical of the settlement moves as it will have to pay more if the gas supply intent "contract" — an outcome of the tender — is cancelled. Sources said NTPC could lose over Rs 20,000-Rs 30,000 crore if a situation emerged where it was forced to pay $4.2 and did not get any subsidy. The government has not received any proposal from RIL to approve the sale of gas to NTPC — so no decision has been taken by it on the matter. But for RNRL, the government has already rejected the (gas) price of $2.34. In NTPC, too, the government may reject it because it is below the eGoM-determined $4.2 price. Recently, NTPC has signed a deal with GAIL (India) Limited to buy 2 mcmd of LNG gas for 10 years at a delivered price of close to $8 per mBtu, much above the price at which it is demanding gas from Reliance. The gas from Qatar will cost $6.4 per mBtu, excluding the cost of transportation, taxes and marketing margins. In addition to NTPC, Reliance is also engaged in a bitter legal battle with RNRL — promoted by Mukesh's younger brother Anil — over Krishna-Godavari gas. RNRL, on the basis of an agreement between the two brothers during the demerger of the Reliance group four years ago, is also demanding gas at $2.34 for its proposed plant at Dadri in Uttar Pradesh, which has been rejected by the government. A case between RIL and Reliance on the gas price will be heard next month before the Supreme Court. On Friday, the government said it was not correct that it would earn Rs 500 crore from the KG basin gas, as claimed by Anil in the media. It said it would get Rs 84,000 crore. |
Reopen hopes rise at Dunlop | ||
SAMBIT SAHA | ||
Calcutta, Aug. 23: The Dunlop management is looking at reopening the Sahagunj factory in Bengal before the Pujas, bringing cheer to its 1,189 workers. Dunlop has agreed to meet the demands of West Bengal State Electricity Distribution Company Ltd (WBSEDCL). The power utility had stopped supply to the unit as the tyre company owed it Rs 13 crore. The company will clear the dues over a period of nine years and the power distributor will resume supply. Though the management had lifted suspension of work at the unit in March this year, production could not take off because of a lack of power. Bengal industry minister Nirupam Sen told The Telegraph that negotiations between the Dunlop management and the state power body was on a "positive" track. "I am hopeful that Dunlop will reopen before the Pujas," Sen said. It will take about two weeks to start production once power starts flowing. The Durga Puja is in the last week of September. Dunlop chairman Pawan Ruia declined to comment on whether the two parties had agreed to bury the hatchet. However, he had hinted that "there could be good news next week" after railway minister Mamata Banerjee chided him for not opening the plant at a meeting with industrialists in Calcutta on Friday. Last year, Ruia had met Banerjee – well before her fortunes rose in the general election – to seek her suggestions on the company's revival. Sources said the industry minister took the initiative to bring the Dunlop management and the WBSEDCL closer. "I am trying to do my job. But the state unit is run by an independent board which will take its own decision. I am hopeful of an out-of-court settlement soon," Sen said. Dunlop took WBSEDCL to court for freezing the connection. The company is expected to withdraw the case if the two arrive at a solution. The tyre company had run up an electricity bill of up to Rs 15 crore even when the plant remained closed under the erstwhile Chhabria management between 2000 and 2005. During that period, power was consumed by local families and small industries around the plant. The power distributor, however, never disconnected the supply, fearing a political backlash. After Ruia took over Dunlop in 2005, the new management initially refused to clear the dues. Later, it agreed to pay over a period, but with a moratorium in the beginning, which the state body turned down. When Dunlop failed to pay the current bill twice, WBSEDCL stopped supply on both the occasions. The company then went to court in January 2008 to seek redressal. The issue of old dues, which then came down to Rs 13 crore after Dunlop paid a portion, was also brought up in the courts. |
Bacardi eyes whisky brands | ||
SOUNAK MITRA | ||
Calcutta, Aug. 23: Bacardi Ltd — the world's largest private liquor maker — is planning to acquire mid-segment brands in India. "We will acquire brands, especially in the whisky segment, that will fit into our premium market strategy," said Mahesh Madhavan, president and chief executive of Bacardi-Martini India Ltd. The company, which has a considerable share in the metros, will expand its distribution network to enter the tier II and tier III cities. Most of Bacardi's global products will also be launched in India in the next 1-2 years. "The company's priority segments will be the existing white spirits and Scotch whisky in the niche and the semi-premium segments that have potential in the long term," he said. Bacardi, which entered the domestic market with its premium Carta Blanca white rum a decade ago, expects to introduce its gold rum series by year-end, Madhavan said. "We have already set up a good distribution network in the country and the next thing that we are keen on is to expand the brand portfolio here," he said. The company has one distillery at Nanjangode near Mysore and a packaging unit in Goa. It plans to set up bottling plants in north India and the Northeast. Bacardi Martini is targeting the small cities as they constitute around 70 per cent of the liquor sales in India. "At present, our sales across these brands are growing 12-13 per cent a year, and we hope this growth will continue as the potential in the domestic market is huge," Madhavan said. "The Indian spirits market will see a key transformation in drinking culture and there will be a major shift to imported premium brands," he said. Around 2.4 million cases are sold annually in the premium segment, accounting for less than 2 per cent of the country's 144 million-cases-a-year liquor market. One case comprises 12 bottles of 750ml each. India's spirits market is estimated to be worth $6 billion, or Rs 28,000 crore, led by Vijay Mallya's United Spirits and United Breweries, followed Delhi-based Radico Khaitan Ltd and the local units of Diageo and Pernod Ricard. |
"In the light of the current economic environment and headcount pressures, BT has taken the decision to cease graduate recruitment activity and are no longer running a graduate recruitment programme," The Guardian newspaper quoted the telecoms giant in a statement.
"At the present time, there is no timeline for re-entry," it said.
The company, Britain's ninth-largest employer, said the number of graduates applying for the 130 jobs on the programme has climbed to 4,800 this year from 3,800 in 2007, the Guardian said.
Britain's fixed-line telecoms provider has cut its dividend and announced 15,000 further job losses in May after its total workforce, both permanent and contract staff, fell by 15,000 to 147,000 in the year to March.
BT was not immediately available for comment.
Lucrative career options plenty in capital market 24 Aug 2009, 1836 hrs IST, ET Bureau CHENNAI: Signs of recovery in India and leading economies augur well for a healthy growth in the Indian capital market, which still remains one of With India having weathered the storm of global meltdown without any stock market scam ( except the Satyam episode) and the strong regulations in place, the Indian capital market has tremendous growth prospects, said Ms Chandra Ramesh, Managing Director, IFIN Financial services, a subsidiary of IFCI, India's leading financial institution. India continues to be an attractive destination for rest of the world and has an edge over others in terms of its young population with a median age of 25 compared to China's 34, USA's 36 and Japan's 43. India's working age population is also to reach 70% of the total population by 2020, she pointed out. Speaking on " Good times ahead for Indian capital market" at an ET in campus event held recently at Dept of Management Studies, Easwari Engineering College in Chennai, she said the field offers plenty of lucrative career opportunities for the management students if they have the right skills and attitude. The career opportunities are available with mutual funds, share broking, commodity and currency broking, FIIs, PE funds, regulators like RBI, SEBI, FMC and stock exchanges like NSE, BSE, commodity, currency and derivative exchanges. The MBAs can pursue their career in areas like research ( fundamental and technical), marketing ( institutional and retail), operations & risk management, dealing, portfolio management services, treasury & arbitrage, back office, distribution of products, legal, secretarial accounts and compliance. Highlighting the growth potential in the Indian capital market, she noted its share in the world turnover is only 1.12% while it is 1.53% in market capitalisation. But, it is expanding fast covering equity, debt market, commodity, power exchange, currency derivatives etc. The achievements of Indian exchanges are also noteworthy. NSE, born in 1992, has become number one exchange with a market share of 93%. It is ranked seven in the world in terms of overall turnover. Similarly, MCX has become the number one commodity exchange with 87% market share and 7th largest commodity futures exchange in the world. Ms Ramesh said the capital market is also attracting the entry of big corporates due to the high margins in trading and broking. Offering career tips to students, she said, " If you want to become an entrepreneur, the essential virtue is to have the risk taking abilities. True winners in the capital market are the participants who possess virtues like knowledge, passion, discipline, hard work & perseverance and conviction". |
|
HOME PAGE
More retail investors taking to online trading Changing age profile, better connectivity help. Retail investors are routing more of their stock market transactions through Internet accounts, data from the National Stock Exchange ... States not for cutting sales tax on jet fuel |
| |
| Drought-proofing your portfolio With weather officials finally conceding that the south-west monsoon has failed in 2009, should investors look to "drought-proof" their portfolios? The stock market certainly seems to think so. On evidence of a faltering monsoon, ... |
Gas row clouds NELP auction: Deora
Mumbai, Aug 22 The public spat between the Ambani brothers on the pricing of gas from the Krishna Godavari basin has impacted investor sentiment in the ongoing eighth New Exploration Licensing Policy (NELP) auction process, said the ...
DGCA to probe Delhi airport terminal damage
New Delhi, Aug. 22 The Director-General of Civil Aviation, Dr N. Zaidi, will conduct an independent enquiry into the damage to Terminal 1-D due to heavy rains and winds that lashed the Capital ...
NTPC to power up wind energy plans
To roll out 1,000 MW greenfield capacities in Karnataka, Gujarat and AP. New Delhi, Aug. 22 Amid increasing challenges on the fuel front, NTPC is fast-tracking plans on diversifying its fuel mix, with wind power a key thrust area in the ...
More stocks hit their lows this March, not last Oct
Sensex touched its lowest point in October 2008. Chennai, Aug. 22 In October 2008 the Sensex may have hit its nadir in the recent bear market, but the majority of Indian stocks did not. They actually bottomed out much ...
Large corporates drive export growth
The vast pool of skilled and unskilled workers sending home their modest earnings that add up to India's foreign exchange kitty might still be the harsh reality of the economy. There is, however, another facet emerging: Of big ...
Index Outlook: Swaying with Shanghai
There was pandemonium in the first half of last week as tremors emanating from Shanghai made stock prices tumble. It was only after the Chinese stocks reversed higher that other equity markets could recoup their losses. For those who enjoy ...
Koutons Retail (India): Buy
Investors with a long-term perspective can buy the stock of Koutons Retail. At a price of Rs 386, the stock trades at 14.7 times its trailing four quarter ...
ENIL (Rs 208.7): Buy
Investors with a medium-term perspective can buy Entertainment Network ...
L&T Finance — NCD: Invest
Investments can be considered in L&T Finance's secured non-convertible debentures (NCD), especially the longer-term options as they offer attractive rates and provide a hedge against the interest rate volatility over a 10-year ...
Zodiac Clothing: Hold
Shareholders can stay invested in the stock of Zodiac Clothing, which is among the premium players in the retail space, catering primarily to luxury formalwear for men. At Rs 295, the stock trades at a multiple of 17 times ...
Tantia Constructions: Buy
Tantia Constructions can be a small part of the portfolio of investors with a penchant for risk. Reasonable revenue and profit growth in FY-09, a tough year especially for smaller construction companies, strong order book and presence ...
Simply click and trade
New to the markets and wondering which type of broking account to open? Well, here are some statistics that may help. From a mere 1 in 10 deals in 2004, stock transactions punched in online have risen to over one in three this ...
HDFC Prudence Fund: Invest
Investors can buy units of equity-oriented balanced fund HDFC Prudence, considering its consistent track record over the years. Over one-, three- and five-year periods, the fund has consistently bettered the returns of its benchmark ...
UTI Unit Linked Insurance Plan: Invest
UTI Unit Linked Insurance Plan appears to be good option for those seeking investment bundled with insurance. The fund has good long-term track record of 28 years and pioneered the ULIP concept in India. UTI ULIP is a debt-oriented balanced ...
There is more to investing in gold than the jewellery
Would you ever say no to shop for gold jewellery? Frankly, I can't. For some, just gazing at the exquisite pieces of ornaments is an excellent stress therapy. But what may be strenuous (especially if you are ...
WHO cautions on swine flu 'explosion'
India still grappling with basics. Mumbai, Aug. 22 Even if you choose to wear a surgical mask to protect against swine flu and you are in Mumbai, chances are you will not find one at the local chemist shop. As the World Health Organisation ...
The UK-based Vendanta Resources' subsidiary Sterlite Industries on Thursday said it has raised its offer for the operating assets of bankrupt US copper mine Asarco by about $500 million. The revised bid will be $2.1 billion in cash. While there ...
TAXATION: States not for cutting sales tax on jet fuel
New Delhi, Aug. 22 State governments are not keen on reducing the sales tax levied on aviation turbine fuel (ATF) from its current levels which vary from 4 per cent to 30 per ...
ECONOMY: Drought-proofing your portfolio
With weather officials finally conceding that the south-west monsoon has failed in 2009, should investors look to "drought-proof" their portfolios? The stock market certainly seems to think so. On evidence of a faltering monsoon, ...
TOURISM: Malaysia launches new tourism initiative
New package offers, easier visa formalities on the cards. Chennai, Aug. 22 Positioning Malaysia as a "premier holiday destination", the Malaysian Government is now targeting the large potential base of first-time travellers from ...
ECONOMY: Downturn halves IT/BPO mergers, acquisitions in Jan-July
New Delhi, Aug. 22 IT and BPO companies appear to have largely stayed away from blockbuster meger and acquisition (M&A) deals so far this ...
TEXTILES: NTC land won't be sold below market price, says Maran
Inaugurates four mills modernised under revival scheme. Coimbatore, Aug. 22 While appreciating the quality and design of the NTC mills products, the Union Textiles Minister, Mr Dayanidhi Maran, urged the National Textile Corporation Chief, Mr K ...
BUSINESS MODELS: Opting for the mobile route
When Sabeer Bhatia offered his hotmail 'free' it was the ultimate example of a business model innovation. In the years that followed, there have been others who have come out with novel ideas in this age of innovation. We look ...
INFRASTRUCTURE: For a safe and secure Chennai
Would allowing hospitals greater built-up area per unit area of land help bring down congestion and risk of infection? How do you increase security in a hotel or hospital, where visitor comfort and speed of entry is a prime consideration? ...
REAL ESTATE & CONSTRUCTION: RE/MAX India in expansion mode
RE/MAX India, the master regional franchisee of RE/MAX International, has expanded its areas of operations in seven more regions. The company has appointed franchisees (regional owners) for seven new regions, including Bangalore, North ...
FOREIGN TRADE: French team on India visit
A high-level delegation from Moselle in France is now on a tour of the country, organising roadshows to draw the attention of the business houses to the Indo-European event dedicated to transportation systems. The event is scheduled between ...
TAXATION: GST may lead to fall in prices
Time-bound implementation, a 'challenge for both States and Centre'. New Delhi, Aug. 22 A Constitutional amendment will be required for the introduction of a dual goods and services tax (GST) system in the country, the Chairman of ...
HEALTH: WHO cautions on swine flu 'explosion'
India still grappling with basics. Mumbai, Aug. 22 Even if you choose to wear a surgical mask to protect against swine flu and you are in Mumbai, chances are you will not find one at the local chemist shop. As the World Health Organisation ...
REAL ESTATE & CONSTRUCTION: NBFCs enter construction equipment finance
New players to capitalise on potential growth. Mumbai, Aug. 22 As construction equipment makers see their order books building up, lending to this segment is also set to rise. While existing financers hope this segment will add to their ...
ENGINEERING: Industrial engines revving up
Industrial engine manufacturers, who primarily supply to the construction equipment sector, are seeing a revival in demand following a trickle down effect from the Centre's infrastructure spending of around Rs 1 lakh ...
TRAVEL & PLACES: Visa-on-arrival rules may be relaxed
New Delhi, Aug. 22 India is looking to liberalise its visa on arrival rules. Nationals from nine countries, including South Africa, Japan, Germany, the Netherlands, Brazil and Finland, could soon get a visa-on-arrival rather than applying for ...
NON-CONVENTIONAL ENERGY: Sharp fall in wind power generation in TN
Chennai, Aug. 22 Going by the generation in the last few days, it appears to be the end of the season for wind power in ...
POWER: In full swing
...
EVENTS: Weekly News Round up
The UK-based Vendanta Resources' subsidiary Sterlite Industries on Thursday said it has raised its offer for the operating assets of bankrupt US copper mine Asarco by about $500 million. The revised bid will be $2.1 billion in cash. While there ...
PETROLEUM: GSPC to bid 'selectively' in NELP-VIII
Kolkata, Aug. 22 The Union Government's recent decisions, which might impact the return on gas production, has set Gujarat State Petroleum Corporation (GSPC) mulling to participate selectively in the ensuing NELP-VIII bidding round for ...
SSI: Match units seek adequate supply of potassium chlorate
Chennai, Aug. 22 The All-India Chamber of Match Industries (AICMI) has urged the Tamil Nadu Government to ensure the supply of potassium chlorate, the primary raw material to manufacture match ...
Industry & Economy
Economy |
Downturn halves IT/BPO mergers, acquisitions in Jan-July (August 23, 2009)
Drought-proofing your portfolio (August 23, 2009)
Annual Plan of Delhi fixed at Rs 10,000 cr (August 22, 2009)
Globalisation, an opportunity for development: Tharoor (August 22, 2009)
Farm labour price index up despite fall in inflation rate (August 21, 2009)
Watch out for inflation in next 2-3 quarters, cautions Deloitte (August 20, 2009)
Assam annual Plan fixed at Rs 6,000 cr (August 20, 2009)
'Implement task force recommendations for coastal development' (August 19, 2009)
RBI plans sweetener for banks to park funds with Govt (August 19, 2009)
Are we inflation insensitive? (August 19, 2009)
Sensex sinks with global markets, drops 626 points (August 18, 2009)
Pricing woes (August 18, 2009)
Honda, Toyota India operations decelerate with economy (August 16, 2009)
Indian manufacturers optimistic of business outlook: KPMG (August 16, 2009)
Rise in contract hiring signals revival (August 15, 2009)
Sustaining the recovery (August 15, 2009)
Indian economy has bottomed out: S&P (August 14, 2009)
IIP growth hits a gusher in June (August 13, 2009)
The price of populism (August 12, 2009)
Weak monsoon to impact growth, inflation, says Crisil (August 12, 2009)
Karnataka to stagger borrowings programme (August 10, 2009)
RBI survey sees agriculture growth slowing down (August 09, 2009)
Economy moving 'slightly', but worries over rains remain (August 08, 2009)
Monsoon clouds direction of economy's growth (August 08, 2009)
No takers for big-ticket Bollywood flicks (August 07, 2009)
Pranab promises prompt action on price rise (August 07, 2009)
'Five major revolutions happening all at once' (August 04, 2009)
Mizoram annual Plan fixed at Rs 1,250 cr (August 04, 2009)
Consumer goods cos on song as urban, rural spends remain strong (August 02, 2009)
Inflation: Spotlight on manufacturing (July 31, 2009)
Salary bill is high, we need to tighten spending: Sikkim CM (July 31, 2009)
Karnataka steps up efforts for resource mobilisation (July 30, 2009)
RBI survey projects higher growth in 2009-10 at 6.5% (July 28, 2009)
Plan panel's new innings (July 28, 2009)
Agri sector will fare better: Plan panel member (July 26, 2009)
Signs of economic recovery visible, says Pranab (July 26, 2009)
Infrastructure sector grows 6.5% in June (July 24, 2009)
Finance Commission focuses on better fiscal devolution (July 21, 2009)
Finding opportunity in adversity (July 20, 2009)
AP to seek more resources from Centre (July 20, 2009)
Indirect tax mop-up takes a hit in Q1 (July 18, 2009)
Centre to borrow more in first half (July 17, 2009)
Surge in States' market borrowings likely in H2 (July 17, 2009)
Recession? You must be joking (July 15, 2009)
Private banks' share of AP Credit Plan outlay at 3% (July 15, 2009)
AP Credit Plan outlay at Rs 55,000 cr (July 14, 2009)
Pranab remains non-commital on rate cut (July 12, 2009)
Economists not convinced with Govt's clarification on OMOs (July 11, 2009)
LPG revenue loss may go up by 50% (July 11, 2009)
Industrial growth hits 8-month high (July 11, 2009)
Sharp rise in direct transfer of Central funds to districts (July 11, 2009)
Borrowing gamble (July 10, 2009)
India's rating under pressure, says S&P (July 09, 2009)
'Thrust on rural economy is good for banks' (July 09, 2009)
Higher State grants to offset fall in tax transfers (July 08, 2009)
Inflation measures: Incomplete, irrelevant? (July 08, 2009)
Kerala Govt sees 'positive signs' on industrial front (July 06, 2009)
Budget Expectations (July 05, 2009)
Kerala among high-ranked States in economic freedom: Study (July 04, 2009)
Survey pitches for big-bang reforms (July 03, 2009)
Govt spending alone can't sustain recovery: Economists (July 02, 2009)
Exports, imports down in May (July 02, 2009)
Core sector grows 2.8% in May (July 01, 2009)
Policy drought (July 01, 2009)
Economy to grow at 7%, if rains don't fail: Tendulkar (June 30, 2009)
AP moots uniform subsidy rate (June 29, 2009)
'Recession is best time to learn' (June 26, 2009)
'Economy on recovery path' (June 26, 2009)
Truly, a unique identity (June 26, 2009)
Nilekani to head Govt's unique identification project (June 26, 2009)
Recovery signs in 2nd half this year: Rangarajan (June 25, 2009)
Kerala revising BPL list (June 24, 2009)
Profits from BRIC to tow GM out of slump (June 24, 2009)
'Economic slowdown throws up challenges as well as opportunities' (June 22, 2009)
The inflation paradox (June 22, 2009)
Fund managers set store by Chinese growth (June 21, 2009)
Economy will grow at 6.5% this fiscal: Rangarajan (June 21, 2009)
Different cycles for different sectors (June 21, 2009)
Reading the recovery (June 21, 2009)
Is global co-ordination more rhetoric than reality? (June 20, 2009)
Households continue to feel the inflation pinch (June 20, 2009)
Balancing growth and deficits (June 19, 2009)
Budget should balance growth with distributive justice (June 19, 2009)
'Outsiders' in a slow economy (June 19, 2009)
Kerala Govt takes steps to check price rise (June 19, 2009)
Negative inflation: No impact seen on market (June 19, 2009)
Enliven the New Pension Scheme (June 17, 2009)
States may end up with fiscal deficit cap of 4% (June 16, 2009)
Why lay-offs don't always make sense (June 15, 2009)
World economy has limited impact here: AIMA survey (June 14, 2009)
April industrial growth at 1.4% hints recovery (June 13, 2009)
States seek relaxation in fiscal deficit ceiling for 2009-10 (June 12, 2009)
UPA's dilemma of reviving growth and accentuating fiscal deficit (June 12, 2009)
All-round growth has raised AP credit rating, says CM (June 11, 2009)
Orchestrating the resurgence (June 11, 2009)
Industrial recovery muted in Coimbatore region (June 11, 2009)
Asia showing signs of economic recovery (June 11, 2009)
World Bank study exposes limitations of Official Poverty Line (June 11, 2009)
Manmohan says 8-9% GDP growth achievable (June 10, 2009)
Slow global recovery, high oil prices may hit India: S&P (June 10, 2009)
Test the quality of govt spending (June 10, 2009)
Aiding growth (June 10, 2009)
'BRIC nations to lead recovery' (June 09, 2009)
Sikkim sets up commission to address key issues (June 09, 2009)
AP sets growth target at 8-9% (June 09, 2009)
Plan panel sees bright outlook for current fiscal (June 09, 2009)
CII expects recovery by second half of current fiscal (June 09, 2009)
'Recession should not narrow focus' (June 08, 2009)
HDFC Bank raises FY10 growth forecast to 6.5% (June 08, 2009)
Sensex rise brings little cheer to MBA graduates (June 08, 2009)
Industry on road to recovery; growth nearing last year's high (June 08, 2009)
Recession forces travel cos to work harder (June 07, 2009)
Expat talent willing to take a cut in pay to stay on (June 07, 2009)
Net direct tax collection increases 16.88% in May (June 06, 2009)
Plan panel reconstituted (June 06, 2009)
UPA's new agenda: Can it deliver? (June 05, 2009)
Karnataka likely to approve Rs 12,000-cr projects next week (June 04, 2009)
Reforms on fast track (June 04, 2009)
Sikkim Planning Commission to ensure continuity in projects (June 03, 2009)
Karnataka to raise off-budget borrowings (June 03, 2009)
Winning was the easy part (June 02, 2009)
Creditable growth (June 02, 2009)
Accounting norm changes help major cos boost earnings (June 01, 2009)
President's address: Focus on rural job, Bharat Nirman schemes (May 31, 2009)
Q4 GDP growth brings cheer (May 30, 2009)
Moody's caution on Indian economy (May 29, 2009)
Inflation rate remains unchanged at 0.61% (May 29, 2009)
Economy and expectations (May 28, 2009)
Taxing growth (May 27, 2009)
Word of caution (May 26, 2009)
Pranab is new Finance Minister (May 24, 2009)
US: Recovery is still some way away (May 24, 2009)
RBI Governor cautions Govt against more fiscal stimulus (May 23, 2009)
Inflation rate rises to 0.61% on costlier food (May 22, 2009)
Corporate tax collections fall short of revised estimate (May 22, 2009)
Social sector boost to be new Govt's immediate priority (May 22, 2009)
Inflation rises to 0.61% on higher food prices (May 22, 2009)
Services in BRIC nations poised for a rebound: KPMG report (May 20, 2009)
Wanted smart government, policies (May 20, 2009)
Plan panel to be reconstituted (May 19, 2009)
Lok Sabha polls: Gujarat economy may be impacted by political uncertainties (May 19, 2009)
'A golden opportunity to accelerate growth' (May 17, 2009)
'Emphasis should be on good governance' (May 17, 2009)
'Economic revival will now be easier' (May 17, 2009)
'Focus on all inclusive growth' (May 17, 2009)
Push for banking, insurance reforms seen (May 17, 2009)
Sovereign ratings hinge on fiscal policy, says Fitch (May 15, 2009)
RBI survey of forecasters predicts 5.7% GDP growth (May 15, 2009)
Economy in process of resetting: Ballmer (May 14, 2009)
Industrial output contracts 2.3% in March; poor show by manufacturing (May 13, 2009)
CPI, WPI-based inflation seen converging (May 12, 2009)
Tata Steel's Corus unit in UK on verge of closure (May 09, 2009)
Challenges before new government (May 09, 2009)
Scripting a revival (May 05, 2009)
Leasing their way out of the gloom (May 03, 2009)
Sad tales aplenty… looking for a ray of hope (May 03, 2009)
Singapore's strategy: Sops for cos to prevent lay-offs (May 03, 2009)
Exports plunge 33% in March (May 02, 2009)
US recovery still key (May 01, 2009)
Devoured beaches (May 01, 2009)
I complicate, therefore I am (April 29, 2009)
Of tax havens & black money (April 27, 2009)
Goldman Sachs CEO sees hopeful signs of US recovery (April 24, 2009)
Monetise fiscal deficit to help investment, says CII President (April 23, 2009)
Industry downturn began in 2007-08 (April 21, 2009)
World doomed to Sisyphean labour? (April 20, 2009)
'Fiscal consolidation targets tied to Centre-State relations' (April 20, 2009)
'Steel, cement sectors recovering' (April 19, 2009)
New rules for IMF loan arrangements (April 19, 2009)
5 macro indicators (April 19, 2009)
Double whammy for infrastructure (April 18, 2009)
'US must take lessons from India to tackle economic crises' (April 18, 2009)
'Near-normal' monsoon forecast (April 18, 2009)
Nuts and bolts of revival (April 17, 2009)
Is TDP's cash-transfer scheme bankable? (April 17, 2009)
RBI should look to boost demand, not liquidity (April 15, 2009)
TTD Hundi holds its own (April 15, 2009)
ICT can boost the economy (April 14, 2009)
Nurturing shoots of revival (April 13, 2009)
Election and economics (April 12, 2009)
Industrial nations in deep slowdown: OECD (April 12, 2009)
Montek hopeful of 6-7% growth rate this fiscal (April 12, 2009)
MEPZ beats slowdown on gem & jewellery show (April 11, 2009)
'India's growth likely to be far more than global estimates' (April 11, 2009)
Fiscal deficit cap hike: States look to raise funds (April 11, 2009)
Students told to take up the challenge of 'downturn' (April 11, 2009)
Productive sector gets higher LSG allocation in Kerala (April 11, 2009)
TeamLease report lists tasks to reduce poverty faster (April 10, 2009)
Industrial output contracts 1.2% in February (April 10, 2009)
How the slowdown cookie crumbles (April 10, 2009)
Exports growth at 3.6% in '08-09, but to improve post-Sept' (April 09, 2009)
`India can bounce back faster than developed economies' (April 08, 2009)
Chamber call to implement stimulus package, relief measures (April 08, 2009)
Sharing news makes IT better (April 06, 2009)
BJP manifesto: Cuddly to middle class, silent on financial reforms (April 05, 2009)
From London, a trillion dollar booster shot for IMF (April 05, 2009)
'Economy will ride 7-8% growth in 2009-10' (April 05, 2009)
Fleet operators feel the heat of slowdown (April 02, 2009)
India's GDP to grow by 4.3% in 2009, says OECD (April 01, 2009)
Seminar on economic recession (April 01, 2009)
ADB, World Bank see sharp fall in GDP growth (April 01, 2009)
G-20 meet: Tighter regulation in store (April 01, 2009)
'Economic growth likely to be under 7%' (April 01, 2009)
Capital account shows deficit first time in 10 years (April 01, 2009)
'Think up outside-the-box solution for economy' (March 31, 2009)
'Need sector, firm-specific stimulus' (March 31, 2009)
Credit offtake may not be as good as expected, says Bhatt (March 29, 2009)
Montek sees GDP growth to be about 6.5% in 2008-09 (March 28, 2009)
Public relations firms feel impact of corporates' cost cuts (March 28, 2009)
Are steel and cement leading a nascent recovery? (March 28, 2009)
Banks credit offtake robust at year-end (March 28, 2009)
Economy not heading towards deflation: Montek (March 27, 2009)
'Managing volatility will be key to future' (March 27, 2009)
Escap sees Indian GDP growth moderating to 6% in 2009 (March 27, 2009)
Record borrowing target for 2009-10 first half (March 27, 2009)
PSBs: Weathering global recession (March 26, 2009)
Turner Review: Learning lessons from India (March 26, 2009)
'GDP growth rate to be 4.8-5.5% in 2009-10' (March 25, 2009)
Obama bets on 'toxic' asset plan (March 25, 2009)
Sunday brunches still entice Bangaloreans despite recession (March 24, 2009)
'India's response to slowdown seems misdirected, may stoke inflation' (March 23, 2009)
When prices retreat (March 23, 2009)
Public sector banks sound & safe: J.M. Garg (March 22, 2009)
Tax collections offer hope (March 22, 2009)
'Economic crisis an opportunity to create a new world order' (March 22, 2009)
All India consumer price index rises to 462 points (March 22, 2009)
G-20 Summit: Camdessus meets Montek (March 22, 2009)
Life insurers well-placed to navigate turbulence (March 22, 2009)
Unctad stresses on monitoring of financial instruments (March 21, 2009)
Dabur to go slow on retail biz (March 21, 2009)
Ashok Leyland's cost-cutting initiatives yield Rs 1.67 crore (March 21, 2009)
'Non-Cong, non-BJP policies needed to push economy forward' (March 20, 2009)
No fear of deflation, says Cabinet Secretary (March 20, 2009)
US economy: Strong revival signs (March 20, 2009)
Direct tax mop-up surpasses previous fiscal's collections (March 19, 2009)
India's GDP to slowdown this, next fiscal too: IMF (March 19, 2009)
Bullish on growth (March 19, 2009)
Manufacturing cos find downturn a great teacher (March 18, 2009)
Advance tax collections from Mumbai down 7% this fiscal (March 18, 2009)
Rainbow on the horizon (March 18, 2009)
'Use Ministry data to assess corporate savings' (March 17, 2009)
Builders chant 'timely completion' mantra to woo buyers (March 17, 2009)
The G-20 must act now (March 16, 2009)
Green challenge (March 16, 2009)
US: Unemployment blues (March 15, 2009)
Unorganised workers in select sectors to be hit by slowdown (March 15, 2009)
Women worse hit in recession than men, says N. Ram (March 15, 2009)
'Invest in infrastructure to combat meltdown' (March 14, 2009)
Pilot ID card project at Karnataka village (March 13, 2009)
Infation is down, but so is industrial output
January sees some growth (March 13, 2009)
Import growth continues to show downward trend in Feb (March 13, 2009)
Industrial growth in Kerala positive (March 11, 2009)
Partner for overseas assets: Wait to get longer for Essar Oil (March 11, 2009)
IPL revenue already tops last year's (March 11, 2009)
Scope for more rate cuts in India, Sri Lanka: ADB study (March 10, 2009)
The global crisis and Indian finance (March 10, 2009)
Skewed economic growth in southern districts: CII (March 10, 2009)
CSO to get help from State Govt agencies in data collection (March 09, 2009)
'Time to reassess free market prescription' (March 08, 2009)
Corporate India looks at pruning executive salaries (March 08, 2009)
Chidambaram forecasts return to high growth path by 2010 (March 08, 2009)
OECD leading indicators reach new low in January (March 08, 2009)
Core sector growth dips to 1.4% in January (March 07, 2009)
'Cos getting credit to meet productive needs' (March 07, 2009)
' GDP growth to slow down to 5.5%' (March 07, 2009)
Income-tax collections decline in February (March 06, 2009)
Sensex hits 3-year low as negative sentiment rules (March 06, 2009)
Rupee at new low; may remain weak (March 03, 2009)
Despite global gloom, India's outlook is good, says US expert (March 03, 2009)
Cochin SEZ feels the pinch of global economic slowdown (March 03, 2009)
Sombre tale (March 02, 2009)
Himachal Plan outlay Rs 2,700 cr (March 01, 2009)
Seshasayee warns against too much role for governments (March 01, 2009)
2% incentive for garment, leather exports to EU, US from Apr 1 (March 01, 2009)
Indian rupee stays more resilient in 2009 (March 01, 2009)
General elections spending could provide stimulus to economy (March 01, 2009)
Govt, RBI sign new deal on market stabilisation scheme (March 01, 2009)
Ideas for poverty-free TN (February 28, 2009)
India fares better than developed markets (February 28, 2009)
Slowdown hurts Q3 GDP growth (February 28, 2009)
Rupee slips to record low of 51.15 (February 28, 2009)
Rupee falls sharply to 50.48 against dollar (February 27, 2009)
'Domestic consumption protecting India' (February 27, 2009)
Banking sector: Showing resilience amid slowdown (February 27, 2009)
Interim Budget hands the baton to RBI (February 27, 2009)
'Self-sufficiency in food production within reach' (February 26, 2009)
Push for industrialisation (February 26, 2009)
Gujarat economy sustains growth; human development index falls (February 26, 2009)
'Discretionary spend on the decline in Asia-Pacific' (February 26, 2009)
Questioning the growth numbers (February 25, 2009)
Bihar annual Plan fixed at Rs 16,000 cr for 2009-10 (February 24, 2009)
The dilemma over trade (February 23, 2009)
Equity funds sitting on Rs 20,000-cr cash chest (February 23, 2009)
Bottom of the pyramid demographics (February 22, 2009)
Books, stationery biz bucks the trend (February 22, 2009)
'Strong govt needed in times of difficulty' (February 21, 2009)
Stimulus, waiver packages announced (February 21, 2009)
Fiscal deficit not a major problem, says expert (February 21, 2009)
'Economic growth may pick up in second half of 2009-10' (February 21, 2009)
India, New Zealand to begin talks on FTA soon (February 21, 2009)
Pranab sees protectionist trend in developed world (February 21, 2009)
Orissa's annual Plan fixed at Rs 9,500 cr (February 20, 2009)
Bottom of the pyramid demographics (February 20, 2009)
Kerala's GSDP growth at 10.42% in 2007-08 (February 20, 2009)
Marketing in a slowdown (February 19, 2009)
Taking advantage of the downturn (February 19, 2009)
Will IPL have its way with ad rates? (February 19, 2009)
Banks put overseas expansion on hold (February 18, 2009)
Bottom of the pyramid demographics (February 18, 2009)
India Inc: Indirect benefits, direct threats (February 17, 2009)
What the budget means (or doesn't) for India Inc (February 17, 2009)
'AP growth higher than national average' (February 17, 2009)
The 16th vote-on-account (February 17, 2009)
An account for votes (February 17, 2009)
Domestic air traffic declines in Jan (February 17, 2009)
Old ideas are up for new challenges (February 16, 2009)
Trends in US retail sales (February 15, 2009)
Confusion over growth prospects (February 15, 2009)
Stock market movement seen range-bound (February 15, 2009)
Bengal Annual Plan pegged at Rs 14,150 cr (February 15, 2009)
PSUs cough up record interim dividends (February 15, 2009)
Global recovery won't happen soon: Nilekani (February 14, 2009)
'Top brass should be first to take pay cut, if needed' (February 13, 2009)
Industrial output dips 2% in Dec (February 13, 2009)
Do IIP figures negate GDP growth estimate? (February 13, 2009)
Domestic demand could inject fresh momentum to economy: President (February 13, 2009)
Financial protectionism implications should be analysed: RBI Governor (February 12, 2009)
Recession accounting? (February 12, 2009)
Spend, but wisely (February 12, 2009)
'We are responding to the crisis as it impacts on us' (February 11, 2009)
Govt to borrow Rs 46,000 cr more (February 11, 2009)
Monetary policy is not for children (February 11, 2009)
Nagaland's annual Plan for 2009-10 pegged at Rs 1,500 cr (February 11, 2009)
Sikkim's annual Plan finalised at Rs 1,045 cr (February 11, 2009)
7.1% economic growth forecast for this fiscal (February 10, 2009)
Sensex gains 283 pts (February 10, 2009)
Optimistic numbers (February 10, 2009)
Kerala should enhance revenues to accelerate growth: Kelkar (February 10, 2009)
Kerala seeks hike in States' share from Central pool (February 10, 2009)
Panel to meet today on additional borrowings for next 2 months (February 10, 2009)
Can private sector fuel revival? (February 09, 2009)
Kerala received less statutory transfers from Finance Commissions: Study (February 09, 2009)
Kerala received less statutory transfers from Finance Commissions: Study (February 09, 2009)
Can private sector fuel revival? (February 09, 2009)
'Marketers, producers must bring optimism to bottom of pyramid' (February 08, 2009)
Report outlines ways to deal with volatile capital flows (February 08, 2009)
'Lower interest rate not panacea for all ills afflicting economy' (February 08, 2009)
Malls morph into offices (February 08, 2009)
Services sector contributes 50% of AP's GSDP (February 07, 2009)
What recession? Pietersen, Flintoff hit $1.55-m jackpot (February 07, 2009)
'Savings, investment rates may drop 3-4% this fiscal' (February 07, 2009)
'India unlikely to get access to ADB's soft loan window' (February 06, 2009)
Food price threat remains serious (February 06, 2009)
Rice, pulses lead food price rise since 2006 (February 05, 2009)
Direct tax mop-up short of target by Rs 1 lakh cr (February 04, 2009)
Slackened growth for India Inc (February 03, 2009)
Fiscal deficit soars in Apr-Dec 2008 (February 03, 2009)
Govt-RBI assessment says financial system essentially sound, resilient (February 02, 2009)
Reports lists reasons for not urging separation of debt management (February 02, 2009)
Raising money in a recession (February 02, 2009)
Fiscal deficit soars in Apr-Dec 2008 (February 01, 2009)
Kerala's revenue receipts register fall in Dec '08 (January 31, 2009)
Tracking movements, recovery patterns in a banking crisis (January 31, 2009)
'Kerala Govt studying CDS report on crisis' (January 31, 2009)
Economy to grow 7% in 2008-09: Pranab (January 30, 2009)
Centre relaxes fiscal deficit targets, borrowing ceilings for States (January 30, 2009)
RBI sees inflation at less than 3% by March (January 28, 2009)
Mission on India@75 (January 26, 2009)
Connecting the dots (January 26, 2009)
Growth pangs (January 26, 2009)
PM's economic panel lowers GDP growth forecast to 7.1% (January 24, 2009)
Inflation pronounced in South India (January 23, 2009)
Price of being historic first (January 23, 2009)
TN to seek more development funds (January 22, 2009)
'Get ready to explore opportunities once meltdown ends' (January 22, 2009)
Customer interaction models (January 22, 2009)
'Outsourcing to slow down, consolidation likely' (January 22, 2009)
TN to seek more development funds (January 22, 2009)
Indian economy: Near zero growth? (January 21, 2009)
Kerala Cabinet okays draft Plan outlay (January 21, 2009)
Pound the London streets now! (January 21, 2009)
Capital goods downturn, slackening mining sector point to slowdown (January 20, 2009)
Warring Kerala fronts to join hands on developmental issues (January 20, 2009)
Kerala's Plan outlay at Rs 8,650 cr (January 19, 2009)
Strong fundamentals will stand India in good stead: Nilekani (January 18, 2009)
'An opportunity to introduce capital account convertibility' (January 18, 2009)
'Economy likely to grow 7-7.5% in 2008-09' (January 17, 2009)
States and stimulus (January 17, 2009)
Well-defined fiscal stimulus missing (January 16, 2009)
Mild pick-up in Nov industrial growth offers hope (January 16, 2009)
Industrial production grows 2.4% in Nov (January 13, 2009)
Industrial production grows 2.4% in Nov (January 13, 2009)
Inflation calmed, not beaten (January 13, 2009)
Inflation calmed, not beaten (January 13, 2009)
India slips to 41st rank on Global Innovation Index 2008-09 (January 11, 2009)
Fall in prices pushes up cement demand in Dec (January 11, 2009)
Tata Motors cancels Jamshedpur plant shutdown (January 11, 2009)
'Rs 1 lakh cr in infrastructure will be committed in 100 days' (January 10, 2009)
New facility for providing liquidity to NBFCs cleared (January 10, 2009)
Obama and India (January 10, 2009)
India can regain 9% growth trajectory, says Mulford (January 10, 2009)
Alternative growth model needed (January 07, 2009)
Truck sales hit the bump, decline 73% in Dec (January 07, 2009)
2008 mall supply falls far short of estimates (January 07, 2009)
Stimulus package inadequate, says expert (January 07, 2009)
Autonomous debt management office may not take off for now (January 06, 2009)
Stimulus Version 2.0 (January 05, 2009)
Hotels, hospitals given more freedom to use ECBs (January 04, 2009)
RBI may not be done with yet, say economists (January 04, 2009)
Second stimulus package will be a big boost to economy: FICCI (January 03, 2009)
Exporters get second stimulus package (January 03, 2009)
Analysts see execution as key to stimulus success (January 03, 2009)
RBI cuts key rates further (January 03, 2009)
'Onus on govts to handle commodity conundrums' (January 02, 2009)
Small savings see more outgo than inflows (January 02, 2009)
Lower inflation, hopes on Govt sops boost markets (January 02, 2009)
Trade deficit widens to $69 b in April-Sept (January 01, 2009)
Economic outlook bright: Jindal (January 01, 2009)
What brands need to do (January 01, 2009)
How to stay recession-proof (January 01, 2009)
External debt down $1.2 b in Sept quarter (January 01, 2009)
http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/
No comments:
Post a Comment