Popular Articles

Life insurance sector to grow by 15%
India’s life insurance sector is expected to grow by almost 15 per cent in the current financial year and touch a total premium income of Rs 2,55,000 crore (about $ 50 billion).

BSE to include 25 scrips in mid-cap index
The Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) today said it has decided to include 25 scrips in thw BSE mid-cap index with effect from January 11.

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NHAI identifies 10 mega projects worth Rs 45,000 cr
The government has identified 10 lucrative mega highway projects to be awarded to private developers. These projects, involving investment of Rs 45,000 crore, will be awarded in the next two years.
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BCCL: From zero to Rs 1,000-cr debt

Bennett, Coleman and Co Ltd (BCCL), the company owning the largest-selling English newspaper in the world, is India’s most profitable media company, with what it claims is a 47 per cent market share of English dailies in the urban markets. - Credibility of borrowing scheme may help lower costs - Worrying sign: Value of fake notes up 183 per cent - RBI surplus jumps 66.6 per cent - Bhupesh Bhandari: Bitter-sweet times">Bhupesh Bhandari: Bitter-sweet times - E-transactions gain ground; cheque clearances dip 5% - Indian banks pass stress test It closed the 2008 financial year (FY08) with sales of over Rs 4,000 crore, a net profit of close to Rs 900 crore and an earnings per share of Rs 271 — a healthy jump over FY07 figures. But there was one big change on the liability side. From almost a zero-debt company in FY07, BCCL had over Rs 1,000 crore of loans on its books a year later. It has not specified the purpose of this borrowing. Advertising sales made up over 80 per cent of the company’s revenue. The directors’ report gave more insights into its FY08 operating performance. The Times of India, the flagship brand, grew 11 per cent, with average daily net sales up 500,000 from FY07 to almost 3,700,000. Most of this growth came from the east and the south. The Economic Times, its business news daily, grew by a modest 6.7 per cent, with average daily net sales up by 100,000 to 775,000 copies. Mumbai Mirror’s circulation grew by 16 per cent, to almost 700,000 copies. The directors’ report acknowledged it was not an entirely rosy picture. The report said: “There is sustained competitive pressure in the general interest English dailies and also the business dailies’ segments in several markets. However, the inherent strengths of the company’s publications, and the marketing, display and brand strategies, should enable registering of decent growth in the coming year.” The salary bill for FY08 increased marginally to over Rs 400 crore. The top three salaried employees, not surprisingly the promoters of the company — the Jain brothers and their mother, Indu Jain — each drew a whopping Rs 16 crore per annum in remuneration.


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