Popular Articles

Sunil Jain: Forget Ambani, think Goenka
Most are focused on the salaries of the Ambani brothers when it comes to the ‘’vulgar’’ salaries Corporate Affairs Minister Salman Khurshid spoke of. The Ambanis, it turns out, take home very reasonable fractions of their companies’ sales/net profits — 0.03/0.23 per cent in the case of Mukesh and 0.22/0.63 per cent in the case of Anil. The Marans of Sun TV, Kalanithi and wife Kavery, in comparison, took home 7.36/16.96 per cent of sales/net profits (see graphic).

Sell-off in BSNL likely soon: Sam Pitroda
The Prime Minister’s information technology advisor Sam Pitroda said the government was not planning to merge BSNL and MTNL, but efforts were on to sell stake in BSNL.

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Sea Trans moves London court against owner of sunken vessel
Sea Trans Marine Private Ltd, a Kolkata-based shipping agency has filed a case in an international court in London against the owner and management company of the vessel Black Rose, which capsized near Paradeep port a month back.
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Oil India IPO price fixed at Rs 1,050/share

The government today fixed the issue price of the initial public offer (IPO) of state-run explorer Oil India at Rs 1,050 per share, raising a cumulative Rs 4,982 crore. - Oil India IPO subscribed 30.6 times on final day - Sweet crude - OilMin proposes 44% hike in natural gas prices - Govt plans to raise APM gas price by 44% - OIL finds heavy oil deposits in Rajasthan - OVL, IOC, OIL to invest $5 bn in Iran gas field The IPO of 11 per cent fresh equity shares would fetch Rs 4,982 crore at the higher end of the Rs 950-1,050 price band. Further, the government would sell its 10 per cent stake to state refiners at the issue price for Rs 2,205 crore. "The company would be listed on the bourses on September 30," Oil India Chairman N M Borah told reporters here. About 99 per cent of the issue was subscribed at the higher end of the price band, official sources said. The IPO of OIL, which ended on September 10, got subscribed 30.81 times the shares on offer. The state-run firm received overwhelming response from institutional investors who subscribed about 54 times of the portion reserved for them. Non-institutional and retail investors bid for 9.77 times and 1.14 times, respectively of the shares on offer. Under the twin offer for disinvestment, the Mini Ratna PSU, which produces 3.5 million tonnes of oil annually, will offer fresh equity of 2.64 crore shares or 11 per cent, while the government will put on offer 10 per cent of its stake in the company to state refiners. Of the 10 per cent stake, IOC will get about five per cent, while HPCL and BPCL would take about 2.5 per cent each. Post-IPO and disinvestment, the government"s stake in the company will decrease to 78.50 per cent from the present 98.13 per cent. The IPO proceeds would be used to fund the capex requirement of Rs 2,300 crore for 2009-10 and Rs 2,400 crore for 2010-11, sources said.


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