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SC directs EC to allot common symbol to MNS
The Supreme Court today directed the Election Commission to allot a common symbol of "Railway engine" to Raj Thackeray-led Maharashtra Navnirman Sena (MNS) for contesting the coming assembly elections in Maharashtra.

Pantaloon QIP to start today
Pantaloon Retail, the country’s largest listed retailer, was likely to open its qualified institutional placement (QIP) issue from Friday, sources said. The company plans to raise anywhere between Rs 300 crore to Rs 400 crore from the issue.

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Shobhana Subramanian: AMCs: Time for a shakeup
Shobhana Subramanian / New Delhi August 28, 2009, 0:44 IST
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ICICI's UK arm accused of mistreating whistleblower: report

India"s leading private lender ICICI Bank"s UK subsidiary has been accused by the Employment Tribunals in London of mistreating a whistleblower, a media report says. - Unique identity number to help banks skip KYC rules - Indian ADRs lose $4 bn in a week - ICICI Bank to focus on home-loans as real estate picks up - Sensex rises on RBI-speak, telecom stocks - Bankers, Nilekani to discuss financial inclusion - Nomura plans to expand in India, China next year: Report According to the report in the Financial Times, the bank tried immediately to repatriate the dealer, S Kapoor, to India against his wishes after it was confirmed that he had informed the UK Financial Services Authority (FSA) about alleged irregularities. In a ruling last month on the case, the Judge wrote: "It is our conclusion... The respondent (ICICI) subjected him to a detriment and that it did so because of the protected disclosures that he made internally and more importantly, to the FSA." Meanwhile, ICICI Bank said the matter was subjudice but it rejected the allegation that Kapoor"s repatriation was linked to his disclosures, saying it was instead due to the closure of his division, the proprietary trading group. The FT quoted the bank as saying that "we insist that there is no connection between the whistleblowing incident and the decision to close the PTG". In January, Kapoor and a colleague noticed that their superior on the three-man team was allegedly altering records to cover up his trading losses, which reached more than $one million in 2008, the tribunal ruling said. The pair reported the issue to management, prompting an internal investigation, the daily said.


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