Popular Articles

Canon India's revenue from government grows 25%
Canon, the Japanese imaging and printing firm, has grown its revenue from the government vertical by 25 per cent and will end end this calender year with a revenue of Rs 850 crore. The sector was just 15 per cent of its business in 2008. “Although our growth was down to 18 per cent in the first quarter 2009, we will close the fourth quarter with a growth rate nearing 30 per cent. This growth has come from timely remodeling of our India strategy,” said Alok Bharadwaj, senior vice-president, Canon India.

B'desh nod for Bharti's 70% stake buy in Warid
Bharti Airtel, India"s number one cellular operator today received the nod from Bangladesh"s telecom regulator to purchase 70 per cent stake in Warid Telecom and to invest $300 million in the company.

News of the day

Satyam allots 75,090 equity shares under stock options
Satyam Computer today said it has allotted 75,090 equity shares to its employees, under its stock options plans.
Corporate

RBS to get virtually nationalised; govt to hike stake to 84%

The British government is planning to pump in an additional capital of up to 19 billion pound into the Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) and hike its stake to as much as 84 per cent, a move that would virtually nationalise the bank. - RBI tightens grip on money market instruments - RBS shareholders plan to take legal action against bank - Nabard pumps in Rs 10,000 cr to refinance banks - HSBC eyes ING, RBS assets in Asia - UK plans cutback on public sector salary increases - RBS scouting for new bidders to sell Asia units "Alistair Darling is preparing to plough billions more of taxpayers" money into Royal Bank of Scotland to take the government stake in the bank from 70 per cent to as high as 84 per cent," the Sunday Times said. As part of the deal, the government would pour up to 19 billion pound of additional capital into RBS. "The subsequent increase in the taxpayers" stake will leave the bank (RBS) virtually nationalised, with a small portion of shares left in the hands of private investors," the daily said. The daily added that the Treasury this week would confirm that RBS is signing up to a controversial deal to pump 270 billion pound of problematic loans into a state-backed insurance scheme. The outcome of the state hiking its stake is harsher than the bank expected. The bank was already committed to reducing its balance sheet by 40 per cent and selling off a slew of international businesses. RBS would now be expected to shoulder an additional 20 billion pound of losses on its own balance sheet before it lay claims on the government insurance. Meanwhile, European competition commissioner — Neelie Kroes, has ordered RBS to sell its Churchill and Direct Line insurance operations, which has a network of over 300 branches, and large parts of its investment bank. An agreement in this regard has been reached between Kroes and RBS chief executive Stephen Hester last week.


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