15 June 2009

RIL-RNRL Case Verdict:RIL shares fall after gas supply ruling;Court favours RNRL

RIL shares fall after gas supply ruling

Reliance Industries shares fall after gas supply ruling

15 Jun 2009, 1416 hrs IST, ET Bureau & Agencies

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MUMBAI: Shares in Reliance Industries fell as much as 6.1 percent after the Bonbay High Court directed it to supply gas to Reliance Natural

Resources at lower than market prices.


Reliance Industries, which has the highest weightage in the main share index, was asked to supply 28 million metric cubic metres a day for 17 years at $2.34 million per metric British thermal unit, the lawyer for Reliance Natural said after the court ruling.

Shares in Reliance Natural soared as much as 23.4 percent to 107.70 rupees.

"Reliance Industries will have to supply gas at a rate lower than the rate fixed by the government. They are going to incur a lower profit for that much amount," said D.D. Sharma, vice president at Anand Rathi Securities.

By 0616 GMT, Reliance Industries was trading 5.4 percent lower at Rs 2,228.95 after hitting Rs 2,213.55.

Reliance Industries is controlled by billionaire Mukesh Ambani while Reliance Natural Resources is headed by his younger brother Anil Ambani.

By the gas supply master agreement, RIL was supposed to supply natural gas from the Krishna-Godavari basin to RNRL, to be used for the Anil Ambani group's power generation plant at Dadri in Uttar Pradesh. The GSMA came into existence in January 2006, following the demerger of the Reliance group. But both the sides differed on its terms related to the quantity of gas to be supplied, price, and duration of supply.

In December 2006, RNRL moved the Bombay High Court asking it to compel RIL to honour the gas agreement. Justice Anup Mohta, who heard the case, asked the companies to settle the matter internally under the June 2005 family agreement. The judge also restrained RIL from selling gas to third parties till the final order.

Unable to agree on the price, terms and quantity of gas, both firms approached the division bench of the Bombay High Court against the order of the single bench in early 2008. The hearing of the matter continued till February 2009. Thereafter, the division bench came out with an interim order allowing RIL to sell gas to third parties. The interim verdict also mentioned that RIL’s gas agreement with others would be subject to the court’s final order.

The basic argument in the RIL-RNRL case pertains to the pricing and quantum of gas. During the course of hearing, RNRL made it clear that it wanted 28 million metric standard cubic meters per day of gas for 17 years for $2.34 per million metric British thermal unit (mmBtu), while RIL argued that it could not sell gas below the government-approved price of $4.2 per mmBtu.


RNRL wins gas supply dispute; stock up 20%

RNRL wins gas supply dispute; stock up 20%

15 Jun 2009, 1120 hrs IST, ET Bureau

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MUMBAI: Shares of Reliance Natural Resources surged 20 per cent on huge volumes Monday after the Bombay High Court pronounced the judgment in
favour of the company in the long-standing RIL-RNRL gas supply agreement dispute.


Bombay High Court has now given a month’s time to both parties to come to enter into an agreement. The court has asked Reliance Industries to sell gas to RNRL for 17 years at $2.34/MBTU.

By the gas supply master agreement, RIL was supposed to supply natural gas from the Krishna-Godavari basin to RNRL, to be used for the Anil Ambani group's power generation plant at Dadri in Uttar Pradesh. The GSMA came into existence in January 2006, following the demerger of the Reliance group. But both the sides differed on its terms related to the quantity of gas to be supplied, price, and duration of supply.

In December 2006, RNRL moved the Bombay High Court asking it to compel RIL to honour the gas agreement. Justice Anup Mohta, who heard the case, asked the companies to settle the matter internally under the June 2005 family agreement. The judge also restrained RIL from selling gas to third parties till the final order.

Unable to agree on the price, terms and quantity of gas, both firms approached the division bench of the Bombay High Court against the order of the single bench in early 2008. The hearing of the matter continued till February 2009. Thereafter, the division bench came out with an interim order allowing RIL to sell gas to third parties. The interim verdict also mentioned that RIL’s gas agreement with others would be subject to the court’s final order.

The basic argument in the RIL-RNRL case pertains to the pricing and quantum of gas. During the course of hearing, RNRL made it clear that it wanted 28 million metric standard cubic meters per day of gas for 17 years for $2.34 per million metric British thermal unit (mmBtu), while RIL argued that it could not sell gas below the government-approved price of $4.2 per mmBtu.

At 11:15 am, shares of RNRL were up 20 per cent at Rs 105 while RIL shares fell 4 per cent to Rs 2258.

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RNRL wins gas supply dispute with Reliance



Source:EconomicTimes.com, Business Standard, Moneycontrol etc



12 June 2009

World's best-performing stock markets

World's best-performing stock markets


World's best-performing stock markets of 2009


On January 8, 2008, history was made as the Bombay Stock Exchange's Sensitive Index (Sensex) hit the magic 21,000-mark! Just about 18 years ago on July 25, 1990, the Sensex touched the magical four-digit figure for the first time and closed at 1,001 in the wake of a good monsoon and excellent corporate results.

But within two weeks of touching 21,000 the fairy tale ended, and on January 21, 2008 the Sensex registered the first-ever four digit loss when it plunged 1,408 points to close the day at 17,605.

Since then the slide was steeper till it almost plunged below 7,000.

At its peak in October 2007, global equity, or the market capitalisation of all companies in world stock markets, stood at $62.5 trillion, close to that year's world GDP figure of $65 trillion.

Then the American sub-prime crisis hit the shores, banks collapsed and financial institutions went belly-up.

A jaw-dropping $37 trillion of wealth in the form of market cap was wiped out in 18 months up to the multi-year lows that were reached on March 9, 2009. That was 59 per cent of public company values, or $25.5 trillion.

Since then, however, equity values have risen 37 per cent - a wealth-growth of $9.5 trillion - to just over $37 trillion.

Almost all markets fell in 2008. According to a report by EconomyWatch, 62 markets out of the 83 studied are now up.

Read on to find out more...


The stock exchange of Lima, Peru.


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World's best-performing stock markets of 2009


Peru

2009 growth: 72.92%
Decline from 52-week high: -31.94%

The Bolsa de Valores de Lima, the stock exchange of Peru has several indices. The IGBVL (Indice General Bolsa de Valores) is a value-weighted index that tracks the performance of the largest and most actively traded stocks on the Lima exchange.

Peru's economy has shown strong growth over the past seven years, averaging 6.8 per cent a year, helped by market-oriented economic reforms and privatisations in the 1990s.

Its GDP grew 9.8 per cent in 2008 to $127.8 billion.

Note: All stock market figures are till May 25, 2009



Moscow Interbank Currency Exchange.


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World's best-performing stock markets of 2009


Russia

2009 growth: 53.33%
Decline from 52-week high: -61.22%

The Moscow Interbank Currency Exchange or MICEX is one of the largest universal stock exchanges in the Russian Federation and East Europe. MICEX opened in 1992 and is the leading Russian stock exchange, consisting of shares and corporate bonds of about 600 Russian companies.

After a massive sell-off last year pushed the valuations of Russian companies to record lows, rising energy prices in recent months have drawn investors back into the market.

In May 2009, the Micex index of major Russian company shares, was up about 105 per cent after bottoming out on October 27.

Russia's economy shrank by 7 percent year on year in the first quarter of 2009. Unemployment was up, at 8.5 per cent in February, the highest level since January 2005.



Image: Moscow Interbank Currency Exchange.


A man speaks on a phone in front of a bronze replica of a bull at the gates of Bombay Stock Exchange.


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World's best-performing stock markets of 2009


India

2009 growth: 48.25%
Decline from 52-week high: -18.26%

Bombay Stock Exchange, Asia's oldest bourse, is 133 years old and had a market capitalisation of $1.79 trillion (December 31, 2007).

BSE is the world's number 1 exchange in terms of the number of listed companies and the world's 5th in transaction numbers.

Braving the global recessionary trends, India managed 6.7 per cent economic growth in 2008-09 despite the manufacturing sector recording a dismal performance.

A 5.8 per cent growth rate during the last quarter of the fiscal, at a time when most developed economies have shrunk, puts India among the top-most growing nations.

Inflation slipped to 0.13 per cent, the lowest ever in over three decades even as prices of essential food items turned dearer.



Image: A man speaks on a phone in front of a bronze replica of a bull at the gates of Bombay Stock Exchange.
Photograph: Arko Datta/Reuters




The Shanghai stock exchange.


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World's best-performing stock markets of 2009


China

2009 growth: 47.01%
Decline from 52-week high: -26.30%

The Shanghai Composite Index, the benchmark for the Chinese domestic market, rose six-fold in just over two years, starting in mid-2005, before a yearlong drop starting in late 2007 that left it about 70 per cent lower. It is up 52 per cent in 2009,

China's 2009 real GDP is seen to grow by just 6.5 per cent. Growth will recover in 2010, but only to 7.3 per cent.

The economy will be supported by a rapid expansion of government infrastructure spending and policies to revive housing investment.

The outlook for exports is poor, but falling commodity prices will also depress imports


More @ World's best-performing stock markets

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Slide show: India's costliest cities
PM's 100-day plan to revive Indian economy

Great Places to Work: Others in India's top 50 list
Sensex closes 174 points lower


Source:Rediff, ET.

10 June 2009

Indias Best Companies to Work for 2009

India's Best Companies to Work for 2009



India's Best Companies to Work For 2009
10 Jun 2009, 1226 hrs IST


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Business is all about results. Results arise from opportunities. Opportunities arise from relationships. And business relationships must work beyond the boundaries of achievement to distinguish a good workplace from a great one.

In its latest edition of "India's Best Companies To Work For-2009", The Economic Times in partnership with the Great Places To Work Institute, attempts to do just that.

Here's a list of India's top 25 best workplaces:

Read the complete article:


India's Best Companies To Work For 2009

RMSI Pvt Ltd
10 Jun 2009, 1223 hrs IST


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Rank: 1

India HQ: Noida

Employees: 1457

Gender Ratio (F:M): 1:4.69

Employee Turnover: 8%

Best Practices:

There is more gravitas in the work culture of the company than the slew of awards it has won over the years reflects. It encourages its employees to diversify and rewards them for their out of the box efforts.

Read the full article:

RMSI Private Pimited : Reach meet share involve





Intel Technology India Pvt Ltd
10 Jun 2009, 1222 hrs IST


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Rank: 2

India HQ: Bangalore

Employees: 2541

Gender Ratio (F:M): 1:3.65

Employee Turnover: 10%

Best Practices:

At every group in Intel, there are broad guidelines or deliverables set, but the culture is always steeped in how they could make things bigger, better. The chipmaker also believes in fully equipping with various tools for its workers.

Read the full article:

Intel Technology India Pvt Ltd : Inside intelligence too



Federal Express Corporation
10 Jun 2009, 1220 hrs IST


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Rank: 3

India HQ: Mumbai

Employees: 511

Gender Ratio (F:M): 1:4.68

Employee Turnover: 21%

Best Practices:

It isn’t just the camaraderie, though that drives the company loyalty Federal Express is reputed for; it’s the fairness that has become a hallmark of the organisation, something its founder-CEO Fred Smith instilled right at its inception.

Read the full article:

Federal Express Corporation : Purple patch



More @ India's Best Companies to Work for 2009



Source:Economic Times

How to turn Rs 100 into Rs 1.9 cr in three months

How to turn Rs 100 into Rs 1.9 cr in three months


n 3 months, Rs 100 could grow to Rs 1.9 cr in Indian market

10 Jun 2009, 0807 hrs IST, Shailesh Menon & Rajesh Mascarenhas, ET Bureau

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MUMBAI: In 1999, when he was barely 18 years old and still a student, American Timothy Sykes decided to invest his $12,000 gift money in the
stock market. In a little over two years, his investment had grown to $1.65 million. Impressive, no doubt, but it’s still not the stock market investor’s ultimate fantasy.


Now, suppose an Indian investor had been struck by a brilliant flash of visionary foresight at the start of March this year. Starting March 2, which was the first trading day of the month, for the next three months he would know how each stock was going to behave and which one would end up being the best performer every single day. What would our investor have done with just Rs 100? Would he have made Mr Sykes look like a babe in the woods?

On March 2, his Rs 100 would have been on Apollo Tyres, the top gainer of the day. At the close of trading, his investment would have been worth Rs 124 and he would have redeemed it to invest the entire amount in Monnet Ispat on March 3. The steel-maker’s stock would then have turned his Rs 124 into Rs 139.

Thus aided by prophetic vision our investor would have gone on, watching his Rs 100 multiply manifold as he picked the best-performing stock each day for 57 trading sessions. As general elections drew nearer around the second week of April, there was a wave of positive sentiment towards the troubled export, infrastructure and real estate sectors.

Stocks of companies such as Gitanjali Gems, Reliance Infra, Sasken Communication Technologies and Unitech rose smartly on hopes that a new government would come up with plans to infuse new life into these ailing business segments.

On the morning of April 16, when India began voting to elect new representatives to the Lok Sabha, our fortunate investor’s Rs 100 had grown to Rs 36,812. He used the money to buy shares of Gitanjali Gems and exited the stock that evening, pocketing a gain of Rs 6,085.


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Over the next month, as the world’s largest democratic exercise unfolded, our investor’s Midas Touch with stocks continued. On election results eve on May 15, he parked his money, now Rs 14,11,863, in Aban Offshore. In a little over five hours, he was richer by Rs 3,10,186.

Again, on May 18, when trading had to be halted twice as the market showed its glee with the outcome of the election, our prescient investor had picked Indiabulls Real Estate. In less than two minutes of trading, the pre-market opening order for shares worth Rs 17,22,049 has become Rs 22,98,074.

Indian investor better off

On June 2, after two months of living the fantasy, our investor’s original Rs 100 had multiplied 2 lakh-fold and returned him a fortune of Rs 1,97,03,879. During this period, the benchmark Sensex index of the Bombay Stock Exchange had risen by a measly 50% while it took Mr Sykes over two years to multiply his investment by 137 times.

Our investor may have been imaginary and his investments fantastic. But like English novelist Terry Pratchett remarked, “Fantasy is an exercise bicycle for the mind. It might not take you anywhere, but it tones up the muscles that can.”



Sensex nears one-year high of 15589.62 mark
Expect infra, PSU, power, sugar, metals to do well: Kotak Securities
Go long on ABB June future at Rs 732: India Infoline