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SC seeks details of total mineral reserves in Karnataka

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 31 Maret 2015 | 23.25

A 2-judge bench hearing the case has asked the state government to draw up a final assessment of all these 15 mines before April 10.

The Supreme Court Tuesday pulled up the Karnataka government for failing to assess the state's total mineral reserves. This even as it looks to auction 15 of the 51 category-C mines in the state.

A 2-judge bench hearing the case has asked the state government to draw up a final assessment of all these 15 mines before April 10. It will hear the miners' plea on seeking a hike in the present mining cap of 30 million tonnes per annum before deciding on the parameters of the upcoming auctions.


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Snapdeal acquires majority stake in RupeePower

At present, it has 40 employees. "Over the next one year, we plan to ramp up our headcount to about 200 people. Most of these will be engineers, who have an understanding of the financial services market," RupeePower founder and CEO Tejasvi Mohanram said.

E-commerce major Snapdeal has picked up majority stake in digital financial products platform, RupeePower, for an undisclosed amount through a stock and cash deal. The move will help Snapdeal to enter the Rs 4,500 crore online financial services market in the country. "Consumers often face difficulty while deciding and buying financial products/services.

This partnership will help solve distribution challenges of the financial services ecosystem and make it more inclusive," Snapdeal co-founder and CEO Kunal Bahl told reporters. He declined to comment on the financial terms of the deal. Founded in 2011, Gurgaon-based RupeePower offers a digital distribution platform for loans, credit cards and other personal finance products.

At present, it has 40 employees. "Over the next one year, we plan to ramp up our headcount to about 200 people. Most of these will be engineers, who have an understanding of the financial services market," RupeePower founder and CEO Tejasvi Mohanram said.

RupeePower, which counts State Bank of India , ICICI Bank  and Bajaj Finserv  among its partners, claims to have enabled credit disbursal worth Rs 1,500 crore through its platform in FY2014-15. "In the next 24 months, we expect this number to grow to about Rs 6,000 crore (USD one billion)," Bahl said.

He added that going ahead, there will be integration of the platforms to allow Snapdeal consumers to make purchases using the finance options offered through RupeePower.

"The share of digital origination of credit is poised to grow from today's 7.5 percent to 40 percent over the next four years, in an Rs 400,000 crore (USD 67 billion) retail credit market growing at 20 percent annually," Mohanram said.

RupeePower aims to become the No 1 originator of financial products over the next couple of years with the investment received from Snapdeal, he added. Snapdeal also runs a 'Capital Assist' initiative, under which its helps its sellers to secure financing to expand their operations.

Launched in August last year, the company has already helped over 150 sellers raise over Rs 50 crore through the initiative. Asked if Snapdeal is looking at raising funds, Bahl replied in the negative. "We have used our funds in a very efficient manner.

Raising money is a full time job and we want to focus on our business. We want to bring entrepreneurs on board (who have products and solutions) because in the long term that will help sustain the business," he said. 

SBI stock price

On March 31, 2015, State Bank of India closed at Rs 267.00, down Rs 0.9, or 0.34 percent. The 52-week high of the share was Rs 335.90 and the 52-week low was Rs 186.74.


The company's trailing 12-month (TTM) EPS was at Rs 16.61 per share as per the quarter ended December 2014. The stock's price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio was 16.07. The latest book value of the company is Rs 158.43 per share. At current value, the price-to-book value of the company is 1.69.


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Jan-March dollar revenue to take a hit of 280 bps: HCL Tech

The Noida-based firm said its EBIT (operating earnings) is also expected to be negatively affected by 80 basis points. During this quarter, the US dollar continued to strengthen against almost all global currencies, HCL Technologies said in a statement.

Country's fourth largest software services firm HCL Technologies  on Tuesday said its dollar revenue for the March quarter will see an "adverse impact" of 2.8 percent on strengthening of the greenback against global rivals.

The Noida-based firm said its EBIT (operating earnings) is also expected to be negatively affected by 80 basis points. During this quarter, the US dollar continued to strengthen against almost all global currencies, HCL Technologies said in a statement.

"Since the company's revenues are derived in multiple currencies and significant costs are incurred in Indian rupee, the revenue and EBIT for the quarter to be reported in dollar, would have adverse impact of about 280 bps and about 80 bps, respectively," it added. In spite of the adverse impact, the company said it is confident of achieving EBIT (earnings before interest and tax) in the range of 21-22 percent for the January-March quarter.

HCL Technologies expects to post foreign exchange loss of about USD 5.5 million, covering both cash flow hedges and mark-to-market of the foreign currency assets and liabilities.

"The net treasury income for the quarter is expected to be around USD 32 million, the same level as reported in the previous one," it said. The company had posted 27.3 percent rise in net profit at USD 307.2 million, while revenues grew 12.8 percent to USD 1.43 billion in October-December quarter compared with the same quarter previous year.

HCL Tech stock price

On March 31, 2015, HCL Technologies closed at Rs 979.65, up Rs 2.70, or 0.28 percent. The 52-week high of the share was Rs 1058.20 and the 52-week low was Rs 628.50.


The company's trailing 12-month (TTM) EPS was at Rs 47.96 per share as per the quarter ended December 2014. The stock's price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio was 20.43. The latest book value of the company is Rs 112.02 per share. At current value, the price-to-book value of the company is 8.75.


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Toyota Kirloskar March sales rise 62% to 14,623 units

The company had sold 9,018 units in March last year, Toyota Kirloskar Motor said in a statement. Sales in the domestic market also grew by 62.47 percent during the month at 13,333 units as against 8,206 units in March 2014.

Toyota Kirloskar Motor on Tuesday reported a 62.15 percent increase in total sales at 14,623 units in March.

The company had sold 9,018 units in March last year, Toyota Kirloskar Motor said in a statement. Sales in the domestic market also grew by 62.47 percent during the month at 13,333 units as against 8,206 units in March 2014.

The company exported 1,290 units of Etios series this month, it added. Toyota Kirloskar Director and Senior Vice - President, Sales and Marketing N Raja said: "Riding on new launches we continue to register a double-digit growth this month as well."

The company had launched the New Corolla Altis, Etios, Etios Liva and Etios Cross in 2014 and New Innova and Fortuner in 2015.


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Reliance signs deal with Myanmar on production sharing pact

Reliance will be the operator of the blocks with a 96 percent participating interest while United National Resources Development Services Co. Ltd, a Myanmar company, will hold the remaining stake.

Indian oil and gas major Reliance Industries  said on Tuesday it had signed an agreement with Myanmar for a production sharing contract for two offshore blocks.

Reliance will be the operator of the blocks with a 96 percent participating interest while United National Resources Development Services Co. Ltd, a Myanmar company, will hold the remaining stake.

Reliance said in a statement its participation was in line with its strategy to expand its international asset base by investing in attractive oil and gas destinations.

Disclosure: Network18, which publishes moneycontrol.com, is part of the Reliance Group.

Reliance stock price

On March 31, 2015, Reliance Industries closed at Rs 824.70, up Rs 14.35, or 1.77 percent. The 52-week high of the share was Rs 1142.50 and the 52-week low was Rs 796.75.


The company's trailing 12-month (TTM) EPS was at Rs 68.32 per share as per the quarter ended December 2014. The stock's price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio was 12.07. The latest book value of the company is Rs 609.07 per share. At current value, the price-to-book value of the company is 1.35.


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Cabinet recommends re-promulgation of Land Ordinance: Srcs

The ordinance had failed the Rajya Sabha test in the first part of the Budget Session. The Opposition was stiffly against the move. The ordinance makes land acquisition easy for industry.

The Cabinet on Tuesday recommended re-promulgation of the Land Ordinance after it had lapsed, said sources. The move came after the Ordinance failed to pass in the Rajya Sabha in the first part of the Budget Session.

The Land Ordinance required President Pranab Mukherjee's assent who had expressed his displeasure over taking the ordinance route.

The Narendra Modi government is however adamant on getting the Ordinance passed and has recommended its re-promulgation now.

On March 17, the united opposition undertook a protest march against the Land Acquisition Amendment Bill and MPs from 14 opposition parties marched from Parliament to Rashtraparti Bhavan.

The protest march was led by Congress President Sonia Gandhi. She had said, "14 political parties met the President and presented a memorandum to him. We have come together to oppose the Land Bill. We want the President to intervene and not to allow this Bill to be cleared."

The Right to Fair Compensation and Transparency in Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement (Amendment) Bill, 2015 was passed in Lok Sabha on March 9.

The ordinance makes land acquisition easy for industry.

CNBC-TV18 Adds

Manish Tewari, expressing his extreme displeasure over the move, said the Budget exercise may be under question due to the manner in which government has acted. It is leart that the Congress will launch a campaign opposing the Ordinance.

Speaking to the channel, CPI(M)'s  Mohd Salim said his party will oppose the move . "Most MPs are against the draconian functioning ways of the government," he said.


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Jet Airways to expand code-sharing partnership with Etihad

Written By Unknown on Senin, 30 Maret 2015 | 23.25

Private carrier Jet Airways on Monday announced that it would expand its code-sharing partnership with Etihad to offer new destinations in North America, Europe and Australia to its customers.

Currently, the Naresh Goyal-promoted airline offers code-share flights from Abu Dhabi to New York (JFK), Chicago (ORD) and Washington DC, with Etihad. Code-sharing allows an airline to book its passengers on its partner carriers and provide seamless transport to multiple destinations where it has no presence.

Following the expansion, Jet Airways would place its 9W code on Etihad Airways flights from Abu Dhabi to San Francisco (SFO), Dallas/Fort Worth (DFW) and Los Angeles in the United States. Etihad holds 24 per cent stake in Jet Airways. The expansion of code-share options also includes Etihad Airways' proposed flights to Edinburgh, Zurich and Perth, Jet Airways said.

"The expansion of code-sharing will further strengthen our global network and provide a significant number of new and important destinations, particularly in the United States," Jet Airways chief executive Cramer Ball said.

As part of the expansion, Jet Airways would also operate code-share flights with Etihad from the Gulf airline's hub Abu Dhabi to Jaipur and Kolkata. In return, Etihad Airways will place its EY code on Jet Airways' flights from Ahmedabad to Abu Dhabi, the release said.

Ahmedabad is one of the three places from where Jet Airways had yesterday launched daily flight services to Abu Dhabi as part of its enhanced summer schedule. The airline also said its passengers travelling to the United States can avail the benefit of having pre-cleared US Customs and Border Protection at Abu Dhabi Airport.

The process allows passengers to pass through all required checks including US customs, immigration and security before they board their flight to the US, enabling them to avoid queues on arrival, it said.

Another key benefit of US pre-clearance is that baggage security screening meets United States Transport Security Administration standards, allowing passengers who connect onto a domestic flight in the US to have their baggage checked through from Abu Dhabi to their final destination.


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Dalmia Cement starts trial production in Karnataka plant

Alstom bags 9 mn euro contract from Kochi metro French power equipment maker Alstom has bagged a contract worth 9 million euro from Delhi Metro Rail Corporation to execute the Kochi metro project.

Dalmia Cement (Bharat)  on Monday said it has commenced trial production in its 2.5 million tonne per annum (mtpa) greenfield facility in Karnataka. When commissioned the unit will take the group's capacity to 24 mtpa, consolidating its position in the country's cement industry further.

"Dalmia Cement (Bharat), a subsidiary of Dalmia Bharat Ltd has commenced its new cement plant of 2.5 mtpa at Belgaum, Karnataka on March 23, 2015 and has now started trial production," the company said in a BSE filing.

Shares of the company today settled at Rs 417.30 apiece, down 0.13 per cent in the BSE.  Alstom bags 9 mn euro contract from Kochi metro French power equipment maker Alstom has bagged a contract worth 9 million euro from Delhi Metro Rail Corporation to execute the Kochi metro project.

"Under this euro 9 million (approximately Rs 61.2 crore) contract, Alstom is in charge of the supply, installation, testing and commissioning of power transmission equipment," Alstom said in a statement.

Alstom is the main supplier of Kochi metro project. Earlier also, it had bagged orders for various equipment for the project. S C Ralhan elected new FIEO President * Exporters' body FIEO today said S C Ralhan has been elected as its new President.

Ralhan was previously the Regional Chairman (Northern Region) of Federation of Indian Export Organisations (FIEO) from the year 2013 till date. He is one of the leading exporters of North India with an experience of over four decades in the field of exports. He represents the Hand Tools sector of exports.

He was also the Regional Chairman of Engineering Export Promotion Council from 1998 to 2011. He has also been the President of Ludhiana Hand Tools Association since 1996. 

Dalmia Bharat stock price

On March 30, 2015, Dalmia Bharat closed at Rs 417.30, down Rs 0.55, or 0.13 percent. The 52-week high of the share was Rs 567.00 and the 52-week low was Rs 233.15.


The company's trailing 12-month (TTM) EPS was at Rs 4.01 per share as per the quarter ended December 2014. The stock's price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio was 104.06. The latest book value of the company is Rs 70.32 per share. At current value, the price-to-book value of the company is 5.93.


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Oricon buys 70% of Oriental Containers for Rs 105 crore

Oricon Enterprises has a consolidated turnover of nearly Rs 1,000 crore and is engaged through its subsidiaries in the business of marine logistics, packaging, automobile distribution and petrochemicals.

Oricon Enterprises , a group company of Parijat Enterprises, on Monday said it has acquired 70 percent shares of Oriental Containers Ltd from its joint venture partners OC Holding Ltd, Mauritius, for Rs 105 crore.

"We have acquired 70 percent shares of Oriental Containers Ltd from its joint venture partners OC Holding Ltd Mauritius at a consideration of Rs 105 crore, thereby making it a 100 percent subsidiary," Oricon Enterprises CFO B M Gaggar said in a statement here.

Oricon Enterprises has a consolidated turnover of nearly Rs 1,000 crore and is engaged through its subsidiaries in the business of marine logistics, packaging, automobile distribution and petrochemicals.

Further, it holds nearly three acres of land parcel in Worli (Mumbai), which is slated for development in the near future.

Oriental Containers is the largest manufacturer of a wide range of closures, which includes crowns, plastic beverages and water closures, ROPP Caps, chamfered caps, aluminium collapsible tubes and other packaging products at its manufacturing facilities in Maharashtra and Goa.

Oriental Containers supplies its products to various industries like beverages and water, FMCG, breweries and distilleries.

Leading customers include Pepsi, United Spirits, United Breweries, Heineken, Diageo, Bisleri, Unilever and others. The company's products are exported to more than 40 countries covering Asia, Middle East, Far East and the African continent. 

Oricon Ent stock price

On March 30, 2015, Oricon Enterprises closed at Rs 51.70, up Rs 3.55, or 7.37 percent. The 52-week high of the share was Rs 71.40 and the 52-week low was Rs 17.60.


The company's trailing 12-month (TTM) EPS was at Rs 0.43 per share as per the quarter ended December 2014. The stock's price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio was 120.23. The latest book value of the company is Rs 30.52 per share. At current value, the price-to-book value of the company is 1.69.


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ICICI, HDFC Bank cut bulk deposit rates by up to 0.25%

The rates have been revised downwards for deposits over Rs 1 crore by 0.25 percent by ICICI Bank effective today, sources said. Fixed deposit rate of maturity between 121-150 days has been revised downward to 8 percent from 8.25 percent earlier.

Leading private sector lenders ICICI Bank  and HDFC Bank  have cut rates by up to 0.25 percent on high value fixed deposit on select maturities, a move that could be a precursor to lower lending rates.

The rates have been revised downwards for deposits over Rs 1 crore by 0.25 percent by ICICI Bank effective today, sources said. Fixed deposit rate of maturity between 121-150 days has been revised downward to 8 percent from 8.25 percent earlier.

Term deposit of the country's largest private lender between 61-90 days for high value fixed deposit over Rs 5 crore and above has been lowered to 8 percent from 8.25 percent.

Similarly, for term deposit between 91-120 days would attract lower interest rate of 8 percent. The second largest private sector lender, HDFC Bank too lowered its on fixed deposits of over Rs 5 crore and above effective yesterday.

Earlier this month, Axis Bank  reduced fixed deposit rates by up to 0.25 percent across various maturities. Axis Bank was one of the first major lenders to slash its deposit offering after RBI's repo cut on March 4.

The third largest private sector lender has cut its deposit rate offerings by 0.25 percent across buckets in the 18 to 36 months window, Axis Bank official said.

Similarly, for deposits up to 18 months, the rates have been decreased by 0.15 percent to 8.50 percent. With easing liquidity conditions and the low credit offtake, Axis Bank was among the few which cut its base rate or the minimum rate of lending in October last year by 0.10 percent.

It can be noted that the RBI indicated a shift in its stance after getting a grip over inflation and delivered a surprising 0.25 percent cut in January, and followed it up with a similar move on March 4, indicating its comfort with the Budget announcements.

Following these moves, the repo rate at which the central bank lends to the system, currently stands at 7.75 percent. While banks claim the policy moves generally take time to get transmitted into actual lending rates, the RBI has been unhappy with the banks for not passing the benefits of the rate cuts to the borrowers.

The country's largest lender, State Bank of India , has indicated that it would be very difficult to have a cut in lending rates till the end of March, which is generally the busy season for credit offtake. 

ICICI Bank stock price

On March 30, 2015, ICICI Bank closed at Rs 318.35, up Rs 3.95, or 1.26 percent. The 52-week high of the share was Rs 393.30 and the 52-week low was Rs 238.40.


The company's trailing 12-month (TTM) EPS was at Rs 18.81 per share as per the quarter ended December 2014. The stock's price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio was 16.92. The latest book value of the company is Rs 126.27 per share. At current value, the price-to-book value of the company is 2.52.


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Tiger Global sheds 3.41% stake in Just Dial for Rs 300cr

According to bulk deal data available with the stock exchanges, Tiger Global sold a total of 24 lakh shares, amounting to 3.41 percent stake of Just Dial. The shares were offloaded on an average price of Rs 1,252.30 apiece valuing the transaction at Rs 300.55 crore, the data showed.

Private equity giant Tiger Global on Monday offloaded 3.41 percent stake in local search engine Just Dial  for over Rs 300 crore through an open market transaction.

According to bulk deal data available with the stock exchanges, Tiger Global sold a total of 24 lakh shares, amounting to 3.41 percent stake of Just Dial. The shares were offloaded on an average price of Rs 1,252.30 apiece valuing the transaction at Rs 300.55 crore, the data showed.

Tiger Global held 13.22 percent stake in the local search engine company at the end of December 31, 2014. Meanwhile, another private equity firm Goldman Sachs has picked up 19,40,098 shares of Just Dial for Rs 242.90 crore. Founded by V S S Mani, the company started offering local search services in 1996 under the Just Dial brand.

In November last year, Reserve Bank allowed the company to raise the foreign shareholding limit to a maximum of 75 percent of its paid-up capital under the portfolio investment scheme (PIS). Shares of Just Dial today grew by 0.84 percent to settle at Rs 1,319.70 apiece on the BSE.

Just Dial stock price

On March 30, 2015, Just Dial closed at Rs 1319.70, up Rs 10.95, or 0.84 percent. The 52-week high of the share was Rs 1894.70 and the 52-week low was Rs 983.10.


The company's trailing 12-month (TTM) EPS was at Rs 17.85 per share as per the quarter ended December 2014. The stock's price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio was 73.93. The latest book value of the company is Rs 75.85 per share. At current value, the price-to-book value of the company is 17.40.


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MCX sells Rs 2.25cr warrants in MCX-SX to ILFS

The warrants were sold at Rs 2.50 per piece. The sale is subject to "applicable provision with respect to ownership of stock exchanges under Securities Contracts (Regulations) (Stock Exchanges and Clearing Corporations) Regulations, 2012," the filing noted.

Leading commodity bourse MCX  on Monday said it has sold 90,17,227 warrants worth Rs 2.25 crore in MCX-SX to IL&FS Financial Services. MCX, which currently has 4.14 percent equity stake in MCX-SX, is selling the warrants to comply with regulations. In a regulatory filing, MCX said it has sold as many as 90,17,227 warrants, which are convertible to equal number of equity shares of MCX-SX, to IF&FS.

The warrants were sold at Rs 2.50 per piece. The sale is subject to "applicable provision with respect to ownership of stock exchanges under Securities Contracts (Regulations) (Stock Exchanges and Clearing Corporations) Regulations, 2012," the filing noted.

With the acquisition, the shareholding of IF&FS in the MCX Stock Exchange would increase to around five percent, sources said.

After sale of these warrants, MCX would be holding about 58 crore warrants worth Rs 116 crore in the stock exchange, they said. The commodity bourse has to offload bulk of the warrants by June-end, they added. 

MCX India stock price

On March 30, 2015, Multi Commodity Exchange of India closed at Rs 1135.45, up Rs 11.75, or 1.05 percent. The 52-week high of the share was Rs 1289.40 and the 52-week low was Rs 483.00.


The company's trailing 12-month (TTM) EPS was at Rs 23.43 per share as per the quarter ended December 2014. The stock's price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio was 48.46. The latest book value of the company is Rs 258.07 per share. At current value, the price-to-book value of the company is 4.40.


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Posco seeks refund from Odisha rail line undertaking

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 29 Maret 2015 | 23.25

South Korean steel giant Posco has sought refund from a rail line undertaking to be set up in partnership with Odhisa government citing change in company law but said it wasn't pulling out from the USD 12 billion steel project in the state.

"For railway (SPV we) cannot continue keeping deposit any further due to changed company law," Posco India Spokesperson IG Lee said.

Posco had joined hands with the state government along with SAIL, Rail Vikas Nigam and other players in 2006 to form a Rs 590 crore special purpose vehicle (SPV) for development of a 78-km long Paradip-Haridaspur rail line in Odhisa. 

Denying reports that the company is pulling out from the multi-billion project in the state, he said: "We are still on Odisha project. Money refund is not for the steel plant land. Rail Infra refund is as per the changed company law last year."

Lee also said six employees have "voluntarily" resigned and denied it was any sign of Posco pulling out from the project.

The steel maker's proposed USD 12 billion project at Jagatsinghpur district in Odisha for producing 12 million tonne per annum (MTPA) is viewed as the largest FDI in India.

It has, however, been stalled for about a decade on account of regulatory hurdles, including delays in land acquisition.

Posco had entered into a pact with Odisha government on June 22, 2005 for the plant, which included iron ore mine development.

However apart from the delays, in a fresh blow to the company, last month the Centre said the company would be required to participate in auction to get iron ore mines to feed its facility instead of direct allotment as assured earlier.

Steel Minister Narendra Singh Tomar had said that the company, which was assured Khandadhar iron-ore mine via dispensation route will have to participate in the auction process to get a mining lease.

Posco was previously promised the Khandadhar iron ore mine by the state for its mega steel plant, considered as the biggest FDI in India, but the actual allocation never happened due to delays in regulatory approvals.

Although the company has a memorandum of understanding with the Odisha government that assured allocation of mining leases, the passage of a Bill in Parliament that made allocation of all mines through auction route only, the agreement with the state will have no value.

In 2013, Posco had scrapped the 6 MT steel project in Karnataka over land and mineral hurdles. The Odisha project was also scaled down to initial 8 MT after it failed to acquire the desired quantity of land.

Last month POSCO had inaugurated a USD 709 million steel mill in Maharashtra to scale up its presence in the country.


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Vedanta files claim notice against govt under UK-India BIT

Billionaire Anil Agarwal-led group said it will take "all necessary steps" to protect interest against the tax notice on Cairn India.

After Cairn Energy of UK, London- listed Vedanta Group has slapped a notice of claims against the Indian government challenging the Rs 20,497-crore tax imposed on its subsidiary using retrospective legislation.

Billionaire Anil Agarwal-led group said it will take "all necessary steps" to protect interest against the tax notice on Cairn India . The group filed the notice against I-T Department move to impose Rs 20,497 crore in taxes and penalties on Cairn India for allegedly failing to deduct tax on capital gains made by its former parent Cairn Energy while doing a business reorganisation seven years back.

Cairn Energy had in 2006-07 transfered its India assets including the giant Rajasthan oil fields to a new company, Cairn India and got it listed on stock exchanges. It sold major shareholding in Cairn India to Vedanta in 2011. "...

Vedanta's Board of Directors has instructed counsel to file a notice of claim against the GoI under the UK-India bilateral investment treaty (BIT) in order to protect its legal position and shareholder interests," Vedanta said in a filing to the London Stock Exchange.

"If enforced, such tax demand would have serious consequences for Cairn India and therefore Vedanta's investment in Cairn India," the metal, mining and oil major said. Indian government has also made a parallel tax demand on Cairn UK Holdings, for which the Edinburgh-based company has sought arbitration and is seeking compensation under the UK-India Investment Treaty.

Vedanta said the claim notice was the first step required prior to commencement of international arbitration pursuant to the BIT. The company has been advised by leading international counsel that the retrospective tax legislation passed is a violation of protections accorded to investors under the BIT and constitutes a serious impairment of the treaty rights of Vedanta, it said. "Vedanta and Cairn India will continue to take all necessary steps to protect their interest and the interest of their shareholders," it added.

Cairn Energy of the UK also recently sought compensation from the Government of India for the loss in value it suffered due to an "unfair and arbitrary" Rs 10,247 crore tax demand raised using a retrospective tax law. Cairn argued that the imposition of capital gains tax on transfer of its India assets to Cairn India was not only contrary to relevant legal standards but unjust because it was an internal transaction and no shares or assets were sold to any third party to make any capital gains.

Cairn India stock price

On March 27, 2015, Cairn India closed at Rs 215.55, down Rs 7.5, or 3.36 percent. The 52-week high of the share was Rs 385.00 and the 52-week low was Rs 214.60.


The company's trailing 12-month (TTM) EPS was at Rs 21.98 per share as per the quarter ended December 2014. The stock's price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio was 9.81. The latest book value of the company is Rs 206.66 per share. At current value, the price-to-book value of the company is 1.04.


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Reckitt Benckiser committed to ‘Stop Diarrhea’ proj: CEO

India is the only island of growth amongst the emerging markets, that's how the CEO of Reckitt Benckiser, describes India and though he doesn't see the country growing in high double-digit over the next two years, Rakesh Kapoor is indeed very bullish on the country and says the global FMCG giant is in for the very long haul.

New launches are going to play a big role in the company's growth and it is betting big on the government's Swachh Bharat programme. The company has recently developed two hygiene products designed for the use and consumption at lower end of the pyramid, says Kapoor.

Kapoor said India's story is not about a quarter or even a year, it is a very long-term story and companies that have a very long view on India will make the right choices and make India a very important part of their business as indeed we want to make.

Talking about their other commitments towards India, Kapoor says, "RB is totally committed to the program called 'Stop Diarrhea' and would be investing over USD 30 milion over a number of years".

Moreover, the company also looks at divesting non-core assets, tail brands to focus on driving their core businesses like health, hygiene and home, says Kapoor.

"Just a few years ago everyone was super excited about Brazil, Russia, India and China (BRIC). Everyone thought BRIC was the answer to economic challenges in the west but just a few years later Brazil is in a very tough place, Russia for both I would say political reasons but also economic reasons is not the same high profile economic growth that we have seen so in that context India becomes quite an island of growth for many companies. India remains very important not just for its own structural demographic and economic reasons but also in the context of global growth," he added. 

Kapoor further said that the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), which has headquarters in markets like Singapore, Indonesia will revert to Singapore through the ASEAN regional headquarters.

"In the past India was reporting into ASEAN which was reporting into our developing markets headquarters but now we have brought India straight line into reporting into developing markets headquarters so India actually has gone up, not gone down in the hierarchy if you want to measure it like that but India of course is, has been and will be a very important force of growth for RB," said Kapoor.

Answering a query on acquisitions, Kapoor says the company has always been open to making aquistions if they make strategic sense and if they create added value to shareholders.

Below is the transcript of Rakesh Kapoor's interview with Shereen Bhan on CNBC-TV18.

Q: The last conversation that you and I had was sometime in November, you were very confident about the India story, you were very confident about the signals coming in from the Modi government. Today, while the headline growth number looks very good, everyone is talking about 7.5 percent plus growth for India - consumption continues to be a worry, agricultural distress is a concern at this point in time impacting rural discretionary spending. What is your sense about the Indian market and growth in India at this point in time?

A: I would like to say that I remain very positive about the India story because my own personal view is that India story is not about a quarter or even a year; it is a very long-term story. Companies that have a very long view on India will make the right choices and make India very important part of their business as indeed we want to make.

The second thing I would like to say about India is that nothing changes very quickly here. It is the biggest anchor that you can think of. As long as the path is straight we will get there. I don't think we need to get super excited about changes that take place but also not get underwhelmed when things do not move fast enough. This is India, as long as directional fable is good - it seems to be a good one I think we will be on the right track.

The third important thing about India which I see particularly from my eyes sitting in London is that just a few years ago everyone was super excited about BRIC. Everyone thought BRIC was the answer to economic challenges in the West. However, just a few years later Brazil is in a very tough place, Russia for both political reasons but also economic reasons is not the same high profile economic growth that we have seen. So, in that context India becomes quite an island of growth for many companies. So, India remains very important not just for its own structural demographic and economic reasons but also in the context of global growth.

Q: You are speaking about the challenges facing emerging markets at this point in time and there continues to be concern on the deceleration as far as emerging markets are concerned. Even on your India growth figures your sales rose by about 11 percent to Rs 4000 crore in FY14. You were anticipating a growth rate of at least 20 percent I understand. What is the kind of growth projection that you have now for India in FY15 and FY16?

A: I don't set targets.

Q: Is a 20 percent growth rate unachievable at this point in time given the state of affairs?

A: This level of growth, the very high double digit growth rates that we have seen and we have come to expect and come to aspire to for India, remains our aspiration. I don't think we are going to give up on that. Will I see that in the next quarter, could I see that in the next year? Perhaps not but I don't believe we should lower our bar, I don't believe we should lower the ambition.

Our ambition remains to grow at the same kind of growth rates that we have all enjoyed, come to expect and want to have from India, even if the next quarter or even the next year does not seem to be as good. So, I don't want to set a target for FY15 at least externally. However, I do think that markets will improve in FY15 over FY14 and hopefully that will carry on in FY16 and FY17.

Q: Let me ask you about some of the efforts that you have rolled out in order to optimise costs. Project Supercharge was announced by you in February 2015. The idea behind that is to drive margin expansion to enable cost savings between 100-150 million pounds in 2015 and this also involved in creating a simpler and more agile corporate structure. What will this mean for markets like India?

A: First of all I think, Supercharge is an important project for Reckitt Benckiser (RB). It has like you just said two major vectors. One vector is having a company which is faster to market, which is simpler to operate, which does not get bogged down by the complexities that we all see in our world today. So, how do we become more agile? RB has enjoyed the fantastic history of growth and outperformance over the number of years but when organisations become bigger they become complex.

One of my challenges is to make sure that we can keep this company simpler. So, we simplified our structure, we have made sure that inside the company for example we used to have two different area organisations – one looking after Russia, Middle East and Africa and the other one looking after Latin America, Asia-Pacific. We have combined those area organisations and provided a simpler governance and decision making structure here as one example of a simpler organisation. Removing the multiple decision making touch points that sometimes exists in large companies to simplify how we decide, how we go to market.

The other aspect is for larger companies to constantly interrogate their cost of doing business. I have always said that costs are like finger nails, they need to be cut from time-to time. This program of Supercharge is to look at all areas of cost and thinking about where we have waste, where we have duplication, where can we buy things cheaper? We have point of sale material that we buy in multiple markets on multiple brands around the world. Couldn't we buy them together, couldn't we buy them cheaper, and couldn't we simplify that?

Q: What about divesting assets which may no longer be core to you or divesting brands which may no longer be core to you?

A: That is something that we have done from time to time. If you think about the last three years we have demerged our pharmaceutical business and created a new company called Indivior. We have divested our footwear business and given that out. There is a lot of rationalisation that has taken place in the tail brands. So, that has been an important part of our focus on driving the core business in health, hygiene and home.

Q: What more can we expect in terms of divesting or getting out of brands that no longer fit into the company's current profile and the effort to continue to boost your healthcare business?

A: About three years ago, 80 percent of our business was health, hygiene and home and 20 percent was of the rest and today it is only 8 percent. So, you are talking about a pie which has shrunk from 20 percent to 8 percent. So, divestment focus has taken place and we will continue to do that. Our larger opportunities are not just to think about divestments and tail brands rationalisation, I think it is to drive our focus on consumer health, on hygiene.

Just to give you a very simple story here – I came off the plane, went straight to Dakshinpuri in South Delhi. Dakshinpuri in South Delhi is like one of the many suburban places we have in Delhi but also in many parts of India. When you think about so many, there were about 20,000 people who live in a very small place – five people in one small room of 10 feet by 10 feet, open drains, water condition is not very hygienic, toilets not very clean and the fact of the matter is you have got hygiene issues there. With hygiene issues you have got health issues.

I am very proud of many things about India as an Indian, as somebody who has been born and brought up here and owe everything to India but the one thing I am not proud of is the fact that in this country you have something like a 120,000 deaths taking place from diarrhea alone. When you add it all together, in the world we live in today there is one child dying of diarrhea every minute. By the time you and I finish this conversation 15 of these young children under the age of five would have died of diarrhea.

It is highly preventable; it is something we have to avoid. RB today is very proud to announce a program of 'Stop Diarrhea'. This is where we are investing over a number of years, over USD 30 million. We want to make sure that we not only invest this money but we have actually committed R&D resources, our people to bring change and to take care of diarrhea.

So, the larger opportunity in our company is not just to think about tail brands divestment, it is about to bring health, hygiene in markets that we operate in because that is good for people, that is good for society and that is good for the economy. There is so much economic loss that takes place because of bad health and that is good for my company.

Q: Any change expected from a corporate point of view because India so far has been the regional headquarters for South East Asia covering about 12 nations including Singapore, Thailand and Malaysia, will that stay, are there any changes expected on that front?

A: There will be, I think India will revert to its very important position as a regional hub for South Asia. However, the ASEAN headquarters which is markets like Singapore, Indonesia, etc will revert to Singapore through the ASEAN regional headquarters.

Q: Any reason for why you are doing this at this point in time given the fact that you anticipate strong growth in India and you anticipate India to be one of your key drivers not just from a sales point of view but also from an innovation point of view?

A: I think there is a very clear reason. We want to give India a very special place in our company's hierarchy if you want to call it like that. In the past India was reporting into ASEAN which was reporting into our developing markets headquarters. However, now we have brought India straight line into reporting into developing markets hedquarters. So, India has gone up, not gone down in the hierarchy if you want to measure it like that. India is, has been and will be a very important force of growth for RB.


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Power firms face huge under recovery in fuel cost: ICRA

Aggressive bidding seen in the auction of 33 mines would result in a significant under-recovery in fuel cost estimated at Rs 1,800 crore by financial year 2017-18 for the winning bidders in power sector, rating agency Icra said.

It also said cancellation of blocks has impacted capacity in private IPP (independent power producer) segment to the tune of 18 GW.

"Bidding by power generating companies in the auction has been quite aggressive ...As a result, winning bidders remain exposed to a significant under-recovery in fuel cost... Aggregate under-recovery for the bidders is estimated at Rs 8 billion in FY 2015-16, which is likely to increase to about Rs 18 billion by FY 2017-18," it said in a report.

The government has so far auctioned 33 blocks in two tranches garnering over Rs 2 lakh crore, a figure surpassing the Comptroller and Auditor General's estimates of losses of Rs 1.86 lakh crore on account of allocation without auction of mines.

Icra said that of the 33 blocks, 12 were earmarked for the power sector and the government has announced successful bidders for nine mines which have geological reserves of 1200 million tonnes of which extractable reserves are 60 percent.

These blocks are "estimated to provide a fuel security for about 6 GW of generation capacity in the power sector, in ICRA's view".

"ICRA notes that the bidding by power generating companies in the auction has been quite aggressive with the bidding happening on a forward basis on the reserve price payable as bid quoted is zero in reverse bidding," it said.

It added that the bids quoted by the successful bidders range from Rs 302 per tonne to Rs 1,110 per tonne which are "negative price bids" for the bidders "which essentially means that a winning bidder would have a zero fuel charge recovery in PPA and in addition would bear the cost of both i.e. cost of coal mining and quoted reserve price payable to State Government".

It said that as a result, the winning bidders will remain exposed to significant under-recovery in fuel cost which is "estimated to range from Rs 0.39/kwh to Rs 1.02/kwh on a levelised basis over a 25-year period."

Further it said the quantum of under-recovery in fuel cost would remain sensitive to both the stripping ratio of the coal mine and cost of mining related to over-burden removal during the operating phase.

"ICRA estimates that the SC ruling cancelling allotment of coal blocks had impacted capacity in private IPP segment to the tune of 18 GW and the current coal auctions have secured fuel for 2.5 GW out of those 18 GW," it said.

Thus, capacity of about 15.5 GW (with cumulative project cost at around Rs 930 billion) continues to remain affected and within the same, about 8 GW is at risk also due to absence of tapering coal linkage.

The Supreme Court in September last year had cancelled allocation of 204 mines terming same as "fatally flawed" necessitating the auctions.


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Airtel, RCom gain capability for 4G service across country

Reliance Communications made bids worth Rs 4,299 crore and is required to make an upfront payment of Rs 1,106 crore.

Bharti Airtel  and Reliance Communications  (RCom) have gained capability to provide 4G services across the country as they bagged requisite spectrum in the recently concluded spectrum auction.

RIL's telecom arm Reliance Jio already has pan-India 4G spectrum.

"RCom becomes India's first and only operator with nationwide footprint of contiguous 800/850 MHz spectrum. RCom operations now future-proofed across all circles for most advanced LTE technology at most optimal cost," the company said in a statement.

Airtel, the country's leading telecom operator, in a statement said, "Post the latest spectrum acquisition, Bharti Airtel's spectrum mix will give it unmatched reach in the mobile data segment across 3G and 4G with a pan-India footprint."

The telecom firm now directly holds spectrum for 3G service in all parts of the country, except in Kolkata.

Reliance Communications made bids worth Rs 4,299 crore and is required to make an upfront payment of Rs 1,106 crore.

The company won 800 MHz spectrum in 11 service areas, but could not defend its 900 MHz spectrum holding in five out of seven circles expiring in 2015-16.

However, RCom spectrum holding in 800 Mhz in some parts of the country cannot be used to offer 4G service as the matter is sub-judice or to start 4G service using those airwaves it will have to pay one-time spectrum fee of Rs 173 crore demanded by government.

Reliance Jio has also added two sets of spectrum-800 Mhz in 10 circles and additional 1800 Mhz in six circles, to boost its 4G services with stable voice calling service.

Bharti Airtel stock price

On March 27, 2015, Bharti Airtel closed at Rs 376.20, down Rs 22.5, or 5.64 percent. The 52-week high of the share was Rs 419.90 and the 52-week low was Rs 299.80.


The company's trailing 12-month (TTM) EPS was at Rs 28.61 per share as per the quarter ended December 2014. The stock's price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio was 13.15. The latest book value of the company is Rs 166.93 per share. At current value, the price-to-book value of the company is 2.25.


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Multiples PE to invest at faster pace over next 2-yrs: CEO

Talking about the investment cycle in India, Multiples PE is basically a sector agnostic fund and looks at opportunities in each and every sector, says managing director and chief financial officer, Prakash Nene.

Multiples Alternate Asset Management Private Limited (Multiples) is an investment advisory firm that manages more than USD 400 million of Private Equity Funds. Multiples believes there are three ingredients to successful investing in India – careful selection based on conviction in the entrepreneur and opportunity; finding a solution beyond just providing capital; and mutual selection between the entrepreneur and the fund.

Multiples PE is now coming out with a second fund which is a 10-year fund with commitment amount of USD 650 million to be invested in 5-year time frame. However, they would be aggressively investing in the first two years on back of hopes that the Indian economy is now turning around, says Nene.

We are quite positive about the changes which are being made on the economic front. There are many incremental changes which are taking place and that is very heartening," adds Nene.

Althought the fund is sectors agnostic, spaces banking financial insurance (BFSI), e-commerce, healthcare will continue to be most attractive sectors, says Nene.

Below is the transcript of Prakash Nene's interview with CNBC-TV18's Kritika Saxena.

Q: Multiples PE since 2010 till date has been a roaring success if you compare it to the other domestic funds. You have raised USD 300 million funds which have been deployed already. How has the growth been given the fact that investing climate has been slightly slow ever since you setup. How have you been able to retain the investment pace and get the kind of success that you have gotten already?

A: We started in 2010 and the fund is slight bigger than what you thought because the dollar has depreciated otherwise we started with USD 400 million commitment. In terms of pace of investment we have been doing investment on a steady basis every year. We have a very strong investment team and lot of us came from another private equity venture and everybody is very experienced. So, we know the game and after all with all this whatever you do ultimately there has to be some external factors also which lead to success. So, we have to be very careful about where do you invest. In fact when you say our pace investment has been good, to begin with our pace of investment was very slow. We were very measured, our first investment took about a year to make.

Thereafter we really gathered pace because the team has to come together. Once the team came together that is how we started going forward at a faster pace.

Q: In your first fund what were your focus areas in terms of the average ticket size that you are looking at and the sectoral focus?

A: We are sector agnostic fund. We look at opportunity in each and every sector. In terms of verticals we look at certain percentage – 10-15 percent for early stage companies and rest of the companies are later stage companies. Our bias is towards later stage companies because our ticket size will be larger than early stage companies. So, USD 30 million would be our ticket size in the first fund. Obviously in the second fund it will be larger than that.

Q: Let us talk about your second fund; USD 500 million is the amount that you are looking at raising. What is the process and by when will you start deploying that? The fund amount is larger than what your other peer, which have seen average of USD 150-300 million, so what really according to you would be the focus areas and do you feel that now that this is a larger fund you would have a larger investment power to invest over the next couple of years?

A: First of all USD 500 million would be the main fund. We also have another vehicle. So, our total amount available for commitment will be USD 650 million. So, we would be deploying USD 650 million which is the target of this fund. We would be deploying that in just a matter of time now, we already have lot of commitments from our core investors. They are all coming back with larger tickets, so we have a number of documents already with us. We are just waiting to do a formal close.

Q: Typically, USD 650 million, roughly across how many year do you see that spanning out or rather the majority investment, would it be a 5 or 10 year timeframe?

A: Technically, the fund is a 10-year fund but what we call as commitment period, the commitment period would be about 5 years. So, 5 year is the timeframe where most of the investment will be made. However thereafter as well once you invest in a company there is a follow-on investment. The companies keep needing money from time to time and it is not that after 5 years company will not require any money. So, you set aside some amount 10-15 percent for follow-on investments beyond 5 years.

For the first 5 years normally we invest at a steady pace. It is not that you have to just divide by 5 and every year you invest USD 120 million. Our bias would be more towards the early years. So, the first couple of years we perhaps would be investing at a faster pace than the earlier year because we are quite positive that the economy is now turning around.

Q: Since 2010 till 2014 things were fairly difficult but the new government came in and we have seen things turn on ground. We have been talking about how the ease of doing business is now one of the top priorities for the government and how there is a pickup in the reform cycle. Do you feel that foreign investors are now looking at India differently and more positively in 2015 than they did in the last two years?

A: Absolutely. I would not say the last two years, I would say year before 2014, the pace of investment all of us know was very slow and things were pretty gloomy. However last year has been a decent year I would say. In the private equity sector I think about 400-450 deals have happened and the capital deployed is about USD 11 billion, which is a sizeable sum which was deployed. Exits have also improved now. Last year we had about USD 4-5 billion of exits and I think that pace will continue.

We are quite positive about the changes which are being made on the economic front. There are not too many what they call big bang changes, lot of people expect that suddenly things will be different and that doesn't happen but I would say there are many incremental changes which are taking place and that is very heartening. We believe that the government's policies are moving in the right direction. However once you change a policy there is some time lag once the economic activity picks up. So, on the ground the economic activity especially in manufacturing sector is yet to pickup, it is slowly picking up but certain other sectors things have started moving faster. So, we are looking very positively, the next two years that is the reason I said that perhaps the pace of investment which we are going to make in the next couple of years will be faster.

Q: Let us talk about taxation in that case; in the Budget this time around the government has created a big positive for the PE industry by allowing tax pass throughs. How significant is that for PE players and for Multiples PE?

A: I would say that pass through is one of the things which the domestic industry was looking forward to and which has now been granted. It is definitely positive for the industry. However what happens is that what you do at one place, you do something else in another place. What has been introduced in this Budget is something called Place of Effective Management (P.O.E.M). In the speech the Finance Minister has said that they are encouraging Indian fund managers like us to really manage foreign money without going abroad. Many of our colleagues have moved abroad simply from that angle.

Place of effective management is considered if you are based in India and if you are managing money in Mauritius or in other jurisdictions and those funds are called resident in India. If those funds are resident in India then they are not eligible for what is called treaty benefits. So, that is one clause – P.O.E.M has come.

Government has created what they call safe harbour rules. Safe harbour rules mean certain sectors of the economy and certain fund managers would be excluded. However what I find that most of those changes which have been made they are for FIIs – foreign institutional investors. Government has not looked very carefully as to what are the requirements of a fund manager who is not an FII but using FDI money.

FII is a regulated concept under Sebi but most of the funds especially private equity funds are not of that type. We typically will have 5-25 investors and not hundreds of investors. So, when you say that no single investor can have more than 10 percent in a company and all of us have an anchor investor which will be more than 10 percent. So, in that situation we will be excluded then you say 5 investors put together cannot own more than 10 percent and you cannot do a buyout.

Even in our first fund we own a company which is completely owned by us – 100 percent and buyout is a very important concept for a private equity. When a policy framework is made this is something which looks like inadvertently it has not been taken into account and I am quite hopeful that before the Budget is finally approved I think there will be some changes on this.


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Multiples PE to invest at faster pace over next 2-yrs: CEO

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 28 Maret 2015 | 23.25

Talking about the investment cycle in India, Multiples PE is basically a sector agnostic fund and looks at opportunities in each and every sector, says managing director and chief financial officer, Prakash Nene.

Multiples Alternate Asset Management Private Limited (Multiples) is an investment advisory firm that manages more than USD 400 million of Private Equity Funds. Multiples believes there are three ingredients to successful investing in India – careful selection based on conviction in the entrepreneur and opportunity; finding a solution beyond just providing capital; and mutual selection between the entrepreneur and the fund.

Multiples PE is now coming out with a second fund which is a 10-year fund with commitment amount of USD 650 million to be invested in 5-year time frame. However, they would be aggressively investing in the first two years on back of hopes that the Indian economy is now turning around, says Nene.

We are quite positive about the changes which are being made on the economic front. There are many incremental changes which are taking place and that is very heartening," adds Nene.

Althought the fund is sectors agnostic, spaces banking financial insurance (BFSI), e-commerce, healthcare will continue to be most attractive sectors, says Nene.

Below is the transcript of Prakash Nene's interview with CNBC-TV18's Kritika Saxena.

Q: Multiples PE since 2010 till date has been a roaring success if you compare it to the other domestic funds. You have raised USD 300 million funds which have been deployed already. How has the growth been given the fact that investing climate has been slightly slow ever since you setup. How have you been able to retain the investment pace and get the kind of success that you have gotten already?

A: We started in 2010 and the fund is slight bigger than what you thought because the dollar has depreciated otherwise we started with USD 400 million commitment. In terms of pace of investment we have been doing investment on a steady basis every year. We have a very strong investment team and lot of us came from another private equity venture and everybody is very experienced. So, we know the game and after all with all this whatever you do ultimately there has to be some external factors also which lead to success. So, we have to be very careful about where do you invest. In fact when you say our pace investment has been good, to begin with our pace of investment was very slow. We were very measured, our first investment took about a year to make.

Thereafter we really gathered pace because the team has to come together. Once the team came together that is how we started going forward at a faster pace.

Q: In your first fund what were your focus areas in terms of the average ticket size that you are looking at and the sectoral focus?

A: We are sector agnostic fund. We look at opportunity in each and every sector. In terms of verticals we look at certain percentage – 10-15 percent for early stage companies and rest of the companies are later stage companies. Our bias is towards later stage companies because our ticket size will be larger than early stage companies. So, USD 30 million would be our ticket size in the first fund. Obviously in the second fund it will be larger than that.

Q: Let us talk about your second fund; USD 500 million is the amount that you are looking at raising. What is the process and by when will you start deploying that? The fund amount is larger than what your other peer, which have seen average of USD 150-300 million, so what really according to you would be the focus areas and do you feel that now that this is a larger fund you would have a larger investment power to invest over the next couple of years?

A: First of all USD 500 million would be the main fund. We also have another vehicle. So, our total amount available for commitment will be USD 650 million. So, we would be deploying USD 650 million which is the target of this fund. We would be deploying that in just a matter of time now, we already have lot of commitments from our core investors. They are all coming back with larger tickets, so we have a number of documents already with us. We are just waiting to do a formal close.

Q: Typically, USD 650 million, roughly across how many year do you see that spanning out or rather the majority investment, would it be a 5 or 10 year timeframe?

A: Technically, the fund is a 10-year fund but what we call as commitment period, the commitment period would be about 5 years. So, 5 year is the timeframe where most of the investment will be made. However thereafter as well once you invest in a company there is a follow-on investment. The companies keep needing money from time to time and it is not that after 5 years company will not require any money. So, you set aside some amount 10-15 percent for follow-on investments beyond 5 years.

For the first 5 years normally we invest at a steady pace. It is not that you have to just divide by 5 and every year you invest USD 120 million. Our bias would be more towards the early years. So, the first couple of years we perhaps would be investing at a faster pace than the earlier year because we are quite positive that the economy is now turning around.

Q: Since 2010 till 2014 things were fairly difficult but the new government came in and we have seen things turn on ground. We have been talking about how the ease of doing business is now one of the top priorities for the government and how there is a pickup in the reform cycle. Do you feel that foreign investors are now looking at India differently and more positively in 2015 than they did in the last two years?

A: Absolutely. I would not say the last two years, I would say year before 2014, the pace of investment all of us know was very slow and things were pretty gloomy. However last year has been a decent year I would say. In the private equity sector I think about 400-450 deals have happened and the capital deployed is about USD 11 billion, which is a sizeable sum which was deployed. Exits have also improved now. Last year we had about USD 4-5 billion of exits and I think that pace will continue.

We are quite positive about the changes which are being made on the economic front. There are not too many what they call big bang changes, lot of people expect that suddenly things will be different and that doesn't happen but I would say there are many incremental changes which are taking place and that is very heartening. We believe that the government's policies are moving in the right direction. However once you change a policy there is some time lag once the economic activity picks up. So, on the ground the economic activity especially in manufacturing sector is yet to pickup, it is slowly picking up but certain other sectors things have started moving faster. So, we are looking very positively, the next two years that is the reason I said that perhaps the pace of investment which we are going to make in the next couple of years will be faster.

Q: Let us talk about taxation in that case; in the Budget this time around the government has created a big positive for the PE industry by allowing tax pass throughs. How significant is that for PE players and for Multiples PE?

A: I would say that pass through is one of the things which the domestic industry was looking forward to and which has now been granted. It is definitely positive for the industry. However what happens is that what you do at one place, you do something else in another place. What has been introduced in this Budget is something called Place of Effective Management (P.O.E.M). In the speech the Finance Minister has said that they are encouraging Indian fund managers like us to really manage foreign money without going abroad. Many of our colleagues have moved abroad simply from that angle.

Place of effective management is considered if you are based in India and if you are managing money in Mauritius or in other jurisdictions and those funds are called resident in India. If those funds are resident in India then they are not eligible for what is called treaty benefits. So, that is one clause – P.O.E.M has come.

Government has created what they call safe harbour rules. Safe harbour rules mean certain sectors of the economy and certain fund managers would be excluded. However what I find that most of those changes which have been made they are for FIIs – foreign institutional investors. Government has not looked very carefully as to what are the requirements of a fund manager who is not an FII but using FDI money.

FII is a regulated concept under Sebi but most of the funds especially private equity funds are not of that type. We typically will have 5-25 investors and not hundreds of investors. So, when you say that no single investor can have more than 10 percent in a company and all of us have an anchor investor which will be more than 10 percent. So, in that situation we will be excluded then you say 5 investors put together cannot own more than 10 percent and you cannot do a buyout.

Even in our first fund we own a company which is completely owned by us – 100 percent and buyout is a very important concept for a private equity. When a policy framework is made this is something which looks like inadvertently it has not been taken into account and I am quite hopeful that before the Budget is finally approved I think there will be some changes on this.


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Posco seeks refund from Odisha rail line undertaking

South Korean steel giant Posco has sought refund from a rail line undertaking to be set up in partnership with Odhisa government citing change in company law but said it wasn't pulling out from the USD 12 billion steel project in the state.

"For railway (SPV we) cannot continue keeping deposit any further due to changed company law," Posco India Spokesperson IG Lee said.

Posco had joined hands with the state government along with SAIL, Rail Vikas Nigam and other players in 2006 to form a Rs 590 crore special purpose vehicle (SPV) for development of a 78-km long Paradip-Haridaspur rail line in Odhisa. 

Denying reports that the company is pulling out from the multi-billion project in the state, he said: "We are still on Odisha project. Money refund is not for the steel plant land. Rail Infra refund is as per the changed company law last year."

Lee also said six employees have "voluntarily" resigned and denied it was any sign of Posco pulling out from the project.

The steel maker's proposed USD 12 billion project at Jagatsinghpur district in Odisha for producing 12 million tonne per annum (MTPA) is viewed as the largest FDI in India.

It has, however, been stalled for about a decade on account of regulatory hurdles, including delays in land acquisition.

Posco had entered into a pact with Odisha government on June 22, 2005 for the plant, which included iron ore mine development.

However apart from the delays, in a fresh blow to the company, last month the Centre said the company would be required to participate in auction to get iron ore mines to feed its facility instead of direct allotment as assured earlier.

Steel Minister Narendra Singh Tomar had said that the company, which was assured Khandadhar iron-ore mine via dispensation route will have to participate in the auction process to get a mining lease.

Posco was previously promised the Khandadhar iron ore mine by the state for its mega steel plant, considered as the biggest FDI in India, but the actual allocation never happened due to delays in regulatory approvals.

Although the company has a memorandum of understanding with the Odisha government that assured allocation of mining leases, the passage of a Bill in Parliament that made allocation of all mines through auction route only, the agreement with the state will have no value.

In 2013, Posco had scrapped the 6 MT steel project in Karnataka over land and mineral hurdles. The Odisha project was also scaled down to initial 8 MT after it failed to acquire the desired quantity of land.

Last month POSCO had inaugurated a USD 709 million steel mill in Maharashtra to scale up its presence in the country.


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Vedanta files claim notice against govt under UK-India BIT

Billionaire Anil Agarwal-led group said it will take "all necessary steps" to protect interest against the tax notice on Cairn India.

After Cairn Energy of UK, London- listed Vedanta Group has slapped a notice of claims against the Indian government challenging the Rs 20,497-crore tax imposed on its subsidiary using retrospective legislation.

Billionaire Anil Agarwal-led group said it will take "all necessary steps" to protect interest against the tax notice on Cairn India . The group filed the notice against I-T Department move to impose Rs 20,497 crore in taxes and penalties on Cairn India for allegedly failing to deduct tax on capital gains made by its former parent Cairn Energy while doing a business reorganisation seven years back.

Cairn Energy had in 2006-07 transfered its India assets including the giant Rajasthan oil fields to a new company, Cairn India and got it listed on stock exchanges. It sold major shareholding in Cairn India to Vedanta in 2011. "...

Vedanta's Board of Directors has instructed counsel to file a notice of claim against the GoI under the UK-India bilateral investment treaty (BIT) in order to protect its legal position and shareholder interests," Vedanta said in a filing to the London Stock Exchange.

"If enforced, such tax demand would have serious consequences for Cairn India and therefore Vedanta's investment in Cairn India," the metal, mining and oil major said. Indian government has also made a parallel tax demand on Cairn UK Holdings, for which the Edinburgh-based company has sought arbitration and is seeking compensation under the UK-India Investment Treaty.

Vedanta said the claim notice was the first step required prior to commencement of international arbitration pursuant to the BIT. The company has been advised by leading international counsel that the retrospective tax legislation passed is a violation of protections accorded to investors under the BIT and constitutes a serious impairment of the treaty rights of Vedanta, it said. "Vedanta and Cairn India will continue to take all necessary steps to protect their interest and the interest of their shareholders," it added.

Cairn Energy of the UK also recently sought compensation from the Government of India for the loss in value it suffered due to an "unfair and arbitrary" Rs 10,247 crore tax demand raised using a retrospective tax law. Cairn argued that the imposition of capital gains tax on transfer of its India assets to Cairn India was not only contrary to relevant legal standards but unjust because it was an internal transaction and no shares or assets were sold to any third party to make any capital gains.

Cairn India stock price

On March 27, 2015, Cairn India closed at Rs 215.55, down Rs 7.5, or 3.36 percent. The 52-week high of the share was Rs 385.00 and the 52-week low was Rs 214.60.


The company's trailing 12-month (TTM) EPS was at Rs 21.98 per share as per the quarter ended December 2014. The stock's price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio was 9.81. The latest book value of the company is Rs 206.66 per share. At current value, the price-to-book value of the company is 1.04.


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Reckitt Benckiser committed to ‘Stop Diarrhea’ proj: CEO

India is the only island of growth amongst the emerging markets, that's how the CEO of Reckitt Benckiser, describes India and though he doesn't see the country growing in high double-digit over the next two years, Rakesh Kapoor is indeed very bullish on the country and says the global FMCG giant is in for the very long haul.

New launches are going to play a big role in the company's growth and it is betting big on the government's Swachh Bharat programme. The company has recently developed two hygiene products designed for the use and consumption at lower end of the pyramid, says Kapoor.

Kapoor said India's story is not about a quarter or even a year, it is a very long-term story and companies that have a very long view on India will make the right choices and make India a very important part of their business as indeed we want to make.

Talking about their other commitments towards India, Kapoor says, "RB is totally committed to the program called 'Stop Diarrhea' and would be investing over USD 30 milion over a number of years".

Moreover, the company also looks at divesting non-core assets, tail brands to focus on driving their core businesses like health, hygiene and home, says Kapoor.

"Just a few years ago everyone was super excited about Brazil, Russia, India and China (BRIC). Everyone thought BRIC was the answer to economic challenges in the west but just a few years later Brazil is in a very tough place, Russia for both I would say political reasons but also economic reasons is not the same high profile economic growth that we have seen so in that context India becomes quite an island of growth for many companies. India remains very important not just for its own structural demographic and economic reasons but also in the context of global growth," he added. 

Kapoor further said that the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), which has headquarters in markets like Singapore, Indonesia will revert to Singapore through the ASEAN regional headquarters.

"In the past India was reporting into ASEAN which was reporting into our developing markets headquarters but now we have brought India straight line into reporting into developing markets headquarters so India actually has gone up, not gone down in the hierarchy if you want to measure it like that but India of course is, has been and will be a very important force of growth for RB," said Kapoor.

Answering a query on acquisitions, Kapoor says the company has always been open to making aquistions if they make strategic sense and if they create added value to shareholders.

Below is the transcript of Rakesh Kapoor's interview with Shereen Bhan on CNBC-TV18.

Q: The last conversation that you and I had was sometime in November, you were very confident about the India story, you were very confident about the signals coming in from the Modi government. Today, while the headline growth number looks very good, everyone is talking about 7.5 percent plus growth for India - consumption continues to be a worry, agricultural distress is a concern at this point in time impacting rural discretionary spending. What is your sense about the Indian market and growth in India at this point in time?

A: I would like to say that I remain very positive about the India story because my own personal view is that India story is not about a quarter or even a year; it is a very long-term story. Companies that have a very long view on India will make the right choices and make India very important part of their business as indeed we want to make.

The second thing I would like to say about India is that nothing changes very quickly here. It is the biggest anchor that you can think of. As long as the path is straight we will get there. I don't think we need to get super excited about changes that take place but also not get underwhelmed when things do not move fast enough. This is India, as long as directional fable is good - it seems to be a good one I think we will be on the right track.

The third important thing about India which I see particularly from my eyes sitting in London is that just a few years ago everyone was super excited about BRIC. Everyone thought BRIC was the answer to economic challenges in the West. However, just a few years later Brazil is in a very tough place, Russia for both political reasons but also economic reasons is not the same high profile economic growth that we have seen. So, in that context India becomes quite an island of growth for many companies. So, India remains very important not just for its own structural demographic and economic reasons but also in the context of global growth.

Q: You are speaking about the challenges facing emerging markets at this point in time and there continues to be concern on the deceleration as far as emerging markets are concerned. Even on your India growth figures your sales rose by about 11 percent to Rs 4000 crore in FY14. You were anticipating a growth rate of at least 20 percent I understand. What is the kind of growth projection that you have now for India in FY15 and FY16?

A: I don't set targets.

Q: Is a 20 percent growth rate unachievable at this point in time given the state of affairs?

A: This level of growth, the very high double digit growth rates that we have seen and we have come to expect and come to aspire to for India, remains our aspiration. I don't think we are going to give up on that. Will I see that in the next quarter, could I see that in the next year? Perhaps not but I don't believe we should lower our bar, I don't believe we should lower the ambition.

Our ambition remains to grow at the same kind of growth rates that we have all enjoyed, come to expect and want to have from India, even if the next quarter or even the next year does not seem to be as good. So, I don't want to set a target for FY15 at least externally. However, I do think that markets will improve in FY15 over FY14 and hopefully that will carry on in FY16 and FY17.

Q: Let me ask you about some of the efforts that you have rolled out in order to optimise costs. Project Supercharge was announced by you in February 2015. The idea behind that is to drive margin expansion to enable cost savings between 100-150 million pounds in 2015 and this also involved in creating a simpler and more agile corporate structure. What will this mean for markets like India?

A: First of all I think, Supercharge is an important project for Reckitt Benckiser (RB). It has like you just said two major vectors. One vector is having a company which is faster to market, which is simpler to operate, which does not get bogged down by the complexities that we all see in our world today. So, how do we become more agile? RB has enjoyed the fantastic history of growth and outperformance over the number of years but when organisations become bigger they become complex.

One of my challenges is to make sure that we can keep this company simpler. So, we simplified our structure, we have made sure that inside the company for example we used to have two different area organisations – one looking after Russia, Middle East and Africa and the other one looking after Latin America, Asia-Pacific. We have combined those area organisations and provided a simpler governance and decision making structure here as one example of a simpler organisation. Removing the multiple decision making touch points that sometimes exists in large companies to simplify how we decide, how we go to market.

The other aspect is for larger companies to constantly interrogate their cost of doing business. I have always said that costs are like finger nails, they need to be cut from time-to time. This program of Supercharge is to look at all areas of cost and thinking about where we have waste, where we have duplication, where can we buy things cheaper? We have point of sale material that we buy in multiple markets on multiple brands around the world. Couldn't we buy them together, couldn't we buy them cheaper, and couldn't we simplify that?

Q: What about divesting assets which may no longer be core to you or divesting brands which may no longer be core to you?

A: That is something that we have done from time to time. If you think about the last three years we have demerged our pharmaceutical business and created a new company called Indivior. We have divested our footwear business and given that out. There is a lot of rationalisation that has taken place in the tail brands. So, that has been an important part of our focus on driving the core business in health, hygiene and home.

Q: What more can we expect in terms of divesting or getting out of brands that no longer fit into the company's current profile and the effort to continue to boost your healthcare business?

A: About three years ago, 80 percent of our business was health, hygiene and home and 20 percent was of the rest and today it is only 8 percent. So, you are talking about a pie which has shrunk from 20 percent to 8 percent. So, divestment focus has taken place and we will continue to do that. Our larger opportunities are not just to think about divestments and tail brands rationalisation, I think it is to drive our focus on consumer health, on hygiene.

Just to give you a very simple story here – I came off the plane, went straight to Dakshinpuri in South Delhi. Dakshinpuri in South Delhi is like one of the many suburban places we have in Delhi but also in many parts of India. When you think about so many, there were about 20,000 people who live in a very small place – five people in one small room of 10 feet by 10 feet, open drains, water condition is not very hygienic, toilets not very clean and the fact of the matter is you have got hygiene issues there. With hygiene issues you have got health issues.

I am very proud of many things about India as an Indian, as somebody who has been born and brought up here and owe everything to India but the one thing I am not proud of is the fact that in this country you have something like a 120,000 deaths taking place from diarrhea alone. When you add it all together, in the world we live in today there is one child dying of diarrhea every minute. By the time you and I finish this conversation 15 of these young children under the age of five would have died of diarrhea.

It is highly preventable; it is something we have to avoid. RB today is very proud to announce a program of 'Stop Diarrhea'. This is where we are investing over a number of years, over USD 30 million. We want to make sure that we not only invest this money but we have actually committed R&D resources, our people to bring change and to take care of diarrhea.

So, the larger opportunity in our company is not just to think about tail brands divestment, it is about to bring health, hygiene in markets that we operate in because that is good for people, that is good for society and that is good for the economy. There is so much economic loss that takes place because of bad health and that is good for my company.

Q: Any change expected from a corporate point of view because India so far has been the regional headquarters for South East Asia covering about 12 nations including Singapore, Thailand and Malaysia, will that stay, are there any changes expected on that front?

A: There will be, I think India will revert to its very important position as a regional hub for South Asia. However, the ASEAN headquarters which is markets like Singapore, Indonesia, etc will revert to Singapore through the ASEAN regional headquarters.

Q: Any reason for why you are doing this at this point in time given the fact that you anticipate strong growth in India and you anticipate India to be one of your key drivers not just from a sales point of view but also from an innovation point of view?

A: I think there is a very clear reason. We want to give India a very special place in our company's hierarchy if you want to call it like that. In the past India was reporting into ASEAN which was reporting into our developing markets headquarters. However, now we have brought India straight line into reporting into developing markets hedquarters. So, India has gone up, not gone down in the hierarchy if you want to measure it like that. India is, has been and will be a very important force of growth for RB.


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Power firms face huge under recovery in fuel cost: ICRA

Aggressive bidding seen in the auction of 33 mines would result in a significant under-recovery in fuel cost estimated at Rs 1,800 crore by financial year 2017-18 for the winning bidders in power sector, rating agency Icra said.

It also said cancellation of blocks has impacted capacity in private IPP (independent power producer) segment to the tune of 18 GW.

"Bidding by power generating companies in the auction has been quite aggressive ...As a result, winning bidders remain exposed to a significant under-recovery in fuel cost... Aggregate under-recovery for the bidders is estimated at Rs 8 billion in FY 2015-16, which is likely to increase to about Rs 18 billion by FY 2017-18," it said in a report.

The government has so far auctioned 33 blocks in two tranches garnering over Rs 2 lakh crore, a figure surpassing the Comptroller and Auditor General's estimates of losses of Rs 1.86 lakh crore on account of allocation without auction of mines.

Icra said that of the 33 blocks, 12 were earmarked for the power sector and the government has announced successful bidders for nine mines which have geological reserves of 1200 million tonnes of which extractable reserves are 60 percent.

These blocks are "estimated to provide a fuel security for about 6 GW of generation capacity in the power sector, in ICRA's view".

"ICRA notes that the bidding by power generating companies in the auction has been quite aggressive with the bidding happening on a forward basis on the reserve price payable as bid quoted is zero in reverse bidding," it said.

It added that the bids quoted by the successful bidders range from Rs 302 per tonne to Rs 1,110 per tonne which are "negative price bids" for the bidders "which essentially means that a winning bidder would have a zero fuel charge recovery in PPA and in addition would bear the cost of both i.e. cost of coal mining and quoted reserve price payable to State Government".

It said that as a result, the winning bidders will remain exposed to significant under-recovery in fuel cost which is "estimated to range from Rs 0.39/kwh to Rs 1.02/kwh on a levelised basis over a 25-year period."

Further it said the quantum of under-recovery in fuel cost would remain sensitive to both the stripping ratio of the coal mine and cost of mining related to over-burden removal during the operating phase.

"ICRA estimates that the SC ruling cancelling allotment of coal blocks had impacted capacity in private IPP segment to the tune of 18 GW and the current coal auctions have secured fuel for 2.5 GW out of those 18 GW," it said.

Thus, capacity of about 15.5 GW (with cumulative project cost at around Rs 930 billion) continues to remain affected and within the same, about 8 GW is at risk also due to absence of tapering coal linkage.

The Supreme Court in September last year had cancelled allocation of 204 mines terming same as "fatally flawed" necessitating the auctions.


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Airtel, RCom gain capability for 4G service across country

Reliance Communications made bids worth Rs 4,299 crore and is required to make an upfront payment of Rs 1,106 crore.

Bharti Airtel  and Reliance Communications  (RCom) have gained capability to provide 4G services across the country as they bagged requisite spectrum in the recently concluded spectrum auction.

RIL's telecom arm Reliance Jio already has pan-India 4G spectrum.

"RCom becomes India's first and only operator with nationwide footprint of contiguous 800/850 MHz spectrum. RCom operations now future-proofed across all circles for most advanced LTE technology at most optimal cost," the company said in a statement.

Airtel, the country's leading telecom operator, in a statement said, "Post the latest spectrum acquisition, Bharti Airtel's spectrum mix will give it unmatched reach in the mobile data segment across 3G and 4G with a pan-India footprint."

The telecom firm now directly holds spectrum for 3G service in all parts of the country, except in Kolkata.

Reliance Communications made bids worth Rs 4,299 crore and is required to make an upfront payment of Rs 1,106 crore.

The company won 800 MHz spectrum in 11 service areas, but could not defend its 900 MHz spectrum holding in five out of seven circles expiring in 2015-16.

However, RCom spectrum holding in 800 Mhz in some parts of the country cannot be used to offer 4G service as the matter is sub-judice or to start 4G service using those airwaves it will have to pay one-time spectrum fee of Rs 173 crore demanded by government.

Reliance Jio has also added two sets of spectrum-800 Mhz in 10 circles and additional 1800 Mhz in six circles, to boost its 4G services with stable voice calling service.

Bharti Airtel stock price

On March 27, 2015, Bharti Airtel closed at Rs 376.20, down Rs 22.5, or 5.64 percent. The 52-week high of the share was Rs 419.90 and the 52-week low was Rs 299.80.


The company's trailing 12-month (TTM) EPS was at Rs 28.61 per share as per the quarter ended December 2014. The stock's price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio was 13.15. The latest book value of the company is Rs 166.93 per share. At current value, the price-to-book value of the company is 2.25.


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Cancelling JSPL bid and allotment of mines to CIL wrong: HC

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 27 Maret 2015 | 23.25

Following the report, the stock surged 6.5 percent intraday. It closed the day at Rs 157.00; up 4.53 percent.

The Delhi High Court has observed that the rejection of winning bids of Jindal Steel & Power Ltd  (JSPL) for two coal blocks in Chhattisgarh was 'prima facie' wrong as the government was making a mistake in comparing the bids with quotes received for other blocks.

Following the report, the stock surged 6.5 percent intraday. It closed the day at Rs 157.00; up 4.53 percent.

The high court will again hear the case on Friday and asked the government to work out an interim arrangement for the blocks.

The court's observations are seen as a setback for the government, which has seen several legal challenges to auction of coal blocks, particularly by firms that lost out. However, the Centre is pleased about the auction as a whole as it has received high bids. It plans to auction more blocks next month.

The court's observations also come as a relief to JSPL and Bharat Aluminum Company (Balco) that took legal recourse after the coal ministry on Friday cancelled auction process for three blocks for which the companies emerged as successful bidders. On Monday, a bench of justices BD Ahmed and Sanjeev Sachdeva had restrained the government from allotting the Tara mine to Coal India .

The government had disapproved bids for JSPL's Gare Palma IV/2&3 and Tara mine and Gare Palma IV/1 for which Balco emerged as the best bidder. The coal ministry allotted these mines to Coal India Ltd. Both these blocks are operational mines and as per Supreme Court's September 2014 verdict that cancelled 204 captive mine allotments, producing mines have to be surrendered by the previous allottee.

JSPL made the best bid for the Gare Palma IV2&3 coal block at a price of Rs 108 per tonne while foregoing the mining cost. Tara coal block auction closed at Rs 126 per tonne. Balco emerged as the best bidder for the Gare Palma IV/1 at a price of Rs 1,585 per tonne.

After rejection of its bid, JSPL had said it was "puzzled" by the government's decision. It said it had followed a consistent and prudent bidding strategy throughout the coal auction with a serious long-term business perspective.

Jindal Steel stock price

On March 27, 2015, Jindal Steel & Power closed at Rs 157.00, up Rs 6.80, or 4.53 percent. The 52-week high of the share was Rs 350.00 and the 52-week low was Rs 125.05.


The company's trailing 12-month (TTM) EPS was at Rs 3.88 per share as per the quarter ended December 2014. The stock's price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio was 40.46. The latest book value of the company is Rs 142.79 per share. At current value, the price-to-book value of the company is 1.10.


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Vedanta files claim notice against govt under UK-India BIT

Billionaire Anil Agarwal-led group said it will take "all necessary steps" to protect interest against the tax notice on Cairn India.

After Cairn Energy of UK, London- listed Vedanta Group has slapped a notice of claims against the Indian government challenging the Rs 20,497-crore tax imposed on its subsidiary using retrospective legislation.

Billionaire Anil Agarwal-led group said it will take "all necessary steps" to protect interest against the tax notice on Cairn India . The group filed the notice against I-T Department move to impose Rs 20,497 crore in taxes and penalties on Cairn India for allegedly failing to deduct tax on capital gains made by its former parent Cairn Energy while doing a business reorganisation seven years back.

Cairn Energy had in 2006-07 transfered its India assets including the giant Rajasthan oil fields to a new company, Cairn India and got it listed on stock exchanges. It sold major shareholding in Cairn India to Vedanta in 2011. "...

Vedanta's Board of Directors has instructed counsel to file a notice of claim against the GoI under the UK-India bilateral investment treaty (BIT) in order to protect its legal position and shareholder interests," Vedanta said in a filing to the London Stock Exchange.

"If enforced, such tax demand would have serious consequences for Cairn India and therefore Vedanta's investment in Cairn India," the metal, mining and oil major said. Indian government has also made a parallel tax demand on Cairn UK Holdings, for which the Edinburgh-based company has sought arbitration and is seeking compensation under the UK-India Investment Treaty.

Vedanta said the claim notice was the first step required prior to commencement of international arbitration pursuant to the BIT. The company has been advised by leading international counsel that the retrospective tax legislation passed is a violation of protections accorded to investors under the BIT and constitutes a serious impairment of the treaty rights of Vedanta, it said. "Vedanta and Cairn India will continue to take all necessary steps to protect their interest and the interest of their shareholders," it added.

Cairn Energy of the UK also recently sought compensation from the Government of India for the loss in value it suffered due to an "unfair and arbitrary" Rs 10,247 crore tax demand raised using a retrospective tax law. Cairn argued that the imposition of capital gains tax on transfer of its India assets to Cairn India was not only contrary to relevant legal standards but unjust because it was an internal transaction and no shares or assets were sold to any third party to make any capital gains.

Cairn India stock price

On March 27, 2015, Cairn India closed at Rs 215.55, down Rs 7.5, or 3.36 percent. The 52-week high of the share was Rs 385.00 and the 52-week low was Rs 214.60.


The company's trailing 12-month (TTM) EPS was at Rs 21.98 per share as per the quarter ended December 2014. The stock's price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio was 9.81. The latest book value of the company is Rs 206.66 per share. At current value, the price-to-book value of the company is 1.04.


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