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Cox & Kings' Aussie arm acquires 2 firms
Cox & Kings (Australia), the wholly-owned subsidiary of Cox and Kings (India), a travel and tour company, has bought MyPlanet Australia and Bentours International through a share sale agreement from First Choice Holdings Australia. The acquisition is being done through an ‘earn-out mechanism’ and is not being paid for from funds raised for acquisition from the company’s recent initial public offering (IPO). http://smallpersonalloans.org.uk

Govt studying use of hydrogen as alternative fuel
Government today said it was carrying out research and development for using hydrogen as an alternative fuel for running transport and other power generation applications.

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Spectrum policy under fire in RS
The Opposition on Thursday lambasted the telecom ministry, alleging that the 2G spectrum allocation to mobile operators resulted in a loss Rs 60,000 crore to the exchequer, a charge rejected by the government. Leader of Opposition Arun Jaitley said in the Rajya Sabha that the difference in the valuation of spectrum awarded by the government in 2007 to private players and the value realised in transaction with foreign companies in each case had been minimum Rs 6,000-7,000 crore.
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SBI deposit rates cut 25-50 bps

The bank extends 8% home loan scheme till March. - SBI extends 8% home loan scheme to March 2010 - SBI cuts deposit rates by 25-50 bps - Subdued showing in 2nd quarter by banking majors - 8% home loan scheme to stay: SBI - Law to cut SBI stake likely soon - Union threatens strike against State Bank of Indore-SBI merger The country’s biggest lender, State Bank of India (SBI), today slashed interest rates on domestic term deposits by 25-50 basis points (bps) across maturities to reduce cost of funds. It also extended the tenure of its popular home loan scheme till March 31, 2010. The fresh cut in deposit rates is being seen as a trade-off for extending the tenure of the home loan scheme. A senior SBI official said, “Though RBI (Reserve Bank of India) signaled the end of its easy monetary policy, it did not increase policy rates. We do not expect the rates to rise at least till March 2010. In fact, they could dip slightly. The system is flush with resources, which provides us room to slash deposit rates and also extend the tenure of the home loan scheme, which is giving business.” The new deposit rates will be effective from November 9. This is the eighth cut in deposit rates by SBI in the current financial year. The steepest drop in rate (of 185 basis points since April) has been for deposits with tenures of one year to less than two years. The new rate for this segment is 6.25 per cent. The lender’s cost of funds has come down to 6.06 per cent from 6.30 per cent at the end of March 2009. The bank has brought down the share of high-cost bulk deposits in total deposits to 3.6 per cent in September 2009 from 16.82 per cent a year ago. It shed high-cost bulk deposits to the extent of Rs 49,700 crore in the April-September period. A slow growth in credit demand and a 200 bps cut in the prime lending rate has hit earnings from interest income. These have put pressure on margins, reflected in a sharp drop in net interest margin from 3.16 per cent (September 2008) to 2.43 per cent. The State Bank of India official said the home loan segment had brought the bank good business. Sanctions under the segment have crossed Rs 15,000 crore. Outstanding home loans at the end of September were Rs 62,338 crore, up from Rs 50,584 crore a year ago. For loans up to Rs 5 lakh (of 10-year tenure), SBI charges a fixed rate of 8 per cent for five years. Loans above Rs 5 lakh and up to Rs 50 lakh carry a fixed interest rate of 8 per cent for the first year and 8.5 per cent for second and third years.


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