Popular Articles

Jet Airways rises 6%
The stock closed at 52-week high of Rs 468.30, up 6 per cent, on reports that the company has started recruiting pilots to man proposed expansion of the operations due to a rise in air traffic recently. Domestic traffic is reported to have risen 25.80 per cent to 3.9 million passengers in October 2009 from 3.1 million passengers a year ago.

Exports to cross 100,000 units in FY10: Maruti
The country’s largest carmaker, Maruti Suzuki India (MSI), today said its exports are expected to achieve the 100,000 units mark in the current financial year (2009-10).

News of the day

Apple plans to embed ads in operating system
Imagine this scenario. While you are booting your computer or notebook, an advertisement pops up and the screen freezes for some time. The ad could be an audio or a plain visual one. Regardless, it may offer you some product or could even offer the operating system (which enables you to start or boot your computer) free or at a lower cost. Tying you down for a few more seconds, the ad automatically fades away and allows you to continue with the booting process.
Online Business

Govt urges US regulator not to punish Satyam

India has requested the US Securities Exchange Commission (SEC) not to impose any fine on Mahindra Satyam, formerly Satyam Computer Services Ltd (SCSL), as this will impede the new entity’s rehabilitation. - AOL to lay off one-third of its workforce - Intel to pay AMD $1.25 bn, settle all disputes - SEC shares info with CBI on Satyam scam probe - European Commission objects to $7.4 bn Sun-Oracle deal - Cognizant buys UBS captive unit for $75 mn - ADRs gain $11 bn in September The SEC has been probing the company, which is also listed on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), after founder-head Ramalinga Raju disclosed that his company’s accounts had been cooked for years. The scam, according to the Central Bureau of Information (CBI), could be to the tune of Rs 14,000 crore and not Rs 7,800 crore, as claimed by Raju initially. “(Mahindra) Satyam has been put back on its feet. The biggest jolt in the Satyam fraud was to the shareholders and if the SEC imposes a penalty, they will be impacted. It will be a setback to the company, which is in the process of being rehabilitated,” said Salman Khurshid, Union minister for corporate affairs. He was speaking at the sidelines of a conference at the Indian Institute of Social Welfare and Business Management here.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):