13th November 2K18
Economic Times
Ø Delays at NCLT cost banks Rs 4,000 cr: ICRA
Ø Uco Bank seeks Rs 7000 crore capital from the Govt.
Ø IL&FS new board to rebid broking arm ISSL
Ø Competition Commission orders probe against Intel
Ø Vedanta plans to inject Rs 15,000 cr in Odisha
Ø IIP data improves in Sep, inflation eases in October
Ø Kellogg eyeing mega alliance with Haldiram's
*Business Standard*
Ø Oil prices gain over 1% after Saudi Arabia talks of cut in output
Ø India paid far more in cotton subsidies than WTO's prescribed 10%, says US
Ø Unions urge Coal India employees to ignore govt's share sale offer
Ø India's sugar exports hit by falling prices, govt offers transport subsidy
Ø Britannia Q2 net profit up 16% on brand investments, widening distribution
*Business Line*
Ø NITI Aayog seeks more time tofinalise back-series GDP data
Ø JNPT to call bids for SEZ on 296 acres
Ø Jet Airways reports consolidated net loss of Rs 1,261 Cr.
Ø India to lease out half of Padur strategic oil storage to ADNOC
Ø ONGC ordered to pay wharfage compensation to Mumbai Port Trust
Ø USFDA completes Biocon’s Bengaluru plant inspection
*Mint*
Ø Govt refuses to yield on Section 7 of RBI Act
Ø India signs initial pact to lease half of Padur storage to ADNOC
Ø Germany’s SAP to buy Qualtrics for $8 billion in cash
Ø Q2 results: Aurobindo Pharma profit falls nearly 22% to Rs. 611 crore
Ø Diageo sells Seagram’s VO to Sazerac in $550 million deal
Ø Netflix to test lower-price plans as it seeks more Asian users
*Financial Express*
Ø 19 GW of stressed power assets eligible for SHAKTI-II: CRISIL
Ø Bank of India posts Q2 net loss of Rs 1,156 crore on jump in provisions
Ø Abu Dhabi oil co hires India’s strategic oil storage
Ø Whatsapp, Skype, Hike soon to come under regulatory regime; TRAI seeks industry views
Ø Oil India Q2 profit rises over 33 pc, but misses estimates
*Financial Chronicle*
Ø NCLT counsels liquidation of Adhunik as Liberty House defaults on payment date
Ø Jaitley links minimising bad loans with credit flow
Ø PE/VC exits till Oct cross yearly highs
Ø Ruthless competition could cripple telecom, aviation