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Sensex hits 22-month high; mid-, small-caps shine
It was a classic case of the davids of the world outpacing the goliaths. While the Sensex touched a 22-month high of 17338 in the earlier part of the week, only to turn sideways, the broader indices were the outperformers of the week. The mid-cap sector appreciated by 3.4% and the BSE small-cap space gained 4%.

DGCA may submit report on near-miss at Mumbai airport
The Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DCGA) is likely to submit its preliminary report to the Civil Aviation Ministry tomorrow on last night"s near-miss incident at Mumbai airport when two aircraft took off almost simultaneously from the same runway.

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RIL, ONGC lead stock surge
Heavy buying by foreign and domestic institutional investors saw the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) Sensex rise 2.25 per cent, or 339 points, to close at a 10-month closing high at 15,466. The rally was led by index heavyweights Reliance Industries (RIL) and Oil and Natural Gas Company (ONGC) as global crude oil price touched $71 a barrel after settling above $70 for the first time in over seven months. Firm global markets too helped the rally.
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Dubai crisis not to impact domestic banks: RBI

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) today said the domestic banks do not have much exposure to the debt-ridden Dubai World and hence their balance sheets will not be materially affected from the crisis. - "No significant impact of Dubai crisis on exports" - UK banks" total exposure to Dubai World debt at $5 bn: report - Asian banks have little exposure to Dubai: Moody"s - Markets in consolidation mode - Dubai crisis to impact India"s specific sectors - Determining the state of art - finally! In the larger context, the rating agency Moody"s also said the ratings of Asian banks are not likely to be downgraded, unless there is a massive restructuring in Dubai. RBI Deputy Governor Usha Thorat said that the crisis will not impact the country"s banking sector as the exposure "is not significant and not a matter of concern...It is not something that materially affects their balance sheets". Moody"s also said Asian banks have relatively small exposure to Dubai and Dubai World companies. "Therefore, no rating actions have been taken on Asian banks as a result of the requested standstill on select Dubai World debt payments. Nor does Moody"s expects that there will be any need of negative rating action on Asian banks at a later date...." So far as the domestic banks are concerned, Bank of Baroda has an exposure of Rs 5,000 crore in Dubai. State Bank of India too had provided Rs 1,500 crore to some UAE companies. Moody"s said, "The Asian banks have billions of dollars of exposures to the UAE entities, but this represents small per cent of their assets. To date, we have found no Asian banks to have sufficiently high levels of exposure to members of Dubai World group to warrant any ratings actions."


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