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Dow arm to invest $20 million
Dow Building Solutions, a foaming and insulation technology division of US-based Dow Chemical International, the world’s second largest chemical manufacturer, is contemplating investing $20 million (approximately Rs 98 crore) for setting up a manufacturing plant in India. “Potential for extruded polystyrene (insulation material) in India is very high.

ICRA upgrades ratings for Titan Inds
Titan Industries, the manufacturer of mechanical, digital and quartz watches, jewellery watches etc., has announced that ICRA has upgraded the rating assigned to the Rs 52.83 crore, or 6.75 per cent non-convertible debentures and the Rs 100 crore bond programme of the company to LAA (pronounced as L Double A) from LAA- (pronounced as L Double A Minus) earlier.

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Navi Mumbai body asks banks to pay cess on gold deals
Public and private sector banks in the Navi Mumbai municipal area which have done gold transactions, will have to pay 1 per cent account-based cess on the total turnover. The Navi Mumbai Municipal Corporation (NMMC) could be the first civic body in the country to recover such a cess on gold transaction.
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Sebi panel for compensating victims of public issue scam

Wadhwa Committee wants recovery of Rs 95 crore from those behind the fraud. - IPO scam: Retail investors may be compensated - Jindal Power files DRHP with Sebi - Sebi panel for recovering gains made by IPO scamsters - Ambani gas row dominates SC in 2009 - One phone and address but 38 different entities - Kochi LNG terminal to go on stream in "12 A panel set up by the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) has suggested recovery of Rs 95.96 crore from those who rigged initial public offers (IPOs) between 2003 and 2005. The amount, it said, should be distributed among the affected investors. The scam in 21 IPOs, including that of Jet Airways, NTPC, IDFC, TCS, Yes Bank, Gokaldas Exports, ILFS Investsmart, Suzlon Energy and Shoppers’ Stop, related to scamsters cornering shares reserved for retail investors by opening fictitious accounts. The suggestion was given by the Justice Wadhwa Committee. The value of the shares that were illegally cornered and which were in depositories worked out to be Rs 147.85 crore, said the committee. The balance, kept in bank accounts frozen by the Central Bureau of Investigation, stood at Rs 1.2 crore as on October 31, 2007, it said. The quantum of unjust gains based on allotment to accounts is approximately Rs 95.69 crore while the value of the holdings in the frozen demat accounts in both National Securities Depository Ltd and Central Depository Services Ltd of the key operators and financiers as on October 31, 2007, works out to about Rs 17.85 crore. The committee said for the purpose of payment to the affected retail applicants, the difference between the closing price of the shares on the first day of listing/trading on the National Stock Exchange and the issue price should be considered. “These applicants will not be entitled to the benefits of the price movements subsequent to the listing,” said the report of the committee. The committee said that those who did not get any shares should be reallocated money equally from the recovered amount till they each received the gains from the minimum shares allotted to the lowest category in the IPO. Once that number was reached, any left-over money be reallocated to the partly-successful applicants, the committee said. Former Finance Minister P Chidambaram had assured the Lok Sabha that steps would be taken to reallocate shares to persons who had lost out on allocation of shares on account of the IPO scam.


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