Popular Articles

L&T accepts U'khand govt's demands on hydel project
Infrastructure major Larsen and Toubro (L&T) has accepted all the demands in its implementation agreement with the Uttarakhand government on the 99-Mw Singoli-Bhatwari hydel project in the hilly Rudraprayag district.

Tech Mahindra: Forex gains
The September 2009 quarter results of leading IT players suggest that the global telecom industry is not out of the woods. Indicatively, Infosys and TCS‘ telecom segments’ share in overall revenues posted a decline of 60-70 bps sequentially — even on an absolute basis, their telecom-vertical revenues were lower sequentially. Given the muted outlook for the telecom sector, the topline and operating performance of Tech Mahindra, which derives 60 per cent from Europe and about 50 per cent from its major client, British Telecom (BT), is reasonably good.

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Nabard launches six projects in Karnataka
The National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development (Nabard), which recently increased the corpus of its Tribal Development Fund (TDF) to Rs 600 crore, has launched six projects for the integrated development of tribals in Karnataka.
Small Business

'Unrealistic valuations hampering PE deals'

Many entrepreneurs wanting to sell a stake have unrealistic valuations of their companies. This is a major block for private equity (PE) players to close a deal. Also, many do not have a second plan if talks fall apart, according to speakers at the Private Equity Conference at the Indian School of Business. - PE funds from corporate families on the rise - Religare plans $500-million pan-Asia fund - India"s M&A, PE deal activity to heat up - Ghodawat Energy to go public in three years - South sees 64% drop in private equity investments - PE investments in South drops 64% KK Iyer, partner, India Equity Partners Fund, says many target companies have suspended their plans to seek PE funding during the year 2008-09 due to market conditions. Those that have taken the deals forward are now involved in number crunching. Many promoters are also emotionally attached to the companies and do not want to give up their stake and this hampers the growth plans, he says. According to Aluri Rao, managing director of Morgan Stanley, that more buyouts will happen in three years in India as family businesses will look for a transformation. Besides, many are keen on having a professional approach in running the company. PE players are also wary of investing in start-up companies, Rao said. With fiscal stimulus packages working and enough liquidity in the system, companies are not preferring the PE route for raising capital for growth or diversification, says BV Krishnan, director, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts. PE firms are, therefore, changing their business models including asset management, he adds.


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