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Sobha set to raise another Rs 250 cr from land sale
Sobha Developers, the Bangalore-based realty player, is set to raise another Rs 250 crore by selling a little over 100 acres of its land in Pune. The company has been making headway to settle a part of its Rs 1,900 crore debt by selling part of its 3,000-acre land bank spread across the country. Sobha recently raised close to Rs 530 crore through the Qualified Institutional Placement (QIP) route. With a debt of Rs 1,900 crore, the company was leveraged 1.6 times and it is understood that a part of the proceeds from QIP is being used to settle a part of that.

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'India can cut emission intensity by 20-25%'
But no binding commitments, Ramesh reiterates to Parliament.

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Distributors to see reduction in commissions from today
The New Year may bring challenges for distributors of financial products who had found solace in unit-linked insurance products (Ulips) after the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) had banned entry load on mutual fund instruments from August this year.
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Goldman Sachs to repay $10 bn in govt funds

Goldman Sachs says it is ready to repay a $10 billion government investment today. - Jonathan Weil: Banks trade TARP for bonuses, debauchery, jets">Jonathan Weil: Banks trade TARP for bonuses, debauchery, jets - Stakes well done - Norwest Venture buys 2.11% in NSE for Rs 250 cr - Commodities rise most in 24 yrs - Rupee may rise to 46/$ in 12 months: Goldman Sachs - Major US banks said to apply to repay Tarp The bank made the disclosure in letters to high-ranking congressmen and senators yesterday. Goldman Sachs is one of 10 large US banks that obtained approval last week to pay back a total of $68 billion received as part of the government"s $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program. The program was aimed at reviving the stagnant credit and lending markets. Today is the first day banks are eligible to begin repaying the investments to the Treasury Department. Morgan Stanley is also expected to repay today the $10 billion it received, according to a person familiar with the talks between the bank and the government. Eight other banks received approval last week to repay the government funds: JPMorgan Chase & Co, American Express Co, US Bancorp, Capital One Financial Corp, Bank of New York Mellon Corp, State Street Corp, BB&T Corp and Northern Trust Corp. Before receiving approval to repay the TARP funds, the banks had to prove they could raise capital in the public markets without the support of the government. Repaying TARP funds frees the financial firms of limitations the government imposed on recipients, such as caps on executive compensation.


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