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Confusion confounded
Business Standard / New Delhi December 17, 2009, 0:58 IST

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Aviva ties up with DBS for distribution of insurance plans
Private sector life insurer Aviva India today forged a strategic tie-up with DBS bank for distribution of its insurance products through the bank"s branches to affluent and high net worth (HNI) customers.

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Food inflation at 19.95%, RBI may hike rates
Food inflation touched more than a decade"s high of 19.95 per cent as of December five, driven by costlier vegetables, pulses, milk, wheat and rice, even as economists said they expected Reserve Bank to hike rates to tame price rise.
International Business

Local court restricts Maytas from loans on land collateral

In a major setback to cash-strapped infrastructure firm Maytas Properties, promoted by former Satyam Computer founder B Ramalinga Raju"s family, a local court has passed an order barring the company from using land as collateral for loans. - Hill County customers told to find investors - Criminal cases against Maytas Properties promoters - Maytas Hill Country owners to protest near Raju"s residence - Maytas Hill County in for more trouble - Mauritius firm slaps Rs 806 cr demand on Maytas Properties - Maytas moots CLB man as director on its board Private equity investors JM Financial and the Mauritius-based SRS Orion Investments, which had invested Rs 600 crore in Maytas Properties early 2008, had filed a petition with the court on November 6, after the property firm failed to return the funds. The Hyderabad city civil court in response to the petition has ordered Maytas and its affiliates to maintain status quo until the date of the next hearing on November 26. The order implies that Maytas and its affiliates can not approach the bank or any third party for raising funds till November 26. Moreover, it cannot enter into any agreement with strategic partners for developing projects on its land assets, sources said. In January-February 2008, the PE players had subscribed to Maytas"s Rs 600-crore compulsory convertible debenture. "During and after September 2008, the management and the board of Maytas Properties committed material breaches of the investment agreement and misused more than Rs 250 crore of the investors" monies by transferring them out of the company, and then giving us misleading information about the use of funds," the PE investors alleged.


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