Archive

Posts Tagged ‘Indian Market’

Crude Oil slides to $118

August 7th, 2008

Oil producers may have to share the additional revenues earned by them as a result of sharp increase in oil prices, if the suggestions of a high-powered committee headed by Mr B.K. Chaturvedi, Member, Planning Commission, get accepted.

The committee, which was set up to examine the financial position of oil companies, is understood to have proposed that such a tax be levied on the producers from pre-New Exploration Licensing Policy (NELP) regime, sources told Business Line. However, the refiners have been excluded from such a levy.

This tax would be in lieu of the existing upstream support mechanism being adopted by the Government to cushion the impact of high crude prices on public sector oil marketing companies (OMCs). The three OMCs – Indian Oil Corporation, Bharat Petroleum Corporation, and Hindustan Petroleum Corporation – together are expected to lose Rs 2,05,740 crore this fiscal.

The pre-NELP regime has two categories – nomination blocks and production sharing contracts (PSC) blocks. While the nomination blocks are mainly held by ONGC and Oil India, under PSC blocks there are private players such as Cairn, and Reliance Industries Ltd among others.

As regards levy of such a tax on the exploration blocks given under the New Exploration Licensing Policy (NELP) rounds, the committee is understood to have proposed that the applicability of such a tax could be studied from the legal and commercial angle. The regime already provides ‘windfall taxes’ to the Government in the form of profit petroleum.

It has also suggested a suitable package which includes oil bonds, some price revision at a slow pace, and upstream contribution along with 100 per cent export parity pricing mechanism for petrol, diesel, PDS kerosene, and LPG.

This export party mechanism will replace the current trade parity structure (weighted average of import and export prices in the ratio of 80:20), which would take out the notional costs that are included into import-parity prices like freight, insurance or landing costs, resulting in reduced prices for marketing companies at the refinery gate. It is also expected to reduce Government’s subsidy burden.

The committee has proposed prices of products to be benchmarked to an average of prevailing price at Singapore, Europe and the US, with a small adjustment for quality, sources said. The committee has also suggested doing away with import duty on petrol and diesel from the current 2.5 per cent to zero. The committee felt that the fuel subsidy should only be for below poverty line (BPL) section of society.

Indian Market News, news , , , , , , , ,

Aegis BPO acquires Nasdaq listed PeopleSupport Inc firm

August 5th, 2008

The Essar group  on Monday said that its Aegis BPO has agreed to buy the Nasdaq listed PeopleSupport Inc firm for $250 million (Rs 1,057 crore). This will the eleventh acquisition of Aegis in past four years. The acquisition would result in revenues of $500 million and also employment for about 29,000 people.

Under the terms of the agreement, Aegis will pay shareholders of PeopleSupport $12.25 per share, a 29 per cent premium to the closing share price on August 1, 2008, said a joint statement from the companies. The company person also added that the deal will be funded through internal accruals of the Essar group.

The US company(PeopleSupport Inc) offers customer management, transcription and captioning and additional BPO services for global clients in areas such as travel, consumer, financial services, healthcare and others. It has three delivery centres in the Philippines and one in Costa Rica.

Indian Market News, Market Gossip, news , , , , , , ,

SEBI nod for Daiichi Sankyo’s offer on Ranbaxy

August 5th, 2008

Daiichi Sankyo is planning to acquire up to 9.21 crore shares at Rs 737 each through the open offer. The Japanese company had announced earlier that it was buying out 34.81 per cent stake in Ranbaxy held by the Singh family. It will also acquire 9.5 per cent through preferential allotment of equity shares and another 4.5 per cent through share warrants to be issued on a preferential basis. Daiichi Sankyo’s stake in Ranbaxy could go up to 58 per cent after the open offer. The entire deal is valued at $3.4-4.6 billion.

However this would increase the stake of Daiichi by 20% in Ranbaxy. Ranbaxy’s share price went up 2.8 per cent to close at Rs 524 on Monday after the final word from SEBI.

Futures and Options Tips, Indian Market News, Market Gossip, news , , , , , , , , ,