Department seeks investor database on the suspicion of fictitious investors.
As returns decline, with extent and time horizon uncertain, some of these investors look to shift to safer zones
Q1 results indicate more pain ahead, as slowdown has spread to more sectors, pricing power has come down and rising interest cost is eating into profits.
Brokers have only kept guarantees for which they have open positions.
The onus is on you to reject financial products that don't suit your needs.
They can wait, as RBI has indicated the bonds could be linked to CPI in future.
These companies may recall loans in extreme cases; loan-to-value ratio stands at 60% but scrap value at 75%.
Interview with chief investment strategist, Reliance Capital.
Interview with Richard Rekhy, chief executive officer of KPMG India.
Interview with CMD, Motilal Oswal Financial Services
It will improve the purchasing power of many buyers, but high interest payout will be a deterrent.
Demand low, regulatory issues seen as bigger hindrances.
Sales growth slows but expenditure control, lower interest burden save the day.
In the past month, when the Essel Group started picking up shares of the company, IVRCL's stock has risen 31 per cent, a rare feat in a market where infrastructure stocks have been suffering due to slow movement in projects and high interest burden.
Earnings and financial condition of only a few companies influencing sentiment.
There could possibly be some reduction in home/auto loan outgo.
Higher returns, more liquidity draw individual investors to savings accounts.
Till October 14 this year, FIIs were net sellers in equities at Rs 1,132 crore (Rs 11.32 billion) while their debt exposure stood at Rs 20,029 crore (Rs 200.29 billion). This is the first time since 2008 that FIIs are net sellers in equities.
The Indian capital markets have seen far-reaching changes in the last 20 years. Take, for instance, the quantum of wealth created. Total market capitalisation has shot up from Rs 68,870 crore (the value of 1,191 companies listed on the Bombay Stock Exchange or BSE) in 1991 to Rs 59,84,875 crore (the value of over 4,000 companies listed on the BSE as on August 29, 2011).
For home buyers in Noida Extension things have just gone worse. While banks have decided not to disburse loans to residential properties in the area, including those that had no litigation against them, builders are threatening to charge a penalty if payments are not made according to the existing contracts.