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CBI team back from Mauritius
Meanwhile, a second chargesheet in the multi-crore Satyam scam will be filed soon, as the CBI team probing the case has returned from Mauritius with some bank details from the island nation.

GMR Hyd inks deal with CFM to build training centre
GMR Hyderabad International Airport, a subsidiary of GMR Infrastructure, has signed an agreement with the world’s leading aircraft engine manufacturer, CFM International, to establish a new CFM56 maintenance training centre to support its customers in the South Asian region. CFM International is a 50:50 joint venture between Snecma (Safran Group) of France and General Electric Company (GE) of the United States.

News of the day

Inflation to drive future action
Business Standard / New Delhi October 28, 2009, 0:09 IST
Corporate

Comexes given 6 more months for divesting foreign equity

The government today gave a second extension up to March 31, 2010 to commodity exchanges to fall in line with the foreign investment ceiling of 5 per cent for an individual investor within the cap of 49 per cent. - Comexes" turnover rise 32.92% till Sep 15 this fiscal - FII inflows to cross $10 bn-mark this month: Analysts - UAE may allow 100% ownership of businesses - FDI up 56% as India beats recession blues - Foreign investment up 5-fold to $15 bn in April-June - Raise FDI cap in defence to 49%: US firms The Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion (DIPP), however, has said this would be the "last opportunity" for complying with August 19, 2008 guidelines which required the commodity exchanges to bring the overall foreign investment ceiling to 49 per cent, within which the portfolio investment would be limited to 23 per cent and FDI to 26 per cent. Over and above this, no foreign investor/entity was to hold more than 5 per cent of equity in these companies. "Difficulties have been brought to the notice of the government in complying with the provisions...Within the stipulated time frame," the DIPP said in its latest Press Note 7 of 2009. It said non-compliance would be a violation of the Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999. The department had originally given a deadline of June 30 this year which was later extended to September 30. The country"s leading commodity exchange NCDEX is in the process of complying with DIPP guidelines. Global investors holding more than five per cent - Intercontinental Exchange and Goldman Sachs - have clinched a deal with Shree Renuka Sugar for divesting their NCDEX stake beyond 5 per cent. All commodity exchanges will have to inform the DIPP, Department of Consumer Affairs, Foreign Investment Promotion Board, Forward Market Commission and Sebi of their foreign investment composition.


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