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Toyota receives 5,000 bookings for its SUV Fortuner
Within 10 days of launch of SUV Fortuner, Toyota Kirloskar Motor Pvt Ltd received 5000 bookings for its SUV from across India. The company which is present in India through a joint venture with the Kirloskar Group, expects to sell over 2500 units by December 2009.

Jaihind Projects bag Rs 14 cr pipeline contract from BPCL
Engineering and construction firm Jaihind Projects today said it has bagged an order worth Rs 14.05 crore from Bharat Petroleum Corporation Ltd (BPCL) for a pipeline project.

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'I hope to reach 150,000 villages by 2010'
Seema Sindhu / New Delhi January 7, 2010, 0:24 IST
Small Business

IRDA mulling cap on traditional products

After putting a cap on charges on unit- linked insurance plans (ULIPs) products, the insurance-sector regulator, Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority (IRDA) is mulling a similar move for traditional insurance products, a top official said. - IOC to increase Haldia refinery capacity by 25% - Dena Bank to raise Rs 600 cr through equity - Markets give up early advantage, end flat - Singapore bourse extends timings, puts pressure on India"s exchanges - Firms line up for rights issues - NMDC likely to file for FPO by Jan 25 "I would like to see what the experience in ULIP says. May be we will see after six or seven months and then will decide how it (cap on charges on traditional products) can be done or whether it should be done," IRDA Chairman, J Hari Narayan, told reporters on the sidelines of an insurance conference organised by FICCI here today. IRDA, in July last year, had put up cap on the fees an insurance company can charge from a customer-buying ULIPs. For a ULIP product with a tenor of upto 10 years duration, IRDA had capped the charges on yield at 300 basis points and for the products above 10 years duration, the charges can not exceed 225 basis points. IRDA is also planning to come out with the disclosure norms in the next few days for insurance companies looking at listing. "Disclosure norms would come in the next 10 days," Hari Narayan said. "There should be adequate disclosures by the insurance companies for a certain period of time which would enable experts, analysts and investors to assess the performance of insurance companies before they invest in them," he said.


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