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Reliance Capital Q2 net dips 32% to Rs 156 cr
Anil Ambani group firm Reliance Capital today reported 32 per cent decline in consolidated net profit for the second quarter ended September 30, while its total income rose by 11 per cent.

Jharkhand politics: All in the family
In Jharkhand politics, it’s sometimes all in the family. Take for example, Jharkhand Mukti Morcha (JMM) chief Shibu Soren, who is a Lok Sabha member. His daughter-in-law Sita Soren, widow of Durga Soren, won the elections from the Jama Assembly seat. Soren’s younger son, Hemant, contested the Assembly polls from the Dumka seat and humbled former deputy chief minister Stephen Marandi. Sushila Hansda of the JMM, who was a sitting party legislator in the last Assembly, was not in the fray from her Litipara constituency this time, but her husband, Simon Marandi, contested on JMM ticket and won the seat.

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Making each paisa count
While pay-per-second tariff plans seem attractive, there’s a lot you need to know before switching over.
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Arcil falls 30% short of bad debt acquisition target: CEO

India"s largest asset reconstruction company Arcil today said it is 30 per cent short of its target of buying bad debts worth Rs 1,800 crore from banks and financial institutions so far this fiscal. - Moody"s retains negative outlook on banking - "Need to provide Rs 5,000 crore to increase coverage ratio" - 'Credit was the main growth driver in Q2' - Abhijit Datta new chairman of Arcil - Banks prefer cash deals for NPA sale - Banks step up sale of bad debt "We are 30 per cent short of our original target (of acquiring bad debts) of Rs 1,800 crore so far this fiscal," Arcil"s Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director S Khasnobis told reporters on the sidelines of AVCJ Private Equity conference here. Khasnobis said "less flow" from the corporate sector as the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) allowed banks to restructure slippages either by extending the repayment time or giving interest rate relaxation caused the firm to be behind target. The RBI allowed banks to restructure their corporate advances as the global financial crisis hit demand and in turn, adversely impacted profitability, resulting in an increase in defaults. Arcil could acquire only around Rs 1,260 crore debt while it should have actually bought around Rs 1,400 crore had it been on target. A large proportion of bad debts bought came from retail portfolios and the rest from corporates, Khasnobis said. "Majority was retail," Khasnobis said. Arcil is India"s largest asset reconstruction company and its promoters include the State Bank of India, IDBI Bank, ICICI Bank and Punjab National Bank.


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