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Banking: RBI to the rescue
The RBI clarification, issued on December 1, 2009, has allowed banks to include technical or prudential write-offs for calculating provision coverage for non-performing assets (NPAs) - mandated to be at a minimum of 70% by September 10. This has triggered a relief rally in bank stocks with reasonably higher NPAs or low provisioning which were underperforming the BSE Bankex (see Prodigal returns).

Bankers don't see interest rate spike in next 6 months
Leading bankers do not foresee any rise in the interest rates at least for the next six months and want the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to keep the monetary stance unchanged in its policy review due later in the month.

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Software fastest growing sector in 2009: Deloitte
Software companies continued to constitute the fastest growing firms in the Deloitte Technology Fast 50 India 2009 programme. This year, the composition of software companies amounted to as much as 80 per cent.
Public Relations

Renuka Sugars acquires Brazil firm for Rs 1,112 cr

It is the first overseas acquisition by an Indian sugar company. - Shree Renuka Sugars jumps 4% - Shree Renuka at new 52-wk high on overseas acquisition - Shri Renuka Sugars acquires Brazilian VDI - Crucial support at 4,950 - Shree Renuka seeks Brazilian sugar mills for supplies - Shree Renuka Sugars surrenders trading membership in NCDEX In the first acquisition of any foreign sugar and ethanol unit by an Indian company, Shree Renuka Sugars Ltd (SRSL), one of the largest producers in the country, has acquired Brazil’s Vale Do Ivaí SA Açúcar e Álcool (VDI) at an enterprise value of $240 million (Rs 1,112 crore). Sugar companies are looking for opportunities abroad, partly due to restrictions on undertaking farming directly. SRSL will pay $82 million (Rs 380 crore) now and the balance over eight years. It plans to finance the acquisition by leveraging the $105 million (Rs 506 crore) it raised through a qualified institutional placement (QIP) of shares in July. Narendra Murkumbhi, MD of SRSL, had earlier said the proceeds would be used on refinery and cogeneration plans. SWEET PLANS FOR INDIA TOO Domestic capacity 2010 2011 Cane crushing (tonnes per day) 35,000 35,000 Ethanol (kilolitres per day) 930 1,200 Sugar refining (tonnes per day) 6,000 9,000 Power (Mw) 173 233 Excess power (Mw) 95 135 The company operates eight sugar mills, five owned and three leased, with a cumulative daily crushing capacity of 35,000 tonnes. The acquisition of VDI includes two sugar and ethanol production facilities in the southern Brazilian state of Parana, with a combined cane crushing capacity of 3.1 million tonnes a year. VDI holds strategic stakes in several logistics assets, including terminals for storage and loading of sugar and ethanol at the port of Paranagua. The acquisition also includes 18,000 hectares of cultivable land under VDI, through which the company meets the larger part of its sugarcane requirements. The land is on long-term lease and used to cultivate cane with an average yield of 95 tonnes a hectare, with recovery of 13 per cent. In India, the yield (around 60-65 tonnes per hectare) and the recovery (a maximum of 11.5 per cent) are lower. VDI has a third production facility in state of the Minas Gerais, which will be spun off to its current shareholders as a consideration for the acquisition. Through this acquisition, SRSL is planning to feed raw sugar demand at its refineries in Gujarat and Haldia, where huge capacity expansion work is under progress. “To meet our objective to focus on sugar refinery, we imported about 0.7 million tonnes of raw sugar last sugar year (October-September) and plan to import about 1.3 million tonnes next year. Going forward, our refinery will require two million tonnes of imported raw sugar to meet the enhanced refinery capacity of 9,000 tonnes per day by 2011,” said Gautam Watve, SRSL’s head for strategy and planning. The company is working to meet up to half of its refinery capacity requirements through import of raw sugar, he added. The acquisition has got the approval of leading creditors of VDI and the other remaining conditions are expected to be completed over the next 45 days. Motilal Oswal Investment Advisors is the strategic advisor to SRSL for this acquisition. Brazil is the largest producer and exporter of sugar, with India being the largest consumer of the sweetener in the world. With the prevailing shortage of white sugar in India, SRSL’s acquisition of crushing units, along with the plantation area, will provide encouragement to other industry stakeholders for a similar move, which the government has also been advocating.


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