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What Economic Survey hints about Budget 2015's tax policy

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 28 Februari 2015 | 08.10

The Economic Survey released by the government offers two important cues on tax policy changes in Budget 2015, reports CNBC-TV18's Menaka Doshi.

The Economic Survey released by the government offers two important cues on tax policy changes in Budget 2015, reports CNBC-TV18's Menaka Doshi.

The survey talks about boosting manufacturing activity in the country and suggests that "an intervention that can be immediately implemented is to eliminate the current negative protection facing Indian manufacturing."

This suggests that the Budget could tackle inverted duty rate structures and may increase specific customs duty. An intervention that can be immediately implemented is to eliminate the current negative protection facing Indian manufacturing.

We spoke with Pranav Sayta of Ernst & Young who said electronics and telecom could get customs duty relief. Some sectors such as FMCG and chemicals may also get a reprieve thanks to the free trade agreements India has signed with ASEAN etc.

"If that comes in, we can say Indian manufacturing as been put on a level-playing field," he said, adding that customs duty for ultra mega power projects could be made zero.

"The inverted duty structure issue has been addressed over the past few years though there are still about 62 odd cases left to be addressed," said Rohan Shah of ELP. "But it needs to be done in an even-handed manner. If you are import-dependent, you have to treat it as one basket. If not, subject to WTO rules, the customs rate can go up."

The second cue has to do with expanding the tax base. The eco survey says "overall revenue-to-GDP ratio for 2014 as estimated at 19.5 percent by the IMF, needs to move toward levels in comparator countries -- estimated at 25 percent for emerging Asian economies and 29 percent for the emerging market countries in the G20.'

This suggests that Finance Minister Arun Jaitley may articulate his government's strategies to expand India's meagre tax-paying base.


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WTI Crude Oil posts its first monthly gain since June

Investing.com - Investing.com -- Crude Oil finished the month of February above $49 a barrel, marking the first monthly gain since last June when oil prices began a prolonged slide.

On the New York Mercantile Exchange, WTI crude oil for April delivery rose 2.65% or 1.27 points to $49.45 a barrel. The sharp increased continued the trend of volatile price fluctuations, as prices have wavered dramatically over the last several weeks.

Daily oil prices have moved more than 2% in an up or down direction in 25 of the last 38 trading days, according to the Wall Street Journal. The large swings have caused the CBOE Crude Oil Volatility Index to skyrocket in recent weeks.

Oil futures dipped on Thursday to $48.15 a barrel, one day after the Energy Information Administration (EIA) said in its weekly report that U.S. crude oil inventories rose by 8.4 million barrels last week. The EIA expected inventories to increase by 4.0 million barrels in its weekly forecast.

Oil prices moved up slightly throughout the day before the oil services firm Baker Hughes (NYSE:BHI) released its weekly U.S. rig count during midday trading. The count for oil and gas rigs nationwide dropped by 43 from last week's total of 1,378. The nationwide right total is also down by 502 in comparison with the count from last year at this time. Following the release, the price for WTI crude oil fell below $48.50 a barrel before quickly rebounding.

On the Intercontinental Exchange (ICE) Friday, brent crude for April delivery rose 3.61% or 2.19 points to $62.90 a barrel. At the start of the week, brent crude fell below $60 a barrel following comments from the Nigerian oil minister that Opec could consider calling an emergency meeting if prices continued to plunge.

Elsewhere, natural gas went up 1.26% or 0.034 points to 2.732.

Oil prices have dropped more than 50% since June, the fourth-largest decline for oil ever over a six-month period.

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Here's what you should expect from Economic Survey

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 27 Februari 2015 | 08.10

The big news point that the markets will watch out for tomorrow is the Economic Survey report. Economists expect the survey to address the 14th Finance Commission report and other macroeconomic targets.

The big news point that the markets will watch out for tomorrow is the Economic Survey report. Economists expect the survey to address the 14th Finance Commission report and other macroeconomic targets. CNBC-TV18's Ekta Batra tells what we can expect from that document tomorrow.

Watch video for more...


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Here's Joe Bell's view of US equity market

Watch the interview of Joe Bell Senior Equity Analyst Schaeffer's Invst Research with Menaka Doshi on CNBC-TV18, in which he shared his reading and outlook on US equity markets.

Watch the interview of Joe Bell Senior Equity Analyst Schaeffer's Invst Research with Menaka Doshi on CNBC-TV18, in which he shared his reading and outlook on US equity markets.

Watch Video for more.....


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Gold futures up as Yellen concludes testimony before Congress

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 26 Februari 2015 | 08.10

Investing.com - Investing.com -- Following steady upward movement in Asian trading, gold futures reversed most of the gains in American trading on Wednesday afternoon before settling slightly higher.

On the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange, gold futures for April delivery jumped $7.30, or 0.61% to $1,204.60 in late-afternoon trading. Gold prices hit an intraday high of $1,211.70 during European morning hours.

On Tuesday, gold dropped to $1,190 to reach a seven-week low, before settling at $1,197.30, down 0.29% or $3.50. Futures were likely to find support at $1,177.80, the low from January 5, and resistance at $1,215.30, the high from February 20.

In Asia, the price of gold futures soared as investors in China returned to markets after a week-long break for the Lunar New Year. China is the second-largest buyer of the precious metal in the world. Investors in Asia also scurried to gold after the dollar weakened slightly on Wednesday.

The U.S. dollar index, which measures the greenback's strength against a trade-weighted basket of six major currencies, dipped 0.25 or 0.26% to 94.23.

Still, the dollar remained relatively unchanged after Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen finished her second day before Congress during the first of two semi-annual Humphrey-Hawkins Testimonies she will make in 2015.

Unlike Yellen's appearance in front of the Senate Banking Committee on Tuesday, members of the House Financial Services Committee spent little time on Wednesday discussing monetary policy. When addressing a potential interest-rate hike, Yellen reiterated that the Fed could wait several additional meetings before raising rates.

A delay in raising interest-rates is often regarded as a positive sign for gold, as it lowers the price of holding onto the precious metal.

Meanwhile, silver futures for May delivery increased 0.31 or 1.94% to $16.55 a troy ounce. Elsewhere on Comex, copper for May delivery rose 0.06 or 0.23% to $2.65 a pound.

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Yellen says Fed is not seeking to change Dodd-Frank

Investing.com - Investing.com -- One day after facing a hard line of questioning from Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D., Mass.) on enforcement of the Dodd-Frank law, Janet Yellen reiterated on Wednesday that the Federal Reserve is not seeking to alter the 2010 act.

Introduced by President Barack Obama's administration in June, 2009, the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, brought the most significant changes to financial regulations nationwide since reforms enacted after the Great Depression.

Asked by Rep. Jeb Hensarling (R., Texas), chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, on whether the central bank will urge Congress to make changes to the law, Ms. Yellen expounded on her comments from Tuesday's Senate hearing.

"We are not asking Congress to alter it. The act provides considerable flexibility for the Federal Reserve and other regulators to tailor rules that are appropriate to institutions that we supervise," Yellen said. "It's been a very useful piece of legislation, it has provided a roadmap for us to take strong action to improve the safety and soundness of the financial system. We have found ways to use the flexibility that the act affords us."

During his time on the floor, Hensarling also made reference to Warren's critique of Fed general counsel Scott Alvarez on Tuesday. In late-2014, Alvarez reportedly suggested that legislators should reconsider the terms of a provision of Dodd-Frank known as the "swaps push-out." Warren, in her comments, suggested that Alvarez overstepped his ground with the proposition. Following her testimony on Tuesday, Yellen came to Alvarez's defense.

Later, in response to a question from Rep. Bill Huizenga (R, Michigan), Yellen indicated that the Fed has offered policy advice to Congress in regards to Dodd-Frank in situations where it felt the legislation hampered its ability to appropriately supervise an entity.

"A case in point would be the application of the Collins Amendment to our ability to design appropriate rules for insurance companies," Yellen said.

In September, President Obama signed the changes of the Collins Amendment into law. Under the guidelines set forth in the law, the Fed is not required to apply leverage requirements of Section 171 of Dodd-Frank to insurance companies regulated by state insurance agencies.

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IPO timings to be guided by sector performance: Ortel Comm

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 25 Februari 2015 | 08.10

Ortel Communications, which is promoted by BJD's Jay Panda is all set to tap the capital markets and raise close to Rs 250 crore.

Ortel Communications, which is promoted by BJD's Jay Panda is all set to tap the capital markets and raise close to Rs 250 crore. CNBC-TV18's Prerna Baruah caught up with Panda and began by asking him about the timing of the initial public offering (IPO) that opens on March 3.

Below is verbatim transcript of the interview:

Q: When are you planning to initiate the IPO?

A: Ortel's public issue is guided by the investment banker's advice and it depends on the sector. This is a sector which has not had an issue for a while and a company which has last mile network and is geared for triple play and is not only providing TV signals but also broadband in a big way, has a certain cache to it.

Q: Could you outline the valuations for Ortel Communications?

A: The company has had three rounds of private equity funding. Two PE investors have already exited. The new silk route is doing a partial exit and they will continue to have a presence in the company and regarding the valuation the price band has been announced today and the final price of course will depend on the demand on the day of the issue.

Q: The company is largely in cable network business and high speed broadband. How do you wish to compete with your peers like  Den Networks or Hathway Cable , what is the strategy for the company going forward once the public issue is successful?

A: Ortel has been benchmarked to global industry standards from its founding. If you look worldwide the biggest providers of both TV signal and broadband are the so called cable companies except that they are different, internationally all cable companies are built last mile.

In India that has not been the case, Ortel has been an exception and I think some of the peers are today also trying to build their last mile, this makes a huge difference.

Den Networks stock price

On February 24, 2015, Den Networks closed at Rs 119.25, down Rs 4.4, or 3.56 percent. The 52-week high of the share was Rs 246.15 and the 52-week low was Rs 100.10.


The latest book value of the company is Rs 98.83 per share. At current value, the price-to-book value of the company was 1.21.


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Disys to invest $15mn in India ops over 3-5 years

US-based staffing and IT services provider Disys has announced plans to expand its India base in Chennai. Operating in 11 countries besides the US, the company will now oversee a large chunk of its IT services in America and across the world from a new 700-member-strong Chennai-based facility.

US-based staffing and IT services provider Disys has announced plans to expand its India base in Chennai. Operating in 11 countries besides the US, the company will now oversee a large chunk of its IT services in America and across the world from a new 700-member-strong Chennai-based facility.

The company's CFO, Tom Fink also told the company was planning to invest about USD 15 million in its India operations in the next three to five years.

"Expansion is integral to the company's billion-dollar revenue target for 2017," he said.


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Financial Inclusion: A mighty challenge to overcome

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 24 Februari 2015 | 08.10

As financial inclusion takes centre stage with the agenda of inclusive growth, sustainable development and poverty eradication, India seeks to build on the momentum to achieve its quest of providing access to affordable financial services.

As financial inclusion takes centre stage with the agenda of inclusive growth, sustainable development and poverty eradication, India seeks to build on the momentum to achieve its quest of providing access to affordable financial services. With the Prime Minister's Jan Dhan Yojna ensuring viable steps to empower low income groups and provide access to formal banking system, there is still a long way to go before the goals of financial inclusion can be achieved. To address this in detail, Niti foundation organised a policy round table on building capacity for sustainable financial inclusion where industry stalwarts and policy makers discuss the opportunities and challenges aligning financial inclusion and financial capacity in the country.

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Chicago Fed National Activity Index edges higher for January

Investing.com - Investing.com -- Bolstered by improvements in the Production-related indicator, the Chicago Fed National Activity Index edged higher for the month of January, one month after experiencing a slight decline.

The Chicago Fed National Activity Index (CFNAI) increased to +0.13 in January, from a three-month average of negative 0.07 for the month of December. Three of the four indicators that comprise the index -- employment-related indicators, consumption-related indicators and production-related indicators -- increased for the month, while only one indicator made a negative contribution to the index in January.

Industrial and Manufacturing production both increased by 0.2% in January, as production-related indicators made a positive 0.02 % contribution on the month -- up from a negative 0.22 contribution in December. An indicator on Sales, Orders and Inventories also increased to a positive 0.03 after producing a reading of neutral in December.

Employment-related indicators fell from plus 0.18 in January from plus 0.28 a month earlier, as the unemployment rate moved up slightly from 5.6 to 5.7 percent.

Though the Personal Consumption and Housing indicator still remained below zero for January, it increased to negative 0.1 for the month from negative 0.13 in December.

The CFNAI is a weighted average of 85 existing monthly indicators of national economic activity.

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U.S. homeland security chief worried about al Shabaab mall threat

Written By Unknown on Senin, 23 Februari 2015 | 08.10

By Anna Yukhananov and Will Dunham

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. homeland security chief said on Sunday he takes seriously an apparent threat by Somali-based Islamist militants against prominent shopping sites in the West including the Mall of America in Minnesota and urged people there to be careful.

Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson was reacting to a video attributed to al Shabaab appearing to call for attacks on Western shopping areas, specifically mentioning Mall of America, the West Edmonton Mall in Canada, London's Oxford Street and sites in Paris.

Mall of America and West Edmonton Mall issued statements saying they were implementing extra security measures.

"This latest statement from al Shabaab reflects the new phase we've evolved to in the global terrorist threat, in that you have groups such as al Shabaab and ISIL publicly calling for independent actors in their homelands to carry out attacks," Johnson told the CNN program "State of the Union," using an acronym for the militant group Islamic State.

Staff Sergeant Brent Meyer of Canada's Royal Canadian Mounted Police said authorities are looking into the video but "there is no evidence at this time of any specific or imminent threat to Canadians." A spokesman said London police were aware of the video and were assessing it.

Asked about the threat to Mall of America, one of the world's largest shopping complexes, Johnson said: "Anytime a terrorist organization calls for an attack on a specific place, we've got to take that seriously." He advised people going to the Mall of America to be particularly careful.

Minnesota is home to a sizeable Somali population. U.S. law enforcement officials have been concerned about the potential for radicalization among some of the community.

A Minnesota man was indicted last week on charges of conspiring to support Islamic State and lying to federal agents investigating recruitment by militant groups.

Prosecutors said dozens of people from the Minneapolis-St. Paul area, many of them Somali-Americans, have traveled or attempted to travel overseas to support groups such as Islamic State or al Shabaab since 2007.

"I'm very concerned about the serious potential threat of independent actors here in the United States. We've seen this now in Europe. We've seen this in Canada," Johnson said.

Mall of America is a large private mall in Bloomington, Minnesota, that has about 40 million visitors a year, and contributes nearly $2 billion in annual economic activity to the state of Minnesota, according to its website.

The West Edmonton Mall in Alberta, Canada, gets about 30.8 million visitors a year and has the world's largest parking lot, according to its website. Oxford Street is one of London's busiest shopping areas, home to several large department stores.

Al Shabaab claimed responsibility for an attack on a high-end Westgate shopping mall in Nairobi, Kenya in 2013 that killed 67 people, raising fears about the safety of malls around the world.

Security officials in Canada have been on alert in the wake of two attacks by Muslim converts last year including a gunman who attacked Canada's Parliament in October, fatally shooting a soldier at a nearby war memorial.

Inside the Mall of America on Sunday, where there were no visible signs of enhanced security, Nick Disbrowe, 23, said he was not entirely surprised when told about the videotape released by al Shabaab.

"If anyone is going to target anything, it's the Mall of America," he said.

(Reporting by Will Dunham, Anna Yukhananov and Valerie Volcovici; Additional reporting by Jeffrey Hodgson in Toronto and Todd Melby in Bloomington; Editing by Robin Pomeroy and Stephen Powell)


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Insight - Ten days that shook the euro; how Greece came to the brink

By Alastair Macdonald and Jan Strupczewski

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The "rock star" took on the rock. And the rock won.

Germany's Wolfgang Schaeuble, the "immovable object" in the words of one economist, stopped Greece's charismatic new finance minister Yanis Varoufakis in his tracks, forcing Athens to extend a bailout programme on Friday on terms its government was just elected to get out of.

It was not just German opposition. The new Greek found itself without a single firm ally among 18 euro zone peers in its drive to reverse austerity and renegotiate its debt pile.

The 10 days it took to strike a deal featured a shambolic round of U-turns, leaked drafts and personal slights while panicked savers withdrew money and pushed Greek banks close to failure, forcing Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras to step in over Varoufakis's head.

More than that, the confusion officials recounted from behind the scenes left mutual trust in such tatters that it casts doubt on whether the four-month bailout extension will lead to an agreement over how to keep Athens solvent.

So short had goodwill become that when Varoufakis sent a letter on Thursday requesting an extension to the bailout he had long resisted, in language that to non-lawyers sounded close to total capitulation, German negotiators quickly shot it down as a "Trojan horse", worded to wriggle out of conditions.

The principal actors played down personal animosities during the talks; Varoufakis took pains to apologise to Schaeuble for a Greek newspaper cartoon that depicted the 72-year-old former tax lawyer as a Nazi demanding to boil Greeks down for soap.

But a series of trips to Brussels to hear about the evils of austerity from the casually dressed left-wing academic blogger - "a bit of a rock star" in the words of Ireland's minister - stretched patience thin.

When Varoufakis, 53, strolled in an hour late with a cameraman in tow to last Monday's finance ministerial meeting, witnesses said Schaeuble's scowl and sharp words from Dutch chairman Jeroen Dijsselbloem set the tone.

At a previous meeting five days earlier, the wheelchair-bound German waited in an underground car park while the Greek minister phoned Tsipras for approval after Varoufakis had struck a deal that the other 18 thought was final.

Still believing an agreement was in the bag, Schaeuble flew home to Berlin, only to find on landing in the early hours that the Greeks had changed their minds and they were back at square one.

Even those who fretted Berlin was pushing Tsipras too far to renege on campaign promises concede the novice government in Athens did itself no favours by demanding World War Two reparations and not giving a clear account of its plans.

In a heresy against the "no Grexit" credo Schaeuble intoned in public, Maltese Finance Minister Edward Scicluna said of the Germans last week: "They've now reached a point where they will tell Greece 'if you really want to leave, leave'."

Most of Europe still recoils from the disruption and loss of confidence in the euro that "Grexit" might entail. It was enough to persuade German Chancellor Angela Merkel to back the 240-billion-euro bailouts and still seems to sway her thinking.

But with Tsipras, untried 40-year-old leader of the leftist Syriza party, wielding a mandate to ease the debt burden and boost spending, leaders are concerned Greek finances could yet run out of control as repayments fall due.

"The biggest threat to Greece was that their banking system would go belly up next Wednesday," said Irish Finance Minister Michael Noonan, describing Friday's deal as a stopgap measure.

Schaeuble called it a "date with reality" for Tsipras which he would struggle to explain to voters whose hopes he raised.

Even as Tsipras was telling Greeks that "we won a battle" if "not the war", Noonan was telling Irish voters, who have also suffered grievously under a bailout programme, that Varoufakis's combative style had secured "absolutely nothing ... that could be considered a concession".

Athens' approach may even have cost it some flexibility, as Schaeuble and his officials demanded ever tighter drafting of terms to stop Greece smuggling in semantic loopholes.

CLAIM AND COUNTER-CLAIM

It all started more promisingly. Euro zone finance ministers first sat down with the Greeks on Feb. 11, two weeks after the government was formed, to work out a plan before the bailout programme ran out at the end of this month. Varoufakis seemed to be on a charm offensive to calm nerves.

Christine Lagarde, the French conservative who heads the IMF, Greece's other main creditor, called Varoufakis "competent and intelligent".

Four hours later, ministers headed home, saying a joint statement would set up a final agreement.

It was not to be. Varoufakis, a political independent who one EU official labelled "a communist in a Burberry scarf", had to check with Tsipras to ensure he could carry his coalition behind the deal. Tsipras said no.

As Schaeuble flew back to Berlin, Dijsselbloem, the Eurogroup president, had to announce to a much delayed midnight news conference that, in fact, there was no common statement.

With money starting to flow faster out of Greek banks, the next day EU leaders sat down for the first time with Tsipras at a scheduled summit to which Merkel and French President Francois Hollande had flown after all-night Ukrainian negotiations in Minsk.

They gave their new Greek counterpart the floor. He pleaded for a break from austerity for his people. Merkel and others insisted they would not pre-empt the finance ministers' talks.

After both sides' technical experts worked over the weekend to find common ground, a frisson of elation rippled through the Greek camp before another round of ministerial talks began on Monday, Feb. 16. That proved another false start.

As Varoufakis told it later, he had been on the point of signing a draft offered by Pierre Moscovici, the French former finance minister who is now EU economics commissioner. But when he strode in to the negotiating room, Dijsselbloem handed him an entirely different text.

As with many of the specific moments of the 10-day crisis, accounts vary among those present. Greek officials spoke of an attempt to "trick" Varoufakis and of sharp words in the room.

The European Commission said Moscovici "contributed ideas" in a discussion with Varoufakis but said there was no Commission proposal separate from that put forward by the Eurogroup.

Either way, euro zone ministers said it was now up to Athens to request an extension before a further meeting on Feb. 20.

Noting the bailout expiry would cut Greece off from funds, Schaeuble said: "On Feb. 28, at midnight, it's over."

With Greek bankers watching capital flee, the European Central Bank kept them on a tight leash of emergency liquidity.

By Wednesday night, Greek officials said, Varoufakis and Tsipras had refined many drafts and sent the extension request.

It appeared to concede on all key points, saying Greece would honour all its debts and bailout terms. Yet Germany scotched their hopes, insisting the letter was, in the words of a leaked Eurogroup briefing note, a "Trojan horse".

HOME TRUTHS

Later on Thursday, Merkel and Tsipras spoke on the phone for the best part of an hour. For the Greek side, which pushed in vain for a top-level political summit on how to reshape the austerity policies of the euro zone, the call was a chance to be heard.

For German officials, who were voicing concerns that Tsipras had started to announce measures to reverse spending cuts, it gave Merkel an opportunity to underline how far Athens had lost its partners' trust and to make clear only a watertight text could pass the German parliament.

With the benefit of Merkel's briefing, it was Tsipras who led negotiations on Friday, over the telephone to Dijsselbloem in Brussels, officials on both sides said.

As financial markets braced for possible capital controls over a three-day Greek bank holiday weekend, Dijsselbloem and Lagarde shuttled between Schaeuble and Varoufakis in separate rooms bearing draft texts.

With a Greek bank collapse looming, Tsipras took the responsibility of accepting a deal he believed he could sell to his broad coalition of far left and far right.

His spokesman said: "These last three weeks were tough weeks for a new government which, let's not kid ourselves, we're not trying to fool anyone, hasn't got the relevant experience."

Opinion polls show most Greeks preferred an "honourable compromise" over a further clash with Europe or abandoning the euro. They are prepared to give Tsipras time.

Greek sources said Tsipras intervened in part to shield Varoufakis who, as a newcomer to Syriza, does not yet command the trust of party hardliners. The pair remain close.

Varoufakis was subdued and said little at Friday's Eurogroup, according to those present.

It was a mark of Greece's isolation that the last hitch came from Spanish Finance Minister Luis De Guindos insisting there be a new meeting on Tuesday if Athens fails to come up with a satisfactory list of policy measures for the next four months.

Spanish conservatives fear concessions to Tsipras will boost their anti-austerity challengers in an election late this year.

That Tsipras has embarked on damage limitation does not concern German officials reassured to have extracted a tight legal text: "It's no problem that Tsipras is now ... claiming victory," one said. "All that counts is what is down on paper."

But it is trust as much as law that holds the 19-state euro zone together. And that may be harder to fix. As Dijsselbloem said late on Friday, quoting a Dutch proverb: "Trust leaves on horseback - and returns on foot."

(Additional reporting by Francesco Guarascio and Tom Koerkemeier in Brussels, George Georgiopolous, Costas Pitas and Deepa Babington in Athens, Padraic Halpin in Dublin and Noah Barkin in Berlin. Editing by Mike Peacock)


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Overdrive: Facelifts upgrades of Verna, Jetta Amaze

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 22 Februari 2015 | 08.10

Every product has a calculated lifecycle and even the most successful ones need to go under the knife once in a while to stay fresh and relevant in their categories. Overdrive puts the spotlight on three such cars, the Amaze, the Jetta and the Verna. Rohit Paradkar of Overdrive gives you details.

Every product has a calculated lifecycle and even the most successful ones need to go under the knife once in a while to stay fresh and relevant in their categories. Overdrive puts the spotlight on three such cars, the Amaze, the Jetta and the Verna. Rohit Paradkar of Overdrive gives you details.

Watch video for more...


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Centre to introduce draft bill on small factories in Budget

The NDA government is all set to move amendment proposals to Child Labour (Prohibition and Regulation) Bill and Factories Act, 1948 and introduce Draft Bill on Small Factories (Regulation of Employment and Condition of Service) in the upcoming budget session, Union Labour Minister B Dattatreya said today.

The NDA government is all set to move amendment proposals to Child Labour (Prohibition and Regulation) Bill and Factories Act, 1948 and introduce Draft Bill on Small Factories (Regulation of Employment and Condition of Service) in the upcoming budget session, Union Labour Minister B Dattatreya said on Saturday.

The Minister said once the Bill is passed with amendments, the Child Labour Bill would have more tooth to deal with serious issues related to child labour. "Employing children below 14 years is totally banned.

Children between 14 and 18 years should not be assigned works of hazardous and critical nature. Anybody violating the provisions of the law would be imprisoned besides being fined penalties," Dattatreya told reporters at a press conference here. The Parliamentary Standing Committee on Labour examined the Bill and submitted its report in December 2013.

The report was considered through an inter-ministerial consultation, he said. Dattatreya said the new Small Factories (Regulation of Employment and Condition of Service) Bill is aimed at regulating factories with workforce less than 40. After obtaining comments and views of all stakeholders including general public, the Bill will be placed before the Cabinet for approval and subsequently in Parliament during the budget session, he added.

The Amendments to the Factories Act 1948 would give flexibility to states on industries, besides enhancement of penalties for violation of provisions, he added.

On migrant labour issues, the Minister said he would hold discussions with Ministry of External Affairs for better security and health aspects of workers abroad. He also said he would hold talks with labour ministers of Telangana, Karnataka, Orissa and Chhattisgarh on child labour issues.

Dattatreya also said he would ask the Telangana Chief Minister K Chandrashekhar Rao to issue a white paper on the progress of Dilsukhnagar bomb case.


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