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Market reaction positive to Bharti dropping MTN
The share price of telecom major Bharti Airtel Ltd today rose 4.01 per cent to close at Rs 435 on the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) after the lengthy talks to acquire African telecom company MTN failed on Thursday for the second time. The stock today touched a high of Rs 467 and a low of Rs 434 on BSE.

Global CO2 emissions could fall by 3% in 2009: IEA
Carbon dioxide emissions, the main driver of global warming, could fall three per cent worldwide in 2009 due to the global economic crisis, the International Energy Agency said today.

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Area under wheat in Punjab to touch 35.20 lakh hectares
There might be political uproar over the meager revision of MSP of wheat (Rs 20 per quintal hike), but the farmers in Punjab are firm on expanding the area under wheat cultivation. The state agriculture department is hopeful that this year also the total area under wheat would surpass the designated target of 35.20 lakh hectares.
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DC Design, Carnation tie up for mass segment

Jagdish Khattar-promoted Carnation, a multi-brand car sales and servicing network, and the Dilip Chhabria-owned car design boutique DC Design have entered into a joint venture that will help the design studio offer its services to the mass segment at lower price points. Before this, DC’s services were restricted to high networth clients. - Service satisfaction - Carnation to sell auto spare parts under its own brand - Khattar"s car servicing foray to branch into branded spare parts - Driving dynamics - Carnation in JV with Hyd firm “This is a red letter day for us at DC Design. Our partnership with Carnation would broaden our design services to more customers in Carnation’s 11 outlets, which is expected to touch 30 soon,” DC Design founder Dilip Chhabria said. According to the business model that was inked today, DC Design would provide the design for cars and luxury bus coaches, while the sales and servicing part for the designs will be taken care of by Carnation. However, this partnership does not mean DC Design will route all its businesses through Carnation. “We will continue to offer B2B and B2C services outside this agreement,” Chhabria said. The joint venture would offer services for Toyota’s Innova, Tata Motors’ Nano, Honda’s City and Maruti’s Swift. Prices range between Rs 45,000 and Rs 4.95 lakh. Three more models — Toyota’s Fortuner, Force Motors’ Tempo Traveller and one from Skoda — would also be covered soon. Carnation CMD Jagish Khattar said future plans of the company to open multi-brand new car outlets would have to relooked in the aftermath of today’s agreement. “With our partnership with DC Design, I think there’s more profit margins in selling new cars that bear DC’s design rather than just brand new cars,” he said. Carnation operates multi-brand car servicing centres, used car outlets, and offers car accessories. DC Design said it would tap Carnation’s facilities once its tooling and fitting facility in Pune reaches full capacity. “We would train the multi-brand car service stations’ technicians on design aspects,” Chhabria said. Mumbai-based DC Design is the only car design boutique in the country. The unorganised sector currently comprises car mechanics offering car fitments. No reliable figures are available pertaining to this market. “In the US and Europe, the customised car market is pegged between 2 and 5 per cent of the overall passenger vehicle segment. We expect India to assume this size. Last year, we posted a 40 per cent growth compared with the previous year,” Chhabria, who retrofits around 100 luxury cars every year, said. The average cost of retrofitting a high-end luxury car with top-of-the-class features like LCD TV and leather seats is Rs 25 lakh. DC Design also retrofits Volvo buses, which costs about Rs 2 crore. Chhabria said over 90 per cent of his business comes from the coach business and very little from cars. The car design boutique is majority owned by Chhabria and a clutch of private investors. “Financially, we would be self sufficient at this rate of business orders for the next five years. I have no plans to either raise funds or induct fresh investors,” Chhabria said.


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