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IT parks again on Madhya Pradesh government agenda
After frustrating traditional bid attempts for its SEZ-categorised IT parks in Indore, Bhopal, Gwalior and Jabalpur, the Madhya Pradesh government is likely to re-bid for the parks through Swiss Challenge System, under which the government can also take offers from private parties, unsolicited. It is also likely to change the model of sale of IT parks so that the developers can attract private partners. Crystal IT park in Indore, a complete infrastructure of eight-storied building, has no taker for years, and the Bhopal IT park is reportedly going the same way before it can see the light of day. Few months back Zoom Developers pulled out of the Crystal IT park project after successfully bidding for it.

Private hospital sector may touch Rs 2 lakh cr by 2012: Study
The private hospital sector is expected to touch $45 billion (around Rs 2,00,000 crore) in the next three years riding on growth in Tier-II and Tier-III cities, a study said.

News of the day

Japan Airlines to cut 1,000 jobs, seek more loans: Sources
Japan Airlines Corp (JAL), restructuring under state supervision, is likely to tap financial institutions for around 170 billion yen in additional loans while considering cutting more than 1,000 jobs through an early retirement program after October, sources said.
Small Business

Indian banks pass stress test: Fitch

Rating agency Fitch in a report today said that Indian banks would remain resilient to face stressful conditions in the current and next financial years. - Bank unions to meet IBA over wage revision - Australian banks make it to Global Finance"s safest banks list - Dhanalakshmi Bank plans brand transformation - PSU banks expect pick up in credit offtake post-Sept - Free ATM withdrawals face caps from Oct 15 - Banks to cap third party ATM cash withdrawals from mid-October Profits of the banking system will give them ability to absorb sharp increases in credit cost, leaving the aggregated capital unimpaired, according to the report. A stress test on 30 Indian banks, which account for 78 per cent of the banking system’s assets, indicates that capital is protected for a majority of the banks. However, some weak banks would need to raise core capital to guard against the effects of the current downturn in the credit cycle, Fitch said in a statement. According to the report, credit cost of the banks has reached 2.28 per cent of loans compared with an annual average of 0.7 per cent during 2005-09. The assessment takes into account restructured loans and corporate lendings turning into bad loans, the largest contributor to the stress. The increase in credit costs is based on Fitch’s estimates of potential impact of different sectors to which Indian banks are exposed, while maintaining a loan loss reserve of 60 per cent for non-performing assets (NPAs). The report said that the stressed operating profit of banks could absorb the increased credit cost, leaving the system’s aggregate capital unimpaired. Nine banks failed the ‘profit test’ due to various reasons such as weaker margins, high restructured loans, portfolio concentrations or a combination of all these. The impact of the profit shortfall on their Tier I capital was marginal for most of the banks and not crippling for any. The Reserve Bank of India"s (RBI"s) took counter-cyclical steps during the credit boom in 2005-08. It increased general provisioning which helped Indian banks better prepare for the downturn. While specific loan loss provisioning for the banking system is 50 per cent of gross NPAs, it goes up to 72 per cent for the system together with general provisions. The coverage ratio will decline if it is adjusted for the restructured loans.


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