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No frowns at Facebook
Facebook: Stock markets have wobbled of late, but has Facebook’s value really plunged by 35 per cent in just two months? For those unacquainted with Silicon Valley’s quirky financing that would be one conclusion to draw from the social networking website’s latest stock sale.
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Jan cement sales in high double-digit

Cement makers today reported double-digit growth in January sales driven by increased demand from housing sector, especially of low-cost homes, and infrastructure. - Shree Cement January sales up 18% - J K Lakshmi January sales up 38% - ACC Dec sales dip marginally in Dec - Jaypee Group to set up 1320 Mw power project in Kutch - Volatile markets end flat on global cues, realty stocks fall - Jaiprakash Associates: Strong numbers Shree Cement, JK Lakshmi and Jaiprakash Associates have recorded better sales growth in the month, while major players like ACC could only witness a marginal increase. Jaiprakash Associates saw its January sales jumping by 60 per cent to 11.65 lakh tonnes, Shree Cement reported a 17.66 per cent rise in sales at 8.82 lakh tonnes, and JK Lakshmi Cement clocked a 38 per cent increase in sales at 5.06 lakh tonnes. But ACC reported almost flat growth at 19.1 lakh tonnes against 18.9 lakh tonnes last January. Generally, cement sales start picking up from January and the peak period ends with the arrival of the monsoons in June. Meanwhile, companies are anticipating poor margins as the industry is adding its highest-ever capacity in a single year. During 2008-09, the installed capacity was 204.8 million tonnes (mt), and this is likely to touch 270 million tonnes per annum (mtpa) by the end of this fiscal. Against this, the annual demand was 178.2 mt in 2008-09 and is expected to be 198 mt by the end of the current fiscal and 220 mt by next the fiscal. Though the industry watchers are projecting a handsome 10 per cent growth in demand in the next fiscal, there will still be a wide supply-demand gap, which is bound to have a bearing on the cement makers" profitability.


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