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Bank of Maharashtra cuts PLR, deposit rates
Bank of Maharashtra (BoM), today said that it has reduced its benchmark prime lending rate (PLR) by 0.25 per cent to 12.25 per cent.

Army short of 11,387 officers: Antony
The Indian Army is short of over 11,387 officers, Defence Minister A K Antony told the Lok Sabha today.

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Top drug firms take in-licensing route to up sales
Leading Indian drug majors, such as Ranbaxy Laboratories, Dr Reddy’s Laboratories, Piramal Healthcare and Wockhardt, are in-licensing popular products from overseas drug makers to boost their domestic sales. They introduce the in-licensed drugs — which are mostly in the premium skin care segment — on payment of an upfront fee to the brand owners, who also get a share of the sales revenue.
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Nomura revises India's GDP forecast to 7%

In view of a surprising economic growth for the second quarter, Nomura Financial Advisory & Securities (India) today revised the country"s FY10 GDP growth forecast at 7 per cent from 6 per cent earlier. - Tata Power completes FCCB allotment - L&T"s Satyam share sale pulls down scrip - IIMs see better summer - Asia junk bond spreads may widen on surge in sales - Manufacturing sector hiring activity to pick up in Q4: Nomura - Nomura posts Q2 profit at 27.7 bn yen "We are revising our GDP growth forecast for FY10 to 7 per cent from 6 per cent, taking into account recent upside surprises in agriculture and industrial output and emerging signs of recovery in the services sector," Nomura said. India"s GDP grew by 7.9 per cent, as compared to 6.1 per cent in the immediate past quarter, on higher Government spending, a large contribution from net trade and pick-up in private consumption and investment. Describing the "lower agriculture output" as the "immediate challenge", Nomura said it could be a drag on GDP in the next quarter and on rural consumption. "But we expect urban consumption to rebound due to better job prospects," it said. Nomura, however, believes that strong data could pave the way for the Reserve Bank to exit from the "very easy policy settings". "We expect the policy rate hiking cycle to begin in January with a cash reserve ratio hike likely this December," it said.


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