Popular Articles

LNG terminal to go on stream in 2012
Construction work on the onshore LNG terminal, coming up at Puthuvype, near here will be completed by December, next year.

Farm sector may shrink in Q3: FM
Agricultural growth in the third quarter (October-December) of the current financial year might be negative, Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee said today.

News of the day

TMC firm in opposing joint operations
Reiterating her opposition to the ongoing joint operation against the Naxalites (CPI Maoist) at Lalgarh, in Paschim Medinipur, Mamata Banerjee said today that her party would continue to oppose it. She has pointed out that the joint operation had not yielded the desired results, as killing of poor people in the junglemahal was continuing.
Online Business

UK asks Tatas to accept revised JLR proposal or risk the plan

The UK government has asked Indian conglomerate Tatas to accept a revised proposal to guarantee hundreds of millions of pounds of short-term funding for luxury brands Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) or risk the plan being taken off, says a media report. - Asian economies may chart global recovery path - Compromise may hold key to Ambanis" dispute: Analysts - TCS recalls 1,200 from the US - Declare Ambani MoU illegal, govt asks SC - NTPC wants to pay marketing margins - Nano passes Euro level crash tests UK Business Secretary Lord Mandelson has warned Tatas -- the owner of Jaguar Land Rover -- to accept a revised proposal to guarantee hundreds of millions of pounds in short-term funding or risk seeing it taken off the table, The Telegraph has reported. Quoting people close to the situation, the report said, "...ministers were surprised that Tatas had not yet provided a response to the latest proposal". The Telegraph said the deal proposed by the British government is understood to have removed a contentious condition contained in the original offer -- "to which Tata objected" -- that would have given the taxpayer board representation at Jaguar Land Rover. "However, it includes a commitment that Tata would not be able to alter the car manufacturer"s business plan without the approval of ministers. It was unclear last night whether the new terms are acceptable to Tata," the report said. It also added the "government was becoming increasingly frustrated with the stance adopted by the Indian company". The publication noted that the government, which was not available to comment on the negotiations with Tatas, is being advised by KPMG and Rothschild. Attributing to Citigroup and Standard Chartered, who are advising Tata Motors, the report said that discussions were "ongoing". Tata Motors acquired Jaguar Land Rover from the US car maker Ford Motor last year for about $2.3 billion.


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