BMW launches 6 Series Convertible
HUL buys back shares worth Rs 625.30 crore till March 23
Sistema Shyam IPO likely this year
High-speed mobile broadband services provider Sistema Shyam Teleservices (SSTL) today said it may come out with an IPO this year to raise funds to expand its services in the country.
The company has so far invested over USD 2.2 billion (around Rs 9,900 crore) in India, and it is set to invest Rs 30 crore for the roll-out of data service across Andhra Pradesh, the Chief Sales Officer, Mr Atul Joshi, said after launching the high-speed mobile broadband service — MBlaze — in Andhra Pradesh.
SSTL, through a joint venture between Sistema of Russia and Shyam Group India, offers its telecom services under the MTS brand, he said.
To a question, he denied having received any notice from any authority or TRAI cancelling the 2G spectrum licence granted to SSTL.
Panel to rewrite financial sector laws will meet on April 5
Goldman CEO says ex-director Rajat Gupta spilled secrets
Goldman Sachs Group Inc chief Lloyd Blankfein testified that former director Rajat Gupta violated confidentiality by leaking boardroom secrets to hedge fund manager Raj Rajaratnam.
Blankfein was called to testify by prosecutors in Manhattan federal court about Goldman's results in 2008, and a crucial investment that September by billionaire Warren Buffett at the height of the financial crisis -- secrets that prosecutors said were given to Rajaratnam.
The Goldman CEO's appearance on the witness stand for more than three hours on Wednesday intensified the focus on what is already the largest Wall Street insider trading case since the prosecutions of speculator Ivan Boesky and junk bond financier Michael Milken in the 1980s. Rajaratnam, a one-time billionaire, could face 20 years in prison if convicted.
Blankfein replied "yes" when prosecutor Andrew Michaelson asked whether disclosure of boardroom talks by Gupta went against the bank's confidentiality policies. The CEO gave his answer after a recording was played of an FBI wiretap in which Gupta and Rajaratnam discussed possible Goldman deal activity.
Rajaratnam, 53, looked pensive as Blankfein spoke. Following the end of morning testimony, Blankfein shook Rajaratnam's hand after jurors had left the courtroom.
Blankfein called Galleon a "prominent client" for Goldman but said he did not regularly communicate with the hedge fund. Goldman has not been accused of wrongdoing.
Prosecutors say Rajaratnam, the founder of Galleon Group, illegally made USD 45 million from 2003 to 2009 in stock trades based on tips from insiders, including highly placed executives in corporate America.
Keeping information privaate
Blankfein, 56, told jurors that Gupta broke Goldman policies by telling Rajaratnam about the board's discussion in June 2008 of a possible merger with the commercial bank Wachovia Corp or an insurance company.
Asked whether American International Group Inc was under discussion, Blankfein said, "I don't have a specific recollection, but it probably would have been."
Prosecutors played an FBI tap of Rajaratnam's mobile phone from July 29, 2008, in which Gupta and Rajaratnam discussed Goldman, Wachovia and AIG.
But during cross-examination, Rajaratnam lawyer John Dowd showed Blankfein press reports from June 24 and July 11 of 2008 suggesting that Goldman might buy a commercial bank.
Rajaratnam's defense is that his trades were based on his own research and publicly available information. He has vowed to clear his name at trial.
Blankfein also said it would have been confidential information that Goldman on September 23, 2008, would get a USD 5 billion injection from Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Inc, given that investors would view it as a "very positive sign."
He also said it would have been confidential to disclose the following month that Goldman was on its way to a surprise fourth-quarter loss, its first as a public company.
"We generally make money," Blankfein said, prompting laughter from jurors and others in the crowded courtroom.
For the government to win a conviction, its evidence must convince the jury that Rajaratnam received information from someone who had a fiduciary duty to keep it secret.
Blankfein, wearing a dark suit, white shirt and blue tie, testified that it would have been "fine" for Gupta as a director to talk generally with outsiders, but that details of Goldman's board meetings themselves are confidential.
The US Securities and Exchange Commission on March 1 accused Gupta of tipping Rajaratnam about Goldman's results and Buffett's investment. It said Rajaratnam made more than USD 17.5 million in illicit gains from trades on the leaks.
Gary Naftalis, a lawyer for Gupta, declined to comment on Wednesday, and repeated earlier comments that the SEC allegations are baseless. Gupta, a former worldwide managing director at the McKinsey & Co consulting firm, has countersued the SEC. He has not been criminally charged.
Two longtime friends of Rajaratnam, former McKinsey partner Anil Kumar and former Intel Corp managing director Rajiv Goel, have testified that they violated confidentiality policies by leaking company secrets to the hedge fund manager.
Oil hovers above $105 amid Middle East conflict
Oil prices hovered above $105 a barrel Thursday in Asia near a two-year high as traders closely watch an unprecedented wave of violent protests and uprisings in the crude-rich Arab world.
Benchmark crude for May delivery was down 26 cents to $105.47 a barrel at midday Singapore time in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract added 78 cents to settle at $105.75 on Wednesday, the highest since Sept. 26, 2008.
In London, Brent crude was down 12 cents at $115.43 a barrel on the ICE futures exchange.
Oil has jumped 24 percent since Feb. 15 as violent conflict roils the Middle East and North Africa.
Israeli warplanes hit Hamas targets in Gaza early Thursday, retaliating for rocket attacks on Israeli cities and a bus stop bombing in Jerusalem a day earlier.
Coalition missiles strikes have pounded forces loyal to Libyan leader Muammar Qadhafi for five days, giving rebels breathing room to regroup. With Mr. Qadhafi refusing to step down and U.S. President Barrack Obama ruling out a land invasion, the conflict could face a stalemate that keeps most of the OPEC nation’s 1.6 million barrels a day of crude production shut down longer than investors had initially anticipated.
In Syria, a crackdown on anti-government protests escalated Wednesday as police killed at least 15 demonstrators in the southern city of Daraa. Meanwhile, Yemen declared a 30-day state of emergency in a bid to quell an expanding uprising against the 32-year rule of President Ali Abdullah Saleh.
Crude prices were also supported by signs U.S. consumers aren’t letting rising fuel costs crimp demand. The Energy Department said gasoline inventories fell 5.3 million barrels last week, and gasoline stocks are down 8.9 percent during the last five weeks.
“The bulls got themselves into a tizzy because of the reported draw in gasoline,” energy consultant The Schork Group said.
In other Nymex trading for April contracts, heating oil fell 0.7 cents at $3.05 a gallon and gasoline dropped 0.6 cents to $3.02 a gallon. Natural gas added 0.6 cents to $4.34 per 1,000 cubic feet.
Tally Solutions restructures business
The Bangalore-based, Tally Solutions, an accounting software company, is restructuring its business, which went through a slowdown in the last five to six years ever since the company acquired two companies — JL Informations and Vedha Automation in 2005 and 2006. After the takeover, Tally Solutions could not handle the sudden exponential growth of employees as a result of the merger. The speed of growth had its own challenges, which reduced the quality and performance of the company in a large way, said Shoaib Ahmed, President, Tally Solutions. In an interaction with journalists, Mr. Ahmed said that the root cause for the slowdown was speed at which it grew. The challenges were cultural fitment of all the employees of three companies. It led to erosion of the value of the product in the market.
Last year, the company decided to rework the business strategy and improve the performance bar. It started engaging and aligning with the business partners and customers' requirements.
He said the company had appointed two-tier partners — master tally partners (MTP) and secondary tally partners (STP).
With the restructuring process, the company had decided to work closely with 140 MTPs and 18,000 STPs. Each MTP would have a maximum of 150 STPs. Of this 10 to 15 would be dedicated partners for Tally.
To improve businesses of these partners, Tally had decided to allocate 40 per cent as their direct commission. Of which, 25 per cent would be for MTPs and the balance for the STPs, he said.
Tally has nearly 5.5 lakh registered users across all segments. But there are 35 lakh small and medium business (SMB) units across the country that are still untapped. Tally was all set to handle the growing needs of the SMBs. But the unforeseen sluggishness in the business and pricing strategy did not attract customers.
Sensex opens 119 points higher
The Bombay Stock Exchange benchmark Sensex opened over 119 points higher on Thursday on sustained buying by funds in fundamentally strong shares influenced by a firming Asian trend following overnight gains in the US market.
The 30-share barometer, which has gained over 367 points in the past two sessions, added 119.32 points, or 0.65 per cent, to 18,325.48 in the first few minutes of trade.
In a similar fashion, the wide-based National Stock Exchange Nifty index moved up by 38.95 points, or 0.71 per cent, to 5,519.20.
Meanwhile, Asian market commenced higher following a firm closing in the US market last night.
Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index was up by 0.59 per cent and Japan’s Nikkei by 0.22 per cent in early trade today. The US Dow Jones Industrial Average ended 0.56 per cent higher in yesterday’s trade.
Rupee gains on strong shares, dollar inflows
At 10:30 a.m. (0500 GMT), the partially convertible rupee was at 44.7700/7750 per dollar after closing on Wednesday at 44.83/84 per dollar, its highest level since Jan. 4. It has traded in a range of 44.75-44.89 so far in the day.
"It is possible the rupee will rise with inflows likely to continue. The sentiment will remain positive as long as the flows continue," said Rohan Naik, head of foreign exchange trading at Standard Chartered Bank in Mumbai.
Indian shares gained 0.6 percent in early trade on Thursday, with financials leading the rise, taking cues from strong Asian markets.
Foreign funds in 2011 have bought $374.55 million worth of shares through March 22. However, they have sold shares of about $1.84 billion so far this year.
The euro's losses against the dollar and high global crude oil prices may temper the rupee's gains, dealers said.
Oil is India's biggest import item and domestic oil refiners are the largest dollar purchasers in the local forex market.
Brent crude fell for a second day on Thursday, shedding as much as 0.5 percent towards $115, after the resignation of Portugal's prime minister rekindled eurozone concerns, prompting oil traders to unwind long positions and take profits.
The market was still vulnerable to spikes as attention remained focused on turmoil across the Middle East and North Africa.
The euro fell on Thursday, pulling further away from a 4-1/2 month high versus the dollar on heightened worries that heavily indebted Portugal will require a bailout from the European Union.
The index of the dollar against six major currencies was up 0.15 percent at 75.949 points. At the end of local trade on Wednesday, it was at 75.636 points.
The one-month onshore forward premium was at 31.00 points, higher than its previous close of 30.50, while the three-month premium was at 84.75 points versus 86.50 and the one-year was at 295.75 points from the previous 296.50.
The one-month offshore non-deliverable forward contracts were quoted at 45.03, weaker than the onshore spot rate. In the currency futures market , the most traded near-month dollar-rupee contracts on the National Stock Exchange, the MCX-SX and the United Stock Exchange were all at 44.7950, with the total volume at about $2.05 billion.
Facebook To Buy Mobile App Developer Snaptu
Facebook has agreed to buy Snaptu, an application developer for mobile devices that are less sophisticated than smartphones, as the world's largest Internet social network focuses on expanding its mobile services.
Facebook will pay up to $70 million for the London-based Snaptu, according to the Israeli newspapers Calcalist and The Marker.
Snaptu confirmed the deal, which is expected to close in a few weeks, on its website on Sunday.
Facebook spokesman Jonny Thaw declined to comment on the deal's terms, but said in an email, "As part of Facebook, Snaptu's team and technology will enable us to deliver an even better mobile experience."
The site has been increasingly focusing on building up its mobile phone services for its 500-million-plus member online social network, and is in the market for more deals. Last week, Facebook said it had hired a member of Google Inc's corporate development team to lead its fledgling merger and acquisition efforts.
Snaptu, founded in 2007, develops applications for feature phones, which have fewer capabilities than smartphones. The company helped develop a feature phone Facebook app earlier this year.
#HappyBirthday, Twitter
by now we’ve all heard the fascinating story of how Twitter was born, five short years ago. No matter what the three founders, Jack Dorsey, Biz Stone and Evan Williams, thought of the messaging platform’s potential, at the time, I’ll bet they couldn’t have guessed that it would one day help put presidents in power and play a role in toppling dictators. Going by Dorsey’s description that Twitter was about “a short inconsequential burst of information, chirps from birds,” they really couldn’t have known.
Despite no end of tweets about the most mundane and apparently meaningless, even silly, things, Twitter turned out to be anything but inconsequential. Some have even referred to it as “the world’s stream of consciousness.”
In part, the success of Twitter comes from the whole shift the Web has been going through for the past few years. If you could define this change in one non-technical word, it would be Democratization.
Remember when the Web went mainstream? Institutions, companies and other big guys realized in slow shock that the little guys, or any guys for that matter, could also build a presence on the internet. And sometimes that presence gave the big fish a good run for their money. Well, much the same thing has been happening now, with anyone who cares to acquiring a voice. That voice could be on a blog, in comments, on social networks.
So that’s where Twitter fitted right in and pushed forward the web’s transformational agenda.
Today Twitter is growing at breakneck speed and there are numbers to prove it. Even though Facebook outnumbers it, Twitter is uniquely positioned in the socialsphere and has both been changed by the world, and changed the world.
From early on, Twitter has very much been a dynamic network in the process of creation by people – developers, who made it easy to use in ways the Twitter team hadn’t thought of, and “Tweeple” who made it useful by using it the way they do. It was users who invented the Retweet which finally saw a dedicated button on the network. It was people who used the hashtag # as an ingenious way to mark and peg tweets around a topic, making it searchable and usable. So, if you were to think of how smartphones are made, it’s really the manufacturers who put in everything to make the device feature-rich and usable. The user just has to grab it and use it as much or as little as desired. But if you take something like Twitter, you’ll see that it isn’t about being handed over a bunch of features. It’s about coming up with a great idea, made immeasurably better by those who use it.
As for third party developers; they created a whole industry of sites, tools and apps to add features to Twitter, among them the popular Tweetdeck, Twitterific, Hootsuite, Twitpic and so many more. Third party developers also developed clever and easy ways of giving a user analytics. Never before was it so easy to see who reads what you write or clicks on what you recommend, how influential you are in your online community or how far your reach goes in the Twitterverse. This measurability added to the many reasons Twitter is the darling of digital marketers.
It’s so ironic that today the same developers are truly cheesed off with Twitter for trying to take control and run the network its own way. While it’s understandable that the company would need to do this to grow the network to make good business sense, it isn’t understandable that the developers should be fobbed off with a ‘So long, and thanks for all the fish’.
There are many events that could be called a part of Twitter’s timeline for the past five years. For me, some of the most important are when it went from “What are you doing” to “What’s happening?” It symbolizes in no uncertain terms how journalists and big news organizations no longer solely and wholly owned news. Today many of us go straight to Twitter when there’s something big happening in the world and most times you can see the lag between the first few tweets and your favorite news anchor breaking it after it’s been broken. It’s amazing that today you’ll probably find the news guys getting their news on Twitter. Sweet justice, I say.
Luckily, journalists found a way to use Twitter to their advantage instead of going under and today you’ll find well known news personalities right within your reach, a tweet away. If you have something sensible to say, that is.
Other turning points were when Twitter began to become part of other networks, sites, and now “real life” media. It was never in doubt that people would use it to brand and market stuff – and many companies like Dell, have proved they can and do make money thanks to Twitter.
Another turning point has been the socialization of mobile phones and tablets and how ths has made the 140-character status updates on-the-spot meaningful. Twitter has really redefined real-time when it partnered with the smartphone. Just ask Google, who had to add a whole layer of real-time search to its engine.
And much as happens in real life, there’s been not-so-good stuff on Twitter too. Strange people shoot to fame, inexplicable trending topics make you wonder how much time humankind wants to waste on silliness, and people get hired and fired, shoot to fame and fall flat in shame, get burgled, get saved, get spammed and get rich.
The ultimate proof of the pudding for those who still believe Twitter and other social networks are just about what you ate for breakfast, is the way they have helped people get together to bring about a whole spate of revolutions across a big chunk of the world. Now, that’s a good thing or a bad thing depending on whether you’re a dictator or not, but one thing’s for sure: no one can fail to take this five-year-old seriously again.
RIL loses top spot to Tata as best Indian brand
Surprisingly, Reliance lost its position slipping to 133 from 108 with a brand value of USD 6.99 billion. Along with Reliance, other brands like ICICI Bank, BPCL went down on the list.
On the positive side, SBI and Infosys climbed higher, while Indian Oil, Bharti Airtel and Wipro made a new entry to the list.
Among the global brands, Google emerged as No 1 with a brand value of USD 44.29 billion leaving big daddies like Wal-Mart, Microsoft and Apple behind. Wal-Mart slid from No 1 position to No 3, Microsoft, however, climbed to No 2 position from No 5 last year. Vodafone is at No 5, whereas Apple moved up from No 20 position to No 8 this year
Crude may head to $150-200/bbl in two years: Baer Cap
“Crude may head to USD 150 per barrel or USD 200 per barrel in next two years,” he added.
Talking about India’s performance as an emerging market, he said that India has been an underperformer for past few months as the market has moved towards a bottom end of the trading range, mainly because of mounting crude prices and inflation.
“The Nifty can be seen trading between 5000-6000 levels, while the Sensex will amble between levels of 17,000 to 20,000.” However, he also said that India may see solid performance going forward.
On the other hand, he also said that there is no point in getting carried away with the emerging markets and developing markets comparison issue. "There is no such thing as a generic developing market and you cannot put Japan and US in the same basket," he added.
Sharing his opinion on the RBI's latest interest rate policy, he said, "RBI is probably ahead of the curve and while the inflationary pressures won’t go away, they are mainly a function of higher commodity prices or higher crude prices in particular and it is not something that can be directly dealt with the RBI simply increasing rates."
The economy drives investors, not Libya or Japan
Any expectation that the bombing of Libya by US, British and French forces would prompt a rush into safer assets has been easily trumped by investors focused on the underlying strength of the world economy.
With the exception of gains in the price of oil and a bit of gold action, markets on Monday paid scant attention to the military intervention, instead buying riskier assets such as stocks.
Put bluntly, investors are primarily driven by the long-term growth prospects for the global economy and while there are many risks to this at the moment, they are still on the margins.
Libya — with disruption to its 2% of world oil output already priced in —does not matter from that perspective as things stand.
"The events in Libya ... do not jeopardise the global economic outlook," Berenberg private bank told its clients.
Japan, comprising 6% of the world economy, is a different matter, of course. But even here, the underlying issue for investors is the impact of Japan's triple disasters on global growth.
Hence, their spirits were lifted on Monday by indications that the nuclear meltdown threat was easing and by estimates from the World Bank that a temporary Japanese slow down would have only a modest short-term impact on the nearby region.
"There will be a major hit to wealth, but hasn't that been priced in already?" said Andrew Milligan, head of global strategy at Standard Life Investments.
The Nikkei average fell close to 20% in the days following the earthquake, before recovering somewhat, prompting some investors to say there had been too great a reaction.
"Frequently, something out of the blue like this, an extraordinary event, really creates a buying opportunity. I have seen that happen in the United States, I have seen that happen around the world," billionaire investor Warren Buffett said.
"I don't think Japan will be an exception."
Risks
None of this is to say that Libya and Japan do not present risks to investors.
Japan's nuclear crisis, for example, is not over and could yet become more serious for the country's people and economy. There are also major unanswered questions about the extent to which the disaster will stop Japanese overseas investment.
The country is a major driver of mergers and acquisitions, for example, as well as foreign direct investment.
In Libya, a prolonged military campaign could build concern. More directly, it remains part of a broader pattern of revolt across the Arab world that has pushed the price of oil into territory where some economists worry about its impact on growth- and profit-dampening inflation.
Brent crude was above USD 115 a barrel on Monday as the intervention in Libya heated up. But this was well short of its recent peak just shy of USD 120.
It was also a recovery from losses experienced after the Japanese earthquake and tsunami when traders sold on the initial expectations — now somewhat reassessed — that the disasters could seriously hurt global growth.
The recovery, though, would be categorised as a "healthy" demand-driven price rise as opposed to a more negative supply-driven one.
The biggest concern for investors is if the turmoil spreads seriously to the core oil producers, notably Saudi Arabia, or if the crackdown on mainly Shi'ite protesters in Bahrain prompts more tangible outrage from Iran.
Moving along nicely
Even then, it would be the impact on the global economy from higher oil prices due to short- or long-term supply disruptions that would cause investors to rush to safer assets.
And a lot would depend how quickly it spiked, how long it held there and what the impact on consumer confidence was.
"Simulations at USD 200 a barrel send Western economies into recession and at USD 150 barrel growth is somewhat weaker but recession can be avoided," said Sarah Hewin, senior economist at Standard Chartered Bank.
This is a long way off. So for now, the reason that investors seem calm about Libya and less anxious about Japan is that the global economy is doing well.
The International Monetary Fund projects that global growth will be in the region of 4.4% this year, well above average for the past 20 years.
Even a worst case scenario for Japan and a big spike in oil would not cut this too much. And JPMorgan economists estimate that growth may be even higher than the IMF suggests.
Global manufacturing surveys, they calculate, imply growth of more than 5%.
Will Satyam succeed in contesting the Rs 616-crore claim by I-T
Mahindra Satyam shares were weak in noon trade, but off day’s lows, as the company grapples with a Rs 616-crore claim from the Income-Tax department. The company has already moved the Andhra Pradesh High Court challenging the I-T department's claim.
Some analysts tracking the stock are confident that the company may win the case against the I-T department, and do not see a major downside in the stock.
"It would not have any significant impact on the stock," said SP Tulsian from tulsian.com.
"The company has a strong case to plead for. It may emerge successful in the writ petition filed in the High Court of Andhra. Sales figures were inflated during 2003-04 to 2008-09. Hence, the question of taxing those sales revenue does not arise," Tulsian said.
The income tax department had last year served a notice to Mahindra Satyam, demanding for an audit of its accounts for the assessment years (2003-04 to 2008-09) as the company was found guilty for illegally claiming tax credit on fictitious income during the period.
Satyam, once one of the top five IT majors in the country, was hit by an accounting scam in 2009 after its founder Ramalinga Raju admitted to overstating profits for many years.
"It is not a case of tax evasion. In fact, there is nothing to read much out of this," said a senior official at a retail broking house.
"If the company manages to win the I-T case, it could trigger a significant upside in the stock. However, we are still in the wait and watch mode looking for further clarification on the case," he said.
At 1226 IST, the stock was trading at Rs 66.50, down 0.8%, after having touched Rs 65.05 earlier in the session.
Tata Motors To Raise Prices As Input Costs Jump
The increase in prices will be effective April 1, the company said in a statement.
"Despite continuous cost control initiatives, the company is being forced to take these increases on account of (a) steep rise in input costs," the company said.
The price increase in passenger cars will be in the range of Rs 7,000 ($155) to 15,000, or about 2 per cent. Utility vehicles prices would go up by between Rs 13,000 and 36,000, the company said.
Car sales in India hit a record high in February, driven by a burgeoning middle class and easier access to loans, but a hike in interest rates and a jump in input costs due to higher global commodity prices remain concerns for the sector.
Earlier this week, the company said its global vehicle sales rose 14 percent in February to 102,411 units.
Tata Motors, part of India's salt-to-software conglomerate Tata group, manufactures commercial and utility vehicles, and cars including the Nano, touted as the world's cheapest car.
Tata Motors to hike prices of passenger vehicles
Tata Motors on Friday said it will hike the prices of its passenger vehicles, excluding the Nano, by up to Rs. 36,000 from April 1, to offset rising input costs.
“Despite continuous cost control initiatives, the company is being forced to take these increases on account of steep rise in input costs,” Tata Motors said in a statement.
Under the revised price, the Indica will be costlier by Rs. 7,000-Rs. 9,000, Vista and Indigo CS by Rs. 8,000-Rs. 11,000 and Manza by Rs. 10,000- Rs. 15,000.
The Nano will, however, not be revised.
In the utility vehicles segment, depending upon the model, Sumo prices will go up by Rs. 13,000- Rs. 15,000, Grande by Rs. 16,000- Rs. 19,000, Safari by Rs. 18,000- Rs. 29,000, Aria by Rs. 30,000- Rs. 36,000 and Venture by Rs. 9,000-Rs. 12,000.
Crude oil futures extend losses, down 1.39 per cent
Crude oil prices fell by 1.39 per cent to Rs. 4,403 per barrel in futures trade today, extending its slide, despite partial recovery in Asian trade.
At the Multi Commodity Exchange, crude oil for delivery in March shed Rs. 62, or 1.39 per cent, to Rs. 4,403 per barrel, with a business turnover of 7,713 lots.
Likewise, the oil for delivery in April also fell by Rs. 62, or 1.37 per cent, to Rs. 4,470 per barrel, with a business volume of 1,225 lots.
Analysts attributed the fall in crude oil futures prices to off-loading of positions by speculators. However, partial recovery in Asian trade capped the losses.
Meanwhile, crude oil for delivery in April rose by 86 cents to $ 98.04 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange, on bargain-hunting following the previous day’s massive sell-off.
As gasoline prices soar, U.S. mulls tapping strategic reserves
With the current unrest in the Middle East propelling gasoline prices to an all-time high in the United States, the Obama Administration is looking into a host of options to bring it down, including tapping the nation’s strategic oil reserves.
“It (strategic oil reserve) is an option we are considering, but there are a number of factors that go into it and it is not price-based alone. It’s important to look at history about it and the times when it has been used. So I wouldn’t look to a price threshold,” White House Press Secretary Jay Carney told reporters at his daily news conference.
In some parts of the country, gasoline prices have crossed the $3.5 per gallon mark.
“I would say that the price of oil is one of a number of factors that are looked at, rather, in making that determination, but not the sole factor,” he said.
Oil prices climbed to $106 a barrel on Monday.
“Is there a major disruption in the flow of oil? That’s obviously a factor. I think the point that we want to make is that we’re very cognizant of the fact that Americans are experiencing a sharp rise in prices at the gas pump and that affects them and their family budgets and we are monitoring that very closely,” he said.
“Meanwhile, we are in discussions with oil-producing countries as well as the IEA about the various options that are available in the global system to deal with a major disruption, should that occur,” Mr. Carney said.
State Department spokesman P J Crowley said the price of gasoline has nothing to do with America’s judgement regarding who should govern Libya in the future.
“It’s an economic factor, yes. Back to the question of if there’s a legal process that results in our recognising someone else or a group as an interim government of Libya, the price of gas will not enter into that judgement,” he said.
Bharti Airtel launches 3G service in Delhi circle
The country’s largest telecom player, Bharti Airtel today launched 3G service in Delhi circle, enabling subscribers to access high speed internet and video telephony.
The company launched its third Generation of Mobile services on the back of a robust network powered by over 1,800 3G sites in the National Capital Region spanning Delhi, Gurgaon, Faridabad and Noida.
Bharti Airtel is the third private operator after Tata Teleservices and Reliance Communications to launch 3G services in the country. State—run BSNL and MTNL are also offering these high speed services.
Besides, Airtel’s 3G services are already available in the seven cities - Bengaluru, Chennai, Coimbatore, Mysore, Manipal, Udipi and Jaipur - and will be operational in all 13 3G—licence circles by March 2011.
“Today, with just over a month since our rollout began, our 3G network covers around half a million customers and has 4,500 sites which is available across seven cities,” Bharti Airtel President (Mobile Services) Atul Bindal told reporters here.
“We are definitely witnessing the tipping point of non—voice and data explosion in this country and will be bringing the airtel 3G advantage pan—India soon as promised,” he said.
Airtel 3G will allow customers to enjoy a variety of exciting service offerings including Mobile TV, Video Calls, high—speed internet and video capabilities on social networks.
Further, a wide range of live and on—demand TV channels as well as shows would be available on Airtel 3G Mobile TV at an affordable price of Rs 40 for 20 minutes per week, the company said.
Bharti Airtel had bagged 3G spectrum in 13 out of the 22 telecom circles for Rs 12,295 crore through an auction held last year.








