Popular Articles

SAIL Q3 sales grow 23% on construction demand
The country"s largest steel maker, Steel Authority of India (SAIL), today reported a 32 per cent growth in sales at 1.3 million tonnes in December 2009.

Great Indian telecom boom begins to ring hollow
When telecom executives went into a meeting with Communications Minister A Raja on Tuesday evening inside the peeling walls of Sanchar Bhawan in New Delhi, they may have believed that things were so bad they could not get any worse. They were wrong. The highlight of the meeting was Raja asking mobile telephony operators to reduce termination charges, the money that an operator pays another to whose network the call is made.

News of the day

Cipla to produce biotech drugs
Cipla, the country’s second-largest drug company, will foray into the production of biotechnology medicines soon. The company is planning to set up a 50:50 joint venture partnership with a Chinese firm. The JV will be based in India and will manufacture and market bio-similar products (off patent biotechnology medicines) for domestic and overseas markets.
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Grupo Mexico's $1.6-bn bid rivals Vedanta's offer

Competing with Vedanta Resources, Grupo Mexico has come up with a $1.6 billion reorganisation programme for regaining control of its bankrupt firm, Asarco. - Grupo Mexico"s $1.6 bn bid rivals Vedanta"s offer for Asarco - Vedanta to invest Rs 42 cr on Lanjigarh peripheral growth - Vedanta Resources profit dips 75% - Sterlite may face $2.6 bn suit if Asarco bid fails - Vedanta expects 9% growth in metal demand for FY"10 - Grupo Mexico counters Sterlite, again Americas Mining Corporation (AMC), the Grupo Mexico arm, which wholly owns Asarco, presented the plan of reorganisation for the firm last week at a bankruptcy court in Texas. In its reorganisation plan, AMC has offered $1.6 billion, with a cash component of 1.3 billion, Grupo Mexico said in a statement. Grupo Mexico claimed its bid is superior to the $1.7-billion offer of Vedanta Group firm Sterlite Industries, whose bid had a cash component aof $1.1 billion. AMC said the plan has been endorsed by the creditors of Asarco. After creditors of the firm give their approval to one of the competing plans to acquire Asarco, the bankruptcy court has to take final call and award the controlling rights of the firm. Sterlite, the Indian subsidiary of London-listed Vedanta Resources, has been negotiating the Asarco deal since last year. It had initially offered $2.6 billion for buying the assets of the ailing company, which has been bankrupt for over four years now. However, with devaluation of mining assets and falling copper prices amid the global economic downturn, Sterlite wanted to settle the deal at a lower price and revised down its bid to $2.1 billion last year and then later to the present offer of $1.7 billion. Sterlite is looking to acquire Asarco’s three open-pit copper mines and associated mills and SX-EW in Arizona, a copper smelter in Arizona, a copper refinery, rod and cake plants, and a precious metals plant in Texas, the US. Asarco, formerly known as American Smelting and Refining Company, is a 110-year-old firm and had filed for bankruptcy protection in 2005, after being sued for $ 1 billion over environmental issues. The company sold about 2.37 lakh tonnes of refined copper last year. At present, the company"s mines have an estimated copper reserves of 5 million tonnes.


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