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United Spirits mulls bond issue to refinance Rs 3,000-crore debt
United Spirits Ltd (USL), the flagship spirits arm of the UB Group, is looking at a bond offering within the next six months in an effort to refinance Rs 3,000 crore of debt.

Thermax Q3 dips 22% to Rs 56 cr
Engineering equipment maker Thermax Ltd today said its net profit declined by 21.84% to Rs 56.50 crore for the third quarter ended December 31, over the same period corresponding fiscal.

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Cox & Kings acquires Australian travel firm
Travel and tour company Cox & Kings today said one of its overseas arm has acquired Australia-based MyPlanet Australia Pty Ltd and Bentours International Pty Ltd for an undisclosed amount.
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Kuwait sees no change in OPEC output this year

Kuwait"s Oil Minister Sheikh Ahmad Abdullah al-Sabah today ruled out any production increase by OPEC this year and predicted that oil prices would remain at between $60 and $80 a barrel. - BSNL, MTNL begin talks to buy Kuwait"s Zain - Kuwait's sovereign fund denies losing $94 billion - Oil higher after OPEC leaves output levels steady - Opec rules out production cut - No view on acquiring stake in Zain: BSNL, MTNL - OPEC committee recommends no oil production cut "This year no way. It"s not possible," the minister told reporters when asked if the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries could decide to raise output at a ministerial meeting in December. "In December, OPEC will be looking at the market situation next year," said Sheikh Ahmad, who urged OPEC members for greater compliance with their production quotas. The minister said that such compliance had recently slipped, adding that the latest figure he saw was a compliance of just 68 per cent, down from over 80 per cent in the first quarter. He said Kuwait is sticking to its quota production of 2.2 million barrels per day. Sheikh Ahmad said he expects oil prices to continue to range between $60 and $80 for this year but that prices could go up in 2010 as the world economy recovers. Oil eased in Asian trade on Tuesday as dealers continued to evaluate the pace of recovery in the US economy, the world"s biggest energy consumer. New York"s main contract, the light sweet crude for November delivery, dropped five cents to $70.36 a barrel. Brent North Sea crude for November delivery fell nine cents to $67.95 a barrel.


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