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Obstacles may impede India growth story
India was the most promising market but obstacles could impede the speed at which India reached the full extent of the promise, said Sudhir Maheshwari, member of group management board responsible for corporate finance, M&A and business development (including India) and risk management of ArcelorMittal. Addressing the 47th National Metallurgists’ Day Celebration of the Indian Institute of Metals, Maheswari clarified, “We remain fully committed to our announced greenfield projects in Jharkhand and Orissa. We are looking for other alternatives of land acquisition to accelerate realisation of our plans.” ArcelorMittal’s two 12 million tonne steel plants in Jharkhand and Orissa were running behind schedule on account of problems with land acquisition.

Daiichi Sankyo, JK Tyre & Financial Tech Q2 result
Japanese drug maker Daiichi Sankyo, which holds 64 per cent stake in Ranbaxy Laboratories, today reported a 45 per cent drop in net income for the April-September this year. The company has a net income of ¥18.69 billion for six months ended September compared with 33.97 billion yen in the same period last year, Daiichi Sankyo said in a statement.

News of the day

Dec exports surge 9% to $14.6 bn on key sector growth
The country"s exports in December have grown to $14.6 billion, up 9.4 per cent over November, on the back of a strong growth in pharma, engineering and auto components sectors, Commerce and Industry minister, Anand Sharma said today.
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Silver may continue to outshine gold's performance in 2010

Silver has outshone gold’s performance this year and will continue to do so in 2010 as the metal responds to the prospect of a surge in industrial demand, Angel Commodities Broking said. - "Silver may continue to outshine gold in 2010" - Gold falls on weak global cues, subdued demand - Gold rebounds as dollar slides - Gold slides on weak global cues - Gold futures rebound on firm global cues - Gold slides further on weak global cues, dollar gains Silver ready (.999 fineness) prices are hovering around Rs 27,850 per kg in the Mumbai bullion market. Demand for silver in the coming year is expected to rebound to normal levels in 2010 as the emergence of key new markets for silver would help to boost prices further. Also, re-stocking of inventories for more of silver’s traditional uses will be a powerful demand driver in the near-term, Angel Commodities Broking’s Analyst Amar Singh said. Silver prices are mainly driven by the fact that traditional industrial end-users of silver, such as the global electronics industry have in recent weeks begun to replenish severely depleted inventories, he said. During the financial crisis, silver inventories had run down sharply and it may take approximately six-months to fully rebuild the inventories to normal levels, Singh said. An important factor to understand in the case of silver is that demand from the industrial sector tends to be quite inelastic. This means that buyers have few options and have to pay at prevailing prices. Key driver for 2010 silver will be demand for silver-zinc batteries in ‘smart automobiles’ and an array of portable electronic devices. The widespread adoption of silver-zinc batteries is going to be one of the major drivers behind the rise in prices as it may absorb a high quantity of silver, Singh said. The ever-expanding industrial market for silver includes LCD/plasma television screens, solar panels, and water purification, medical and superconductivity applications. Silver is also finding a critical new use in biocides where the white metal is used in chemical agents to kill dangerous bacteria, he said. Silver’s importance has grown as a high-tech industrial metal and it has grown year-on-year since 2001 to the start of the financial crisis. This long-term trend in silver prices is set against a backdrop of a multi-year rally. “We expect silver to continue to trade higher in the coming year as the demand-supply dynamics are beginning to reflect a return to a normal economy. We feel that silver is a unique metal in terms of performance as it wins whether the economy is in good or bad shape,” Singh said. Demand for the metal rises in both situations because if the economy improves then the industrial demand increases and if there is a downturn then investors buy it as a hedge against the downturn in the economy. “In the coming year, we expect silver to witness a bullish phase as new avenues of demand open up amid the existing traditional applications of the metal. We also expect investment demand along with industrial demand to drive silver prices higher in the coming year,” Singh said.


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