General Trading Chat

Bhai kisi ko 702.6 ( rate shown on the terminal ) mein DMart chahiye kya ?:Daapus me kar lete hain.

ST
Ye BSE ka rate (sell order) pre opening me mera hi dala huwa tha ...:D
 
They have got warning from US Drug inspection...

ST
pahle bhi december me 1150 se 750 be fall huwa tha ...... fir koi normal renounce bhi nahi huwa ....

No dead cat bounce trade on this counter .... I presume
 
Uttar Pradesh Farm Loan Waiver:
SBI Report sees Rs 27,420 crore Hit

Beena Parmar
The Moneycontrol News
Published on March 20, 2017


Mumbai, March 20: After the Bharatiya Janata Party won a massive mandate in Uttar Pradesh, Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath’s first challenge will be fulfilling the election promise to waive off loans given to small and marginal farmers. The Uttar Pradesh government stands to lose Rs 27,420 crore, or 8 percent of its total revenue, if the farm loan waiver scheme becomes a reality, according to State Bank of India. As per data, the total outstanding credit by all banks in 2016 towards the agriculture sector was Rs 86,240 crore in Uttar Pradesh, with an average ticket size of Rs 1.34 lakh.

According to Reserve Bank of India data from 2012, 31 percent of the direct agriculture finance went to marginal and small farmers (landholdings up to 2.5 acres). “Taking this as a proxy for Uttar Pradesh as well, approximately Rs 27,419.70 crore will have to be waived off in case loan waiver scheme is implemented for the small and marginal farmers for all banks [scheduled commercial banks, cooperative banks and primary agricultural cooperative societies],” the country’s largest lender said in a report.

It stated that the UP government’s total revenue for FY17 was Rs 340,255.24 crore, according to revised estimates. Thus, the amount of Rs 27,419.70 crore to be waived off is approximately 8 percent of total revenue. ”This will definitely cause some amount of stress for the state’s fiscal arithmetic in the coming year,” read the report. According to the Socio-Economic and Caste Census 2011, 40 percent of rural households of Uttar Pradesh are engaged in cultivation. When it comes to landholdings, 92 percent are marginal and small landholdings, according to 2010-11 Agriculture Census.

Banks are against the implementation of the loan waiver scheme as they fear this would affect the credit discipline among that segment of borrowers. SBI Chairman Arundhati Bhattacharya recently said, “We feel that in case of a [farm] loan waiver there is always a fall in credit discipline because the people who get the waiver have expectations of future waivers as well. As such, future loans given often remain unpaid.” She added that no formal proposal had come to them from the government.

A Congress leader submitted a breach of privilege notice in the Maharashtra Assembly against Bhattacharya for “insulting farmers and the House” with her remarks. In 2009, the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance government retained power on its lucrative election promise of Rs 60,000-crore farm loan waiver scheme.

This is not the first time that such a concern has been raised by lenders. In 2014, banks had raised opposition to a loan waiver scheme in Andhra Pradesh and had written to the finance ministry expressing their concerns. Former Reserve Bank of India (RBI) governor Raghuram Rajan had also pointed out that the “repeated loan waivers by various state governments distort credit pricing, thereby also disrupting the credit market”.

Incidentally, SBI last month allowed one-time settlements for its tractor and farm equipment loans that make up about Rs 6,000 crore of doubtful and losses on its books. According to the SBI report, the new UP government has to go beyond the traditional solutions and find innovative ways of adding to its revenues. The Yogi Adityanath administration must focus on raising farm productivity, fast track transfer of benefits to the farmers’ bank accounts, encourage multiple cropping by farmers and increase interstate price parity among other things, it said.
 
How can retail put order in pre open?
icicidirect allows it


Maine to 351 pe buy order bhi pre opening me dala huwa tha ...
 
Vijay Mallya’s $20 million ‘sky mansion’ is almost ready. But will he get to live in it?

Madhurima Nandy & Sharan Poovanna
The Mint
Published on March 21, 2017


It isn’t inconceivable that the mansion-style
Penthouse in Bengaluru could soon be up for sale
to recover dues that Vijay Mallya owes to banks

Bengaluru, March 20: Almost 400 feet from the ground, businessman Vijay Mallya’s mansion in the sky in Bengaluru is getting ready. The mansion-style penthouse is mounted on a giant cantilever slab on the top of Kingfisher Towers—residences at UB City, which is being built on a 4.5-acre land parcel that once housed his ancestral home.

Sprawled over 40,000 sq. ft across two levels (34th and 35th) with a helipad on the top, the penthouse is surrounded by an open deck that offers a 360-degree viewing platform. There’s an infinity pool to boot.

The penthouse is part of a skyscraper, but it is as exclusive as a private villa with its two elevators; it shares nothing with the rest of the residences.

The $20-million (that’s the rough value of the penthouse) question: will Mallya, a fugitive from justice who left for the UK in March 2016 as lenders and investigating agencies closed in on him, ever get to live in his white house in the sky?

The skyscraper, which will be the fanciest address in the city once ready, is being developed as an extension of UB City, the luxury retail and office space built under a joint development agreement between United Breweries Holdings Ltd (UBHL) and Prestige Estates Projects Ltd. UBHL owns 55% and the developer 45%.

Prestige Estates, which is also constructing the building, has 42 apartments—8,000 sq. ft each with four bedrooms and five car parks—of which it has sold 34 and kept the remaining eight to sell once the building is fully done. The last sale was for around Rs.25 crore.

Sprawled over 40,000 sq. ft across two levels with a helipad on the top, the penthouse is surrounded by an open deck that offers a 360-degree viewing platform. There’s an infinity pool to boot

UBHL, which has the penthouse and 39 of the apartments, sold and issued allotment letters for seven, for a little over Rs150 crore, according to the company’s 2016 annual report. The sales were probably completed in 2012 and 2013. Since 2014, UBHL has been barred from selling the flats.

Prestige has sold some of the apartments as shells while some of them have their interiors designed by its interior design firm Morph Design Co.

“It was a challenge to construct the mansion on a huge cantilever at that height, but we have ensured we build it exactly the way it was conceived. It’s a complex structure and the finishing work is going on,” said Prestige Estates’ chairman Irfan Razack.
“We will finish the project as per contract and hand it over,” Razack said.

In January, the debt recovery tribunal in Bengaluru ruled in favour of State Bank of India (SBI) and allowed it to start the process of recovering the Rs6,203.35 crore it is owed by Mallya’s companies. Mallya, chairman of UBHL, and his companies Kingfisher Airlines, UBHL and Kingfisher Finvest India Ltd are liable to pay the money which, along with interest, adds up to more than Rs9,000 crore. In its application, Kingfisher Towers is listed under other known assets of UBHL, which means it (the apartments owned by the firm) can be sold by the recovery officer to pay the dues of the bank.

In September 2016, the Enforcement Directorate (ED) attached Rs6,630 crore worth of properties belonging to Mallya in the ongoing money laundering probe that included flats in Kingfisher Tower, Bangalore (Rs565 crore), along with the Mandwa Farm House, Alibaug (Rs25 crore), and shares of UBHL and United Spirits Ltd.

Indeed, it isn’t inconceivable that the penthouse could soon be up for sale.

“Only the external structure of the penthouse is being constructed. The interiors will remain pending since there isn’t any clarity on the matter on who the claimant is,” said a person familiar with the development who didn’t want to be named.

When contacted, a UB spokesperson declined to comment.

While the developer Prestige is gearing up to finish the project and hand over the homes to the respective buyers by this year-end, uncertainty clouds the fate of UBHL’s share of apartments and, of course, Mallya’s mansion.

“Under the money laundering Act, an order of conviction will result in confiscation of property by the government,” said S.S. Naganand, senior counsel appearing for the lenders consortium.

“If money laundering is not proven, the debt remains and what will happen to this property is they (banks) will try to recover dues. There will be an attempt to sell off and recover dues and any sale proceedings will be realized and appropriated towards his dues. If after this anything remains, it will be given to him,” Naganand added.

Mallya would have liked to keep the penthouse.

“The mansion is what Mallya always wanted. His family home on the same plot of land was like a British colonial bungalow and he wanted to replicate that (in the penthouse),” said a prominent architect, who didn’t want to be named.
 
Yesterday
both NF BNF were NR7
(though BN and NS were not)
but no action sofar :mad:

OR

Its time for some action to NF 9155 and BNF 21122
 

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