Friday, November 25, 2011

Cheer for savers in December


Public provident fund (PPF), small deposits and post office schemes will fetch a higher rate of return from December.

The government today notified an increase in interest rates on PPF to 8.6 per cent from 8 per cent, and raised the ceiling on annual contributions to the fund to Rs 1 lakh from Rs 70,000.

Interest rates on savings accounts in post offices will go up to 4 per cent from 3.5 per cent. Rates on deposits of other maturities, too, will be raised from next month.

The sale of Kisan Vikas Patras (KVP) will be discontinued from November 30.

The maturity period of monthly investment schemes (MIS) and National Savings Certificates will be reduced to five from six years.

MIS will earn an interest of 8.2 per cent, but accounts opened on/after December 1 will not be entitled for bonus.

Further, every Rs 100 invested in an NSC will fetch Rs 150.90 at the end of five years.

Besides, loans taken from PPFs will attract an interest of 2 per cent per annum from December.

The government has done away with the commission paid to the agents for opening PPF accounts and Senior Citizens Savings Schemes, while the commission for Mahila Pradhan Kshetriya Bachat Yojana has been fixed at 4 per cent. The commission for all other schemes has been halved to 0.5 per cent.

The Centre has also notified an increase in the interest rate on recurring deposit schemes of post office. According to the calculation, a recurring deposit of Rs 10 every month will fetch Rs 738.62 after five years.

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Insurance ruling


An insured person can be denied a claim if he has concealed relevant facts such as existing ailments, the National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission has ruled.

The commission gave the ruling while setting aside a judgment of the Kerala consumer commission that had directed the LIC to pay Rs 50,000 as insurance claim to Shakuntala Devi, wife of a policy holder who died of tuberculosis in 2001.

The panel said there was credible evidence that the policy holder was suffering from tuberculosis and he had concealed it from the company, thus entitling the company to deny him the claim.

“Since, an insurance is a contract entered between the parties in utmost good faith, suppression of any material facts by the insuree, as was done in this case, entitled the insurance company to repudiate the claim,” the bench headed by Justice Ashok Bhan said.

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Mukesh Ambani richest Indian, Anil biggest loser


India’s richest are getting poorer, according to Forbes, as falling stock prices, corruption scandals in Asia's third-largest economy and a global slowdown wiped 20 percent off the total value of the country's 100 wealthiest in the last year.

Mukesh Ambani, head of Reliance Industries, India's most valuable company, retained the top spot with a value of $22.6 billion, despite seeing his net worth drop by $4.4 billion.

In the same period, Ambani completed construction of a 27-storey house in Mumbai, costing an estimated $1 billion.

The biggest loser in the list was Ambani's younger brother, Anil, whose net worth stood at $5.9 billion, down from $13.3 billion. His Reliance Group companies have been some of the worst performers on the Mumbai bourse this year.

A major drag for Ambani has been telecom firm Reliance Communications, which has $7.5 billion in debt and has so far failed in efforts to ease debt and raise money.

The combined wealth of India's richest 100 people fell to $241 billion in 2011, according to the Forbes India Rich List, which includes 57 dollar billionaires, a dozen less than a year earlier.

"This has been a turbulent year for India's richest," Naazneen Karmali, India Editor of Forbes Asia, said in a statement.

"Despite the economy growing at close to 8 percent, a spate of corruption scandals and rising inflation have taken a toll."

The world's second-fastest growing major economy after China grew only 7.7 percent in the three months to June, its weakest in 18 months, and Mumbai's benchmark stock index is down 16 percent since January.

India has raised its interest rates 13 times in 19 months, hurting demand for big-ticket items and making it more expensive for businesses to raise capital.

Of the 85 alumni from last year's list, 66 saw their worth drop this year. A net worth of $370 million was enough to make the 2011 list, down from $500 million a year ago.

BIG TEN

Mukesh Ambani led a top ten dominated by industrial tycoons, including ArcelorMittal chairman Lakshmi Mittal, who came in second with a net worth of $19.2 billion.

Energy and metal barons Shashi and Ravi Ruia lie fourth with a combined worth of $10.2 billion.

Kumar Birla, head of the fabrics-to-cement Aditya Birla conglomerate, Adi Godrej of the Godrej Group and construction tycoon Pallonji Mistry -- the largest individual shareholder of the Tata Group and father-in-law to Noel Tata, touted as a likely successor to Ratan Tata -- are also in the top ten.

Many of those companies are benefiting from India's plans to spend $1 trillion in the five years to 2017 to overhaul its creaking infrastructure, seen as a barrier to continued economic growth.

Only one name from India's showpiece IT sector made the top ten: Azim Premji, chairman of Wipro, India's No. 3 software services provider, ranked third with a net worth of $13 billion.

Savitri Jindal, head of Jindal Steel and Power Ltd, was India's richest woman, sitting fifth on the list with a net worth of $9.5 billion. Jindal was one of only five women on the list of one hundred.

A $39 billion telecom scandal, likely India's largest ever graft scam, made its mark on the list, with two accused in the case, Vinod Goenka and Shahid Balwa, falling out of the top 100. Both deny any wrongdoing.

Debutants on the annual list include Kapil Bhatia and his son Rahul, founders of budget airline IndiGo, and V.G. Siddhartha, whose coffee shop chain Cafe Coffee Day gave him a net worth of $595 million.

India's biggest gainer in percentage terms was Brijmohan Lall Munjal, head of two-wheeler HeroMoto Corp, whose net worth rose to $2.7 billion in the year his firm ended a 26-year partnership with Japan 's Honda Motor .

India's auto industry has seen car sales declining on high interest rates while families of four continue to buy two-wheelers, most of which can be bought without relying on loans.