Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Rupee down 15 paise against US dollar

Rupee down 15 paise against US dollar


Rupee down 15 paise against US dollar

Posted: 29 Nov 2011 08:39 PM PST

The Indian rupee fell by 15 paise to Rs 52.17 per US dollar in early trade on the Interbank Foreign Exchange today amid increased demand for the American currency from importers.


Sensex slips falls below 16K mark

Posted: 29 Nov 2011 08:21 PM PST

A benchmark index for equities started on Wednesday with a negative bias and slipped below the 16,000-mark.


Asia stocks fall as Europe crisis festers

Posted: 29 Nov 2011 07:47 PM PST

Asian stock markets mostly fell Wednesday after a meeting of European finance ministers failed to stem fears that the euro currency union is hurtling toward a breakup.


James Murdoch suffers BSkyB revolt

Posted: 29 Nov 2011 08:54 AM PST

James Murdoch was dealt a heavy blow on today with over 40 percent of independent shareholders failing to back his re-election as chairman of BSkyB.


Foreign airline FDI in local carriers proposed

Posted: 29 Nov 2011 07:22 AM PST

The aviation ministry has proposed allowing foreign airlines to invest under 26 percent in Indian carriers and the final decision will be made by the cabinet, civil aviation minister Vayalar Ravi told news channel CNBC TV18.


Rupee down 7 paise against US dollar

Posted: 29 Nov 2011 05:14 AM PST

The Indian rupee today closed down by seven paise to settle at 52.02/03 against the American currency on weakness in local stocks amid fresh dollar demand from importers.


Sensex closes 159 points down

Posted: 29 Nov 2011 04:00 AM PST

The Bombay Stock Exchange benchmark Sensex on Tuesday dropped 159 points on selling in blue-chips amid mounting opposition to FDI in retail and a weak trend in the European markets as euro zone debt crisis persisted.


Sensex down by 122 points

Posted: 28 Nov 2011 09:54 PM PST

The BSE benchmark Sensex was down by over 122 points in early trade today on fresh selling pressure in refinery, IT, realty, PSU and metal stocks amid persistent foreign capital outflows despite firm global cues.


No comments:

Post a Comment