14 September 2011

Train collision near Chennai, 7 dead


A train accident took place near Arakkonam, Chennai on Tuesday night when a passenger train was hit from behind by a Chennai Electric Multiple Unit train.
The passenger train was travelling from Arakkonam to Katpadi in Tamil Nadu and was waiting for signal when it was hit by the local train, derailing three bogies.
Additional DRM Chennai, Usha Venugopal said, "two compartments of the stationary train has derailed. One bogey of the EMU has been derailed."
IG North Zone Sylendra Babu said that at least seven passengers are confirmed dead and over 30 injured. Most of the injured have been taken to Arakkonam, Kanchivaram hospitals.
"It was a major accident. One train waiting for signal was rammed from the back by an EMU1. Rescue operations are going on. The injured people have been taken to various hospitals. It's raining at the accident spot but rescue operations are still on. We are arranging for more equipments and trained men to carry out rescue operations," said Babu.
The accident is said to have taken place at 9:30 pm on Tuesday night.
Two National Disaster Relief Force (NDRF) teams with necessary equipments have been rushed to the collision spot along with other officials for rescue operations.
NDMA Vice Chairman Shashidhar Reddy said, "two teams have been rushed to the spot. These teams were stationed at Arakkonam station and have been rushed to the spot."
Chennai Helpline numbers:
044 - 25357398
044 - 25347771
044 - 25355793
044 - 25353938
044 - 25352639
044 - 25352629

Sensex opens lower


Indian equity benchmarks bouncing back in the opening trade but erased all gains soon after. The ghost of disappointing close yesterday continues to haunt the market this morning as well following weakness in Asia and a sell-off in banking stocks. The 50-share NSE Nifty fell 16 points to 4,926 and the 30-share BSE Sensex lost 56 points to 16,412.
The Indian rupee was trading at near 2-year low of 47.93/USD, up 0.67% today.
HDFC, Bharti Airtel, HUL, L&T, HDFC Bank, Kotak Mahindra Bank, SBI, ICICI Bank, Maruti Suzuki and ITC were witnessing selling pressure.
However, HCL Tech, Infosys, TCS, Tata Motors, SAIL, Sterlite Industries and Sesa Goa were on buyers' radar.
The CNX Midcap gained 14 points at 7,254. About 400 shares advanced as against 300 shares declined on NSE.
SREI Infra plunged 13%. Pantaloon Retail fell 4%
However, KS Oils, SKS Microfinance, NCC, Jaypee Infra and BEML were up 2-4%.
Technology stocks like Hexaware and Firstsource rose 2% each.
Global cues
Asian markets were trading lower. Shanghai, Hang Seng, Nikkei and Taiwan fell 0.5-1.3%. Kospi tumbled 2.7%.

12 September 2011

Sensex dives 380 pts


Close to 380 points fall on the Sensex has confirmed that the short-term rally is now over. Factors spreading the negative sentiment included worse-than-expected industrial production date, continuous fall in rupee and a very real Eurozone scare. The 30-share BSE Sensex was trading at 16,486, down 380 points and the 50-share NSE Nifty was trading at 4,939, down 120 points.
The Index of Industrial Production (IIP) growth for the month of July, 2011 saw a sharp decline at 3.3% compared to 8.8% in the previous month. The IIP growth for the April-June quarter was at 5.8% compared to 9.7%, year-on-year (YoY).  The dismal number was mainly on account poor performance by capital goods, manufacturing and mining sectors, reflecting sluggishness in the economy.  
The rupee touched a fresh one-year low as dollar strengthened. It was at 46.97 as against US currency while its September contract hit 47/USD on the MCX-SX.
Not a single sector was trading in the green on BSE. Metal, IT, Bank and Capital Goods indices were down 2.5-3%.
Among largecaps, TCS, Reliance Industries, Bharti, Infosys, SBI, ICICI Bank, L&T and Wipro plunged 2-3.5%.
However, HUL shot up 3.5%. Ambuja Cements, Cipla and Grasim were other gainers.
SBI, GTL, Pipavav Shipyard, Reliance Industries, TD Power System, L&T and ICICI Bank were most active shares on exchanges.
Among midcaps, Pipavav, GTL, Financial Tech, Marico and Hindustan National Glass rallied 3-6% while Sujana Towers, IVRCL, S Kumars Nationwide, Indiabulls Real and Jai Corp fell 5-9%.
In the smallcap space, MSP Steel, Gokaldas Export, Falcon Tyres, Ontrack Systems and Seshasayee Paper were up 5-9%. However, Dion Global, Parenteral Drug, aurionPro Solutions, Madhucon Projects and Petron Engg lost 7-10%.
About three shares declined for every share gaining on BSE.
On the global front, Hang Seng crashed 4%. Nikkei and Taiwan fell 2-2.7%.
At 11:08 hours IST : Dismal IIP data, falling Re send Sensex down over 350 pts
Indian equities cracked further ground after the announcement of disappointing industrial output data. Depreciating rupee too added to the injury as FIIs scurry to offload exposure to the Indian markets. The 50-share NSE Nifty tanked 111 points to 4,947 and the 30-share BSE Sensex lost 354 points to 16,512.

Top Black Money Holders from India


Indians have the largest amount of black money in Swiss Banks. Rudolf Elmer provides the list of famous Indians to Wikileaks. He also revealed that black money was started depositing in Swiss Banks in early 70s by some of the names of India through illegal mining, stock market, drug dealing, fake projects etc.
Though Wikileaks has finally released few names, but it has threatened that if Indian government doesn’t start taking action, they would reveal all the names of big and powerful politicians

Wikileaks releases some of the Top Black Money Holders from India


Behind the selloff


The latest turmoil in Europe is overshadowing efforts to revive the US economy, indicating that markets will continue to struggle until the debt crisis in Greece and other EU nations is finally resolved.
Despite an oft-stated belief from economists that the problems in Europe's peripheral nations won't spread through the world's economy, investors are acting as if a tipping point is near.
"There's the sense that there is this denouement coming, that we're coming to some important event in Europe," said Quincy Krosby, market strategist at Prudential Financial in Newark, NJ "We've circled back to Greece."
Stocks sold off sharply Friday, driven primarily by worries that the European Union is unraveling.
Rumors that Greece was about to default on its debt-fiercely denied by the nation`s government-overwhelmed efforts the day before by US policy makers to assure that help was on the way for the domestic economy.
President Obama on Thursday evening unveiled a nearly half-trillion dollar jobs-creation programme, while Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke earlier tried to assure investors that the central bank would not let the economy sink.
The market took no solace from either presentation, selling off after the Bernanke speech and opening lower the morning after seeing the president`s plan.
"With the president's speech, yes, it was important for the market. But right now it`s more about Europe," Krosby said. "Overall there was nothing really new in that speech that had not already been telegraphed."
Much the same could be said for Bernanke's presentation in Minnesota.
"Anyone looking for confirmation that the Fed is preparing to act further...would have been a little disappointed by (Bernanke's) speech," Paul Ashworth, chief US economist at Capital Economics in Toronto, wrote in an analysis. "He noted that the Fed has a range of tools available to provide additional stimulus, but he didn`t expand on what those tools were or drop any hints that additional stimulus was definitely on the way."
With the inability of US policymakers to change the narrative, investors were left to revisit the troublesome nemesis of euro zone debt.
Despite repeated bailout efforts and attempts to devise creative strategies to forestall the problem, the idea has not gone away that widespread defaults are in the offing that will threaten not just the region`s health but elsewhere as well.
"The Eurozone authorities have always avoided the next crisis around the corner by strengthening their firepower despite initial political constraints," wrote Athanasios Vamvakidis, forex strategist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch. "However, with markets now concerned about Italy and Spain, the euro zone crisis could become systemic."
What scares investors most is that even if Congress passes portions of Obama's jobs plan and Bernanke`s Fed can stimulate growth with another round of easing, their efforts could be for naught should the euro debt crisis explode.
"Economic and financial headwinds facing the economy are so strong that they have rendered monetary policy ineffective," Daniel Aaronson and Lee Markowitz, principals at Continental Capital Advisors in New York, said in an analysis. "Therefore, the global debt problem, weak economic backdrop and corporate earnings will be the primary drivers of the stock market going forward."
Still, lawmakers in Washington pledged Friday to give Obama's plan a fair hearing.
Economists greeted the ideas with a broad level of scepticism, though, stating that the proposals to extend unemployment compensation, provide tax cuts for working-class families and give credits for small business job creation have been largely aired already.
The more ambitious plans, meanwhile, are considered unlikely to pass.
"Forecasters should thus see much of last night`s speech in a political light," Citigroup economist Steven C Wieting wrote. "However, to the extent that the president can generate popular support for added measures and to any extent that immediate fiscal tightening can be put off, it does offer the potential for incremental improvement in the US growth outlook, at least for 2012."
With little help for big leaps on the home front, investors then are pushed to look overseas at the ominous European debt overhang.
"It's an issue that we`ve been ignoring. We have a possible Greek default and there obviously still are issues in Europe and it could spill over to the US," said Andre Julian, senior market strategist at OpVest Wealth Management in Irvine, Calif. "If they don`t come up with a real solution that's more than rhetoric it`s going to continue to weigh down the global economy."
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