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Aegon Religare launches iTerm plan
Setting its eye on the growing internet users, Aegon Religare Life Insurance today launched iTerm Plan offerring it exclusivley online to its customers.

F&O Outlook: More correction possible in coming days
The Nifty ignored all bullish indicators and closed below 5,000 on profit-booking and weak global cues. The close of 4,953 is marginally above the 61.8 per cent retracement level of 4,940. Hence, if it falls below this, it can retreat to 4,860. Also, the Nifty has gained over 10 per cent since the last week’s low of 4,538 and so more correction is possible in the coming days.

News of the day

Not standing on ceremony
BJP President Nitin Gadkari doesn’t believe in standing on ceremony. So, while the normal protocol is that meetings are held in the office/residence of the senior-most official in the meeting, Gadkari surprised most by attending a meeting on Bihar at party MP Shahnawaz Hussain’s Delhi bungalow. Gadkari is also quite corporate in the way he carries his visting cards and hands them over to visitors with a “Hi, I am Nitin Gadkari. You can call me Nitin.”
Corporate

Corps to ignore Bollywood in favour of Hollywood: study

The Indian entertainment and media (E&M) corporates will prefer Hollywood over Bollywood in terms of investment in the near future, as over 90 per cent of the Bollywood movies flop annually, a study said. - India Inc for national media policy - India"s per capita emission 70% below world avg: report - Assocham calls for consolidation of banks - Private hospital sector may touch Rs 2 lakh cr by 2012: Study - Bring petrol, diesel under uniform VAT: Assocham - Assocham suggests setting up coal trading "Ninety per cent of the domestic corporates in E&M in future will prefer to invest in Hollywood, ignoring Bollywood since the former provides huge returns on account of it’s more than 90 per cent success ratio," a joint study by Nishith Desai Associates and Assocham said. It says more than 90 per cent of about 1,000 films produced annually by Bollywood flops and thus hardly gives investors any return. However, in Hollywood, the focus is always on making award-winning films which seek high quality and that is why the success rate of those films are so high, it said. "Therefore, domestic corporates will prefer to invest more in Hollywood rather than explore possibilities for investing in Bollywood," it said. Besides other problems, the domestic segment is confronting piracy, estimates for which suggests, the film industry lost $959 million and 5,71,896 jobs a year ago. The problem has become so deep-rooted that pirated CDs/VCDs/DVDs are available at prices as low as Rs 30 as compared with Rs 150-300 for a multiplex theatre ticket. The study has also called for creation of a National Media Policy for vision and benchmarking for films and entertainment industry.


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