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TDSAT says only it can decide on STAR India-BSNL dispute
The Telecom Disputes Settlement and Appellate Tribunal (TDSAT) has held that the ongoing arbitration between broadcast major STAR India and telecom major BSNL is not valid and that it has the sole jurisdiction to decide on the disputes between the two.

Expansion plans have no effect on Bata India stock
Bata India closed the day virtually unchanged at Rs 179. The stock had opened at Rs 181 and touched a high of Rs 185 and a low of Rs 177 during the day. A total of 215,995 shares were traded on the BSE as against the 2-week average of 114,555 shares.

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FIIs net sellers of Rs 495 cr in cash mkt today
Foreign institutional investors (FIIs) were net sellers of Rs 494.66 crore (provisional) today, according to data released by BSE.
Management

Oil weakens in Asian trade on profit-taking

Oil fell in Asian trade today on profit-taking after overnight gains driven by hopes for improved demand as the global economy recovers, analysts said. - Festive season fails to revive paint sales - Oil rises above $72 ahead of US company results - Oil prices fall to $71 in opening trade - Oil rebounds in Asia as US aluminium giant posts profit - Oil extends gains on dollar weakness - Kuwait sees no change in OPEC output this year New York"s main contract, light sweet crude for November, delivery fell 41 cents to $72.86 a barrel. Brent North Sea crude for November delivery sank 22 cents to $71.14. "Coming off recent highs, the only thing I would note is with prices getting to $73, that might have encouraged some profit-taking," said David Moore, a Sydney-based commodity strategist with the Commonwealth Bank of Australia. Looking ahead, the under-performing US dollar is likely to remain a big influence in driving crude prices higher, Moore said. "I think the fragility of the US dollar has been a supporting factor," he said. A struggling greenback tends to boost crude prices particularly because the dollar-denominated commodity becomes cheaper for foreign buyers holding stronger currencies. The US currency had come under pressure recently from speculation that the United States would be slower to tighten monetary policy than other central banks. Rod Smyth at Riverfront Investment Group said the Fed is still flooding the market with dollars, making it hard to increase the value of the greenback. "As long as the Federal Reserve continues to print money, we think the dollar will weaken and risk assets around the world will benefit," he said.


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