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Aviva to sell life insurer Friends Provident International for $443 million

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Bengaluru:  Aviva, Britain’s biggest life insurer, said it would sell Friends Provident International (FPIL), which provides life assurance and investment products in Asia and the Middle East, to a unit of International Financial Group for £340 million ($443 million). The sale, which follows a strategic review, will allow Aviva to further reallocate capital to businesses that can bring higher returns and grow its business across Asia, the insurer said. “Aviva has concluded that the business is not central to the group’s strategy to focus on a small number of markets where it has scale and profitability or a distinct competitive advantage,” it said in a statement on Wednesday.

How much tax do you pay on your investments?

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Most people look only at the returns that an investment vehicle gives. It is, however, important to consider the taxation rules as well since this will reduce the overall returns. Here’s a look at some of these.

ICICI Prudential to take over Sahara Life’s insurance business

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New Delhi: ICICI Prudential Life Insurance Co. Ltd has agreed to take over the life insurance business of Sahara India Life Insurance Co. Ltd, which was effectively wound up by the regulator last month. “ICICI Prudential Life has agreed to take over the policyholders’ liabilities of Sahara Life and has already commenced valuing the liabilities of the policyholders and earmarking the matching assets of Sahara Life,” said Nilesh Sathe, member, life, at the Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (Irdai). “They will transfer on their books policyholders’ liabilities and corresponding assets. We have given them three weeks to submit the valuation report, which will be reviewed by us for approval,” Sathe added. ICICI Prudential declined to comment. The administration of Sahara India Life, a subsidiary of Sahara Group, was taken over by Irdai on 12 June. On 23 June, Irdai asked the company to stop issuing new policies, the first time in its 18-year history that the regulator

NDMC plans to raise Rs200 crore through municipal bonds

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New Delhi: New Delhi Municipal Corporation (NDMC) plans to raise Rs200 crore shortly by selling bonds for strengthening its electricity distribution network, said Geetali Tare, financial advisor at the civic body responsible for providing urban services to Lutyen’s Delhi, home to the country’s most powerful politicians and bureaucrats. This follows Pune Municipal Corporation (PMC) raising Rs200 crore earlier this month through bonds for a water metering project. There is a growing appetite for municipal bonds with PMC, Maharashtra’s second-largest corporation, receiving 21 bids amounting to Rs1,200 crore. PMC is the first urban local body to raise funds through selling bonds, nearly two years after capital markets regulator Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) issued new norms for municipal bonds. Enthused by the response, Indian cities have been ramping up their municipal bonds issuance plans. This, in turn, will bring in fiscal discipline for the municipalities and make the

Bond Yield Rises To Seven-Month High; Rate Hike Fears Rise

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Mumbai: India’s benchmark 10-year bond yield rose to its highest in seven months on Friday after minutes of the central bank’s rate-setting committee meeting contained strong warnings on inflation, dimming hopes of a rate cut in the short term and sparking bets for a tightening move instead. The Reserve Bank of India had opted to leave the repo rate unchanged at 6.25 percent on April 6, and the minutes released on Thursday showed the six-member monetary policy committee had cited upside risks to inflation as the main reason for the decision. However, the comments were more hawkish than some traders expected. RBI Executive Director M. D. Patra had even favoured a pre-emptive 25-basis-points repo rate hike to contain inflationary pressures, although he finally joined the rest of the panel in voting 6-0 to keep rates unchanged. Also, comments by Chetan Ghate, an external member of the panel, were seen by traders as pointing to the prospects a rate hike sooner rather than later. A rate-ti

Rupee weakens to 64.65 against US dollar

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Mumbai: The Indian rupee on Tuesday weakened against the US dollar, tracking losses in the Asian currencies markets. The rupee opened at 64.65 a dollar. At 9.15am, the home currency was trading at 64.65, down 0.14% from its Monday’s close of 64.56. The government will issue Index of Industrial Production (IIP) and Consumer Price Index-based (CPI) inflation for February and March, respectively, on Wednesday after 5.30pm. According to a Bloomberg poll, CPI will be at 3.96% in March from 3.65% a month ago, while IIP will be at 1.3% for February from 2.7% a month ago. The benchmark Sensex index rose 0.17% or 51.25 points to 29,626.99. So far this year, it has risen 12%. So far this year, the rupee has gained 5.2%, while foreign institutional investors have bought $6.91 billion and $6.19 billion from local equity and debt markets, respectively. The 10-year bond yield was trading at 6.883% compared to its previous close of 6.865%. Bond yields and prices move in opposite directions. Asian c

Corporate bond sales set to plunge in Q1 after best quarter in 5 years

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After posting their best quarter in five years, rupee bond sales by Indian companies are set to retreat in the three months to June, if history is any guide. Issuance from businesses in Asia’s third largest economy is seen declining to as low as 1.13 trillion rupees ($17.4 billion) this quarter, according to IDFC Bank Ltd., down from 2.01 trillion rupees sold in the three months to March. A look at market behavior in the last five years shows sales tended to fall in the April-June period as companies draw up debt plans for the new fiscal year and refrain from big-size borrowings. “Companies have to refresh their borrowing plans and wait for internal board approvals before they start raising money again,” said Jayen Shah, Mumbai-based head of debt capital markets at IDFC Bank. “This is a seasonal phenomena, where rupee bond offerings gather momentum through the year with peak volumes in last quarter of the financial year. ” Bond issuance in the first quarter of 2017 surged as firms sou