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UP sugar mills to start crushing soon to recover losses
Despite uncertainties over cane pricing, sugar mills in Uttar Pradesh plan to commence crushing as early as possible, in order to avoid any recovery loss which may impact their operating performance.

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News of the day

Pension regulator hardsells new scheme
The Pension Fund Regulatory Development Authority (PFRDA) is taking ing various measures to increase the number of subscribers under its New Pension Scheme (NPS). It is in discussions with the General Insurance Council, various industry bodies and companies to offer the plan to their employees. Under the recent deal between the Indian Banks’ Association (IBA) and the pension regulator, all new recruits of banks will join the defined contribution system from April 1, 2010. Already 20 nationalised and 12 private sector banks have joined the new system.
International Business

Gold demand to slip by 15 per cent worldwide in 2009: GFMS

Jewellery fabrication business worldwide is likely to fall in 2009 on high gold prices with offtake forecast to slip by 15 per cent compared to the year-ago period, a latest report says. - Gold may touch Rs 18,000 by Diwali: Assocham - Looking closer at gold funds - Gold ETF outshines Sensex, posts 35% returns - Titan: Profits may lack lustre - Oil hovers near $71 amid weakening US dollar - Gold sets new peak at Rs 16,200 on global cues "Despite early signs of economic recovery in many regions, gold price levels will continue to be the determining factor, and with many price sensitive markets expected to remain weak for the remainder of the year, we expect jewellery fabrication for 2009 as a whole to slip to levels not seen for more than two decades," GFMS" Executive Chairman Philip Klapwijk commented. According to the latest GFMS report, there was a substantial 25 per cent year-on-year fall in global jewellery fabrication, with offtake slumping 248 tonnes compared with the first six months in 2008. The update concluded the key reason for the decline was the fragile economic environment and high gold prices, with double-digit fall in all regions except East Asia where the fall was offset by demand from Chinese fabricators. The consultancy noted that higher scrap volumes substituted for new gold demand, making the slump even more pronounced, with the first half demand slumping by 32 per cent, or over 200 tonnes — the lowest level in over 25 years.


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