Wednesday 30 September 2020

Sebi bars four individuals in Birla Cotsyn's GDR issue manipulation case

 Markets regulator Sebi has barred four individuals in connection with manipulation in the issuance of global depository receipts by Birla Cotsyn (India) Ltd back in 2010.

Currently, Birla Cotsyn (India) Ltd (BCIL) is facing liquidation proceedings under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code.

In a 55-page order passed on Tuesday, Sebi banned four former individuals -- P V R Murthy, Yashovardhan Birla, Y P Trivedi and Mohandas Adige -- who were associated with the company.

While a three-year ban has been imposed on Murthy, Birla will face a ban for two years. Trivedi and Adige have been barred from the securities market for one year each.

In September 2019, the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) ordered the commencement of liquidation of BCIL under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code.

Against this backdrop, Sebi said present the present proceedings initiated against the company stands disposed of.

"However, in the event that the order for liquidation passed by the NCLT is reversed in appeal, the noticee No. 1 (BCIL) shall be restrained from accessing the securities market..." for three years from the date of such reversal of liquidation order, the watchdog noted.

Sebi had conducted an investigation into the issuance of Global Depository Receipts (GDRs) by various companies, including BCIL.

In March 2010, BCIL issued 9.69 million GDRs worth USD 24.99 million.

It was found that Vintage was the only entity that subscribed to the GDRs and the subscription amount was paid by obtaining a loan from EURAM (European American Investment Bank), as per the order.

BCIL provided security towards the loan obtained by Vintage through a pledge agreement signed between BCIL and EURAM Bank in February 2010. Under the pact, BCIL pledged GDR proceeds against the loan availed by Vintage for subscription of its GDRs, according to Sebi.

Further, the regulator said the pledge agreement was signed by Murthy, then a director of BCIL who was authorised by a board resolution in December 2009. The company had also approved opening of a bank account with EURAM Bank for the purpose of receiving the GDR proceeds.

Birla, Trivedi and Adige had also attended that board meeting, as per the regulator.

The three individuals were also directors during the period when the corporate announcement were made by BCIL, which were false and misleading to the extent that its GDR issue was successfully allotted whereas the same was subscribed by only Vintage, according to Sebi.

The regulator noted that the announcement conveys that there was considerable demand for its GDRs in the overseas market and the same were successfully subscribed.

Thus, the investors in India were made to believe that BCIL has acquired a good reputation in terms of investment potential and, therefore, foreign investors have successfully subscribed to the GDR issue, it added.

The watchdog also said the act of BCIL in making misleading announcements regarding its GDR issue resulted in fraud under the prohibition of fraudulent and unfair trade practices.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank bring sops for customers ahead of festive season

 At a time when most sectors in the economy are struggling to find their feet due to the virus induced slowdown, the country’s largest private sector lender, HDFC Bank, has said that its business is back to pre-covid levels and that it sees a great future for itself going ahead, as it has managed to build a strong balance sheet and a strong brand.

"If you talk to the automobile industry, steel industry, FMCG industry, see the semi-urban India, rural India, motorcycle segment, gold loan segment, tractor segment and the online market places, the growth is pretty good. However, there are also some sector which will take a little longer," said Aditya Puri, MD&CEO, HDFC Bank. "We are confident about the future. We have achieved pre-covid levels. And in a few segments, we will exceed the pre-covid levels."

Echoing these sentiments, Anup Bagchi, Executive Director, ICICI Bank said that as far as the bank's customers are concerned, the overall spends is at 90 per cent of pre-covid levels and if adjusted for travel and tourism, it is above pre-covid levels in September. The e-commerce segment is seeing around 130-140 per cent spends of the pre-covid levels. And the bank is expecting a 40-45 per cent jump in spends during the festive season due to pent up demand. Normally, the lender sees around 30 per cent growth in its business during festive season.

To boost consumer spending ahead of the festive season, both HDFC Bank and ICICI Bank have come up with sops for their customers, aimed at not only reviving demand and credit growth for the banking sector, but also improving the top-line for various merchants and partners associated with these banks.

Both the banks are offering a range of offers that include spend offers, which is typically done on credit, debit, or pre-paid cards. The festive season sops also include special deals on various categories of loans such as auto loans, personal loans and other consumer loans.

HDFC Bank launched its ‘Festive Treats 2.0,’ where it has tied up with retail brands to offer discounts, cashbacks and extra reward points on both in-store and on-line purchases. E-commerce majors such as Amazon, TataCliq, Myntra, Pepperfry, Swiggy and Grofers will offer special deals during this time for HDFC Bank customers. The bank has also tied up with hyper-local stores and 'kiranas'. In the loans segment, the bank is offering 50 per cent off on the processing fees on auto loans, personal loans and business growth loans and zero processing fee on two-wheeler loans.

Similarly, ICICI Bank has also tied up with leading e-commerce companies so that its customers can avail various offers on categories such as electronics, apparels, jewellery, health & wellness, grocery, food ordering, automobile and others. On top of that, the bank is offering, attractive interest rate on home loans, lower processing fees, tailor made EMIs in auto loans, no cost EMI on consumer finance loans.

ALSO READ: Big Billion Days to create 70,000 seasonal jobs in festive season: Flipkart

“The festive offers are available for retail consumers as well as business customers with discounts on processing fee on loans, reduced EMIs, gift vouchers and more benefits. The Bank has tied up with leading brands to present these offers to its customers”, the bank said.

Parag Rao, Country Head – Payment Business & Merchant Acquiring Services at HDFC Bank said “Consumers have held back on purchases during the lockdown and there is a lot of pent up demand that has built up in the system. In the past 2-3 months we have seen renewed customer interest and buying patterns. We see this continuing through the festive season as well.

HDFC Bank is expecting to do better than last year in the festive season. Last year, the bank did the highest ever disbursal of two-wheeler loans through ‘Festive Treats’. They also disbursed highest ever personal loans, and saw highest-ever spends through debit, credit cards. “This year, we believe, that it will be bigger and better than last year because we have more number of partners and brands”, Rao said.

Last year, a lot of business for the bank was generated by walk-ins in to the branches. This year, however, lesser footfalls of wall-ins into the branch is expected but all of that has actually shifted to online.

Few days ago, country’s largest lender State Bank of India (SBI) has also come out with its festive season offers wherein it will waive off processing fee for customers applying for car, personal and gold loans through digital banking platform YONO. It will also give a concession of upto 10 basis points (bps) on home loans. It is offering the lowest interest rate starting from 7.5 per cent to customers opting for car loans. They will also get 100 per cent on-road finance on select models, SBI said in a statement.

India gig workers, hit by Covid, need tech for financial resilience: Report

 Flourish Ventures, a global fintech venture capital fund with investments across South Asia, today published the fourth country report in its five-part series tracking the economic struggles of gig workers during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The survey reveals that nearly 90 per cent of Indian gig workers have lost income during the pandemic. These workers often enjoyed above-average earnings before the pandemic, but more than a third surveyed were making less than Rs 5,000 (approximately USD 68) per month by August. This research also highlighted the potential of Fintech to serve their unmet financial needs and improve their financial security - especially as nearly all intended to remain on digital platforms for gig workers.

This survey of 770 ridesharing drivers, delivery workers, and housecleaners using digital platforms was conducted in August 2020, as COVID-19 cases were surging across in India.

Flourish's series The Digital Hustle: Gig Worker Financial Lives Under Pressure has also surveyed Brazil, Indonesia, South Africa, and is fielding a final installment in the United States.

Key Findings

* Incomes have collapsed since the lockdowns. While most Indian gig workers earned over Rs 25,000 per month (approximately USD 340) before the pandemic, by August nearly nine in 10 were making less than Rs 15,000 per month (USD 200). More than a third of gig workers were making about USD 2.3 per day or less.

* Indian gig workers have been resilient: If they lost their main source of income, Flourish found that 47 per cent of gig workers could not cover their expenses for a month without borrowing money - although the fact that 52 per cent could manage for more than a month indicates greater financial resilience than we found in other markets.

* Many are taking painful action: 44 per cent have already borrowed, 45 per cent have cut consumption, 83 per cent have used their savings, and 57 per cent have acted on the loan moratorium to reduce or halt payments on their debts.

* Government aid has alleviated some hardship: Of those surveyed, 42 per cent received food or financial aid from government COVID-19 relief. Those who have were over four times less likely to say they have lost hope.

* Despite real fears about the health risk, 61 per cent of respondents were more concerned about their ability to work. Concern for their livelihoods outweighed gig workers' worries about even their access to basic needs (17 per cent) or their family's health (12 per cent).

* Most gig workers worry about their future. While immediate cash flow was a moderate concern, at least 61 per cent of respondents' top concern was saving for old age or paying off debt.

"Gig workers have been hurting as the COVID-19 crisis has persisted in India, even when they had a financial cushion in the form of government aid or personal savings," said Tilman Ehrbeck, managing partner at Flourish. "This research reveals most are concerned for their financial future. At Flourish, our hope is that the same digital platforms which enabled the gig economy can connect workers to new sources of income and better financial tools for security in this crisis and beyond."

Those Hardest Hit

As Flourish has found in other countries, ridesharing drivers in India were hit hardest by the COVID-19 economy. Fully 90 per cent reported a loss of income, compared to 72 per cent of house cleaners. Because India's digital gig economy is dominated by men, fewer women were surveyed. In Indonesia, female gig workers fared the same as men since the pandemic; in India women were more likely to lose income.

As in most countries, the pandemic has affected urban centers more severely than rural areas - and this may be even more pronounced in India. One house cleaner surveyed said, "I returned to my village. I am concerned about going back to Mumbai because everyone seems to have the disease there, but I don't have an option because there's no work here. We have to find a way to make money."

Sources of Resilience

Compared with other countries surveyed in The Digital Hustle series, India provided more generous government aid. In addition to receiving government aid, 57 per cent of workers surveyed temporarily halted payments on existing loans as part of the federal loan moratorium.

Indian gig workers also seemed to have a larger personal savings cushion than those in other countries. At least 83 per cent have used savings to get through the crisis. In India, 52 per cent of respondents said, if they lost their primary income, they could last at least a month without borrowing. In Brazil, Indonesia, and South Africa, less than 27 per cent of respondents could say the same.

Fintech and gig workers' financial futures

While 45 per cent of Indian gig workers have cut spending, about the same proportion (44 per cent) have borrowed money in the pandemic. Most are concerned with their ability to pay down debt and plan for the future.

The need to manage strained day-to-day cash flows, and better prepare for the future, could be served by Fintech solutions, as gig workers are already digitally connected.

A mobile app could aggregate all of a gig worker's earnings derived from different sources and nudge workers to regularly put aside small amounts of money into a digital account for future use - such as for debt instalments. Digital platforms could also provide them with small ticket credit to purchase supplies, fill up fuel tanks or learn new skills when needed.

Survey Methodology

Flourish partnered with research firm 60 Decibels and local partners Avail Finance and Unitus Capital to conduct the online survey of 770 gig workers in August 2020. Of these respondents, 322 were ridesharing drivers, 307 were delivery workers, and 141 were house cleaning workers. To view the full report and access the underlying data, visit:

https://flourishventures.com/perspectives/the-digital-hustle-gig-worker-financial-lives-under- pressure-india-spotlight-2020/

As part of The Digital Hustle: Gig Worker Financial Lives Under Pressure, Flourish began tracking the experiences of gig workers in five key markets across the globe in May 2020. With each study, Flourish aims to better understand the economic impact of COVID-19 on gig workers, further helping fintech entrepreneurs serve the most vulnerable consumers by examining their changing financial needs.

This story is provided by VRPR Digital. ANI will not be responsible in any way for the content of this article.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Media, entertainment biz to reach Rs 1,86,600 cr revenue in FY22: Report

 The media and entertainment sector, which was badly hit due to the disruptions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, is expected to rebound to touch a revenue of Rs 1,86,600 crore in 2021-22, due to acceleration of digital adoption among users across geographies, according to a report.

The sector should recover and post a 33 per cent growth in 2021-22, following a contraction of 20 per cent in 2020-21, which still implies a loss of around two years of growth, said KPMG in India Partner and Head (Media and Entertainment) Girish Menon.

He was quoting the KPMG Media and Entertainment (M&E) report, 'A year off script: Time for resilience', which examines the performance of the M&E sector during a particularly challenging period.

The two areas that offer encouragement are the continued economic growth of India and the universal acceleration of digital adoption among users across geographies, he said.

"As per our revised estimates, India could be home to a billion digital users by 2028 rather than the earlier projected 2030 timeline," he added.

Menon added that there have been several structural changes to digital behaviour on account of the experience of the lockdown resulting in a new homogeneity among users. "It is our belief that many of these changes will translate into a more democratic and sophisticated digital citizen within the country."

According to the report, the overall revenue of the sector during 2019-20 stood at Rs 1,75,100 crore that is expected to contract to Rs 1,40,200 crore during the current financial year and recover to Rs 1,86,600 crore in 2021-22.

There will be a deeper integration of digital technology across the M&E value chain from content production to distribution. Technology adoption could, however, face some challenges in terms of skill development and the shift to a digital-first mindset but will result in operational cost savings and potentially lower lead times over the longer term, Menon said.

India was already experiencing a slowdown in economic activity even prior to the outbreak of COVID-19 in March, and the onset of the global pandemic and ensuing lockdown dealt a severe blow to the Indian economy, the report said.

The M&E sector has been affected but to varying degrees like the outdoor entertainment formats (films and events), and traditional media (print and TV to some extent) have been badly impacted as people stayed indoors and advertising spends dried up, it said.

Digital advertising, over-the-top (OTT) and gaming fared much better, with massive spikes in digital consumption during the lockdown across geographies and socio-economic classes, it said.

The digital advertising spends are now set to overtake those on TV by 2020-21, which is an important milestone and turning point in the evolution of media and entertainment in India, the report said.

"The distinction among segments of M&E has become more pronounced with the lockdown. Marketing spend has moved perceptibly towards digital media and away from traditional segments like print, radio and to some extent TV," KPMG in IndiaPartner and Head (Technology, Media and Telecom) Satya Easwaran added.

Easwaran added that a greater reliance on subscription and other paid options as well as the development of a credible digital business model are going to be inevitable for these traditional media segments.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Arvind Lifestyle, Gap mutually end franchise biz relationship in India

 Arvind Lifestyle Brands Ltd, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Arvind Fashions Ltd (AFL), and Gap Inc have decided to mutually terminate their franchise business relationship in India.

"Due to circumstances post the corona pandemic, both companies agreed that a mutual termination was in both companies' best interest. As next steps, both companies will work out modalities regarding transition of the Gap business. Arvind Lifestyle Brands Limited has appointed an Investment Bank to find a buyer for the Gap business," said a regulatory filing by Arvind Fasions.

The Gap business delivered revenues of Rs 182 crore (4.7 per cent of AFL's consolidated turnover) with a PBT loss of Rs 34 crore in FY2020.

The company has entered into a binding agreement on September 29 with Gap Inc to terminate the franchise business relationship in India.

The companies are working out modalities regarding transition of the Gap business in India and the closure period will become clear over time.

--IANS

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(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Oberoi Group, Mandarin Oriental in strategic tie-up to expand global reach

 Mandarin Oriental Hotel Group, the London Stock Exchange-listed hospitality firm and The Oberoi Group have got into a long-term strategic alliance, Oberoi Hotels and Resorts said in a statement. As part of the alliance, the two groups will be collaborating jointly across a range of initiatives. The partnership creates a platform for the two to collaborate while retaining their brands' unique identity and heritage.

The alliance enhances the global reach of both groups, providing guests with increased choice in breadth across the globe as well as depth in India. Members of Mandarin Oriental and Oberoi One, the brands’ respective recognition programmes, will have privileged access to over 50 luxury hotels in sought-after destinations, where they will receive superior recognition, exclusive experiences and offers, as well as invitations to bespoke event, the company said.

“We have long been ‘fans’ of Mandarin Oriental,” said Vikram Oberoi, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer of EIH Limited, the flagship company of The Oberoi Group. “Our brands complement each other extremely well as do our organisations values and culture. This exciting alliance will allow guests to experience new destinations and experiences in the legendary styles for which both companies are renowned.”

ALSO READ: Oberoi Group, Mandarin Oriental Hotel enter into strategic alliance

Tapping into the expertise of both brands, the alliance will work together to create unique culinary and wellness experiences and will also collaborate on innovation, sustainability and colleague learning and development. Joint efforts across these areas will provide synergies for both brands enabling both to further evolve the meaning of luxury hospitality.

“We are delighted to launch this innovative partnership with The Oberoi Group, setting the stage for us to push the boundaries of luxury hospitality. The Oberoi Group has a long established history and a wealth of expertise in providing exemplary service and I am confident that by working together both organisations will grow and create further differentiation in the industry that our guests will value. We look forward to working with The Oberoi Group to continue to develop and deepen this special partnership.” said James Riley, Mandarin Oriental’s Group Chief Executive.

Due date for 'filing belated, revised' ITRs for AY20 extended to Nov 30

 The deadline for filing "belated, revised' Income Tax returns has been extended from September 30 to November 30, said the government on Wednesday.

The date is being extended for the "genuine difficulties" taxpayers face in the Covid-19 pandemic, said the Central Board of Direct Taxes on Twitter.

The last date for filing tax returns for AY 2019-20 is being extended for the fourth time for the pandemic. The date was first revised till June 30, then July 31, and then till September 30.

The Income Tax department on Wednesday said it has issued refunds worth over Rs 1.18 lakh crore to over 33 lakh taxpayers in 6 months till September 29, said news agency PTI.

This include personal income tax (PIT) refunds amounting to Rs 32,230 crore issued to 31.75 lakh taxpayers, and corporate tax refunds amounting to Rs 86,094 crore to over 1.78 lakh taxpayers during this period.

"CBDT issues refunds of over Rs 1,18,324 crore to more than 33.54 lakh taxpayers between 1st April, 2020 to 29th September,2020. Income tax refunds of Rs 32,230 crore have been issued in 31,75,358 cases & corporate tax refunds of Rs 86,094 crore have been issued in 1,78,540 cases," the Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) tweeted.

The government has emphasised on providing tax-related services to the taxpayers without any hassles during the pandemic and to that end has been clearing up pending tax refunds.

(With inputs from PTI.)

India's April-Aug fiscal deficit passes 109% of full year budget target

 India's fiscal deficit in the five months to end August stood at Rs 8.7 trillion ($117.98 billion), or 109.3% of the budgeted target for the current fiscal year, government data showed on Wednesday.

Net tax receipts were Rs 2.84 trillion, while total expenditure was Rs 12.5 trillion, the data showed, indicating the government was facing a fall in tax receipts amid a rise in spending to combat the impact of the coronavirus.

The deficit is predicted to exceed 8% of GDP in the 2020/21 fiscal year that began in April, economists said, from initial government estimates of 3.5, mainly due to a sharp economic contraction triggered by the pandemic.

JPMorgan to pay $920 mn for manipulating precious metals, treasury market

 By Abhishek Manikandan and Michelle Price

(Reuters) - JPMorgan Chase & Co has agreed to pay more than $920 million and admitted to wrongdoing to settle federal U.S. market manipulation probes into its trading of metals futures and Treasury securities, the U.S. authorities said on Tuesday.

The landmark multi-agency settlement lifts a regulatory shadow that has hung over the bank for several years and marks a signature victory for the government's efforts to clamp down on illegal trading in the futures and precious metals market.

JPMorgan will pay $436.4 million in fines, $311.7 million in restitution and more than $172 million in disgorgement, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) said on Tuesday, the biggest-ever settlement imposed by the derivatives regulator.

Between 2008 and 2016, JPMorgan engaged in a pattern of manipulation in the precious metals futures and U.S. Treasury futures market, the CFTC said. Traders would place orders on one side of the market which they never intended to execute, to create a false impression of buy or sell interest that would raise or depress prices, according to the settlement.

This manipulative practice, which is designed to create the illusion of demand, or lack thereof, is known as "spoofing."

Some of the trades were made on JPMorgan's own account, while on occasions traders manipulated the market to facilitate trades by hedge fund clients, the CFTC said. The bank failed to identify, investigate, and stop the behavior, even after a new surveillance system flagged issues in 2014, the agency said.

"The conduct of the individuals referenced in today's resolutions is unacceptable and they are no longer with the firm," said Daniel Pinto, co-president of JPMorgan and CEO of the Corporate & Investment Bank.

He added that the bank had invested "considerable resources" in boosting its internal compliance policies, surveillance systems and training programs.

In parallel settlements, the bank entered into a Deferred Prosecution Agreement with the Department of Justice and the United States Attorney's Office for the District of Connecticut, staving off criminal prosecution on charges of wire fraud.

It also agreed to pay $35 million to settle related charges with the Securities and Exchange Commission, although the bank's payment to the CFTC would offset that fine, it said.

In an unusual concession, JPMorgan also admitted wrongdoing in agreeing to the SEC and Justice Dept. settlements.

"This record-setting enforcement action demonstrates the CFTC's commitment to being tough on those who intentionally break our rules, no matter who they are. Attempts to manipulate our markets won't be tolerated," said CFTC Chairman Heath Tarbert.

The CFTC and Justice Department have taken aim at spoofing in recent years, using sophisticated data analysis tools to spot potential wrongdoing that it could not previously detect.

Reuters has reported that around 2017, the agency began using techniques it originally developed to spot healthcare fraud schemes to identify suspicious trading patterns, including by scanning activity on exchanges.

"The idea was: let's mine this data source to see who the worst actors are," Robert Zink, a top Justice official who helped lead the effort, told Reuters in May https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-doj-trading-insight/traders-beware-u-s-taps-new-tools-to-find-fraud-in-volatile-commodities-market-idUSKBN22X14E.

The agency has already charged six JPMorgan traders for manipulating metals futures between 2008 and 2016. On Friday, meanwhile, two former Deutsche Bank AG traders were found guilty https://www.reuters.com/article/us-deutsche-bank-traders-convicted/two-ex-deutsche-bank-traders-convicted-in-u-s-over-fake-orders-idUSKCN26H00X by a federal jury of spoofing, the agency said.

 

(Reporting by Abhishek Manikandan in Bengaluru; additional reporting by Jonathan Stempel, editing by Patrick Graham, Arun Koyyur, Nick Zieminski)

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Explained: The story behind the Apple versus Fortnite App Store battle

 Perhaps it’s a sign of our times that a potentially landmark battle with antitrust implications is shaping up over digital pickaxes. The court case involving Apple and Epic Games, the maker of the video game Fortnite, is the result of the gamemaker’s rebellion against rules and fees set by Apple in its role of gatekeeper for apps on its iPhones and iPads.

What’s the case about?

In August, Epic’s billionaire founder, Tim Sweeney, announced that he would no longer abide by Apple’s rule that all purchases of apps and items within apps designed for its iOS-based devices go through Apple’s payment system. After he activated Epic’s own payment system, Apple kicked Fortnite out of its app store. It also threatened to make it hard for developers using Epic’s tools to build games. In response, Epic sued in federal court; it also sued Google over the same issue Apple soon counter-sued.

What was Epic unhappy about?

That Apple and Google charge fees of up to 30 per cent to developers using their app stores. Consumers spent $50 billion worldwide on the App Store and Google Play in the first half of 2020, according to Sensor Tower estimates. That generated billions of dollars in highly profitable revenue for the companies. Some developers have derided this as an unfair and unwarranted tax, especially since it applies not just to the purchase of an app, but to anything bought within one.

Why does Apple do that?

Apple says that the App Store’s success is directly related to its iron-clad rules because it spends significant resources to police apps and maintain high quality standards. Its payment system ensures that consumers using the store have a seamless and easy experience and are protected from fraud. But a growing number of developers say Apple is simply finding excuses to maximise profits.

What are app makers doing?

Spotify, the music-streaming company, and Match Group, which runs dating services including Tinder, joined Epic and 10 other organisations to launch the Coalition for App Fairness to push Apple and Google, to change their app-store rules. The group launched a website outlining 10 “App Store Principles”, including one asserting that developers should not be required to exclusively use a particular app store or payment system. The group also criticised Apple’s 30 per cent cut for most paid apps and subscriptions.

First batch of Apple iPhone 12 to reach distributors on October 5: Report

 As the world awaits Apple to announce the launch date for its much-awaited and slightly-delayed iPhone 12, new reports have emerged that claim the first shipment of final units is going out to distributors on October 5.

According to Apple insider and tech analyst Jon Prosser, the shipment includes "iPhone 12 mini 5.4 (definitely the final marketing name) in 64GB/128GB/256GB and iPhone 12 6.1 (64GB/128GB/256GB)."

"Event on October 13, as I mentioned before," he said in a tweet late on Tuesday.

He claimed that the first iPhones to hit the stores are going to be the iPhone mini, which is the 5.4-inch version and the 6.1-inch iPhone 12 Max.

Apple is expected to launch four new devices under the iPhone 12 series.

All four models are expected to feature OLED displays and 5G support, as another analyst Ming-Chi Kuo claimed previously.

Apple is expected to launch its new iPhone 12 series in South Korea earlier than its usual schedule. According to officials at local telecom operators, they are preparing to sell the iPhone 12 in late October or early November, reports Yonhap news agency.

Foreign tech reviewers predicted that the iPhone 12 could be unveiled on October 13 and go on sale on October 23 in select markets.

Apple is expected to release four models of the iPhone 12 -- the 5.4-inch iPhone 12 Mini, the 6.1-inch iPhone 12, the 6.1-inch iPhone 12 Pro and the 6.7-inch iPhone 12 Pro Max.

Recently, it was revealed that the upcoming iPhone 12 could cost somewhere between $699 to $749 while the iPhone 12 Max could be priced around $799-849.

The Pro and Pro Max models are expected to be priced between $1,100 to $1,200.

--IANS

na/

 

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Google to force apps to pay 30% Play Store tax; gives one year to comply

 Google on Tuesday said all apps that sell digital goods within Play Store have to use its billing system, which allows the tech giant to collect a percentage of in-app purchases as a fee. The firm said it was only providing clarity on its billing policy as there was some confusion.
Google's clarification comes as the firm faces accusations of having anti-competitive policies worldwide, most recently by Fortnite-maker Epic Games, which has sued the firm after being banned from the Play Store. Closer home, Paytm last week slammed the tech giant’s policies after its app, too, was delisted from the app store.

“We want to be sure our policies are clear and up to date so they can be applied consistently and fairly to all developers,” said Sameer Samat, vice-president for product management at Google, in a blog post.

Policy not new

The tech giant clarified that this policy is not new and Google Play billing has always taken a 30 per cent commission on these transactions. This will only apply to less than 3 per cent of developers with apps on Play Store, as 97 per cent are already using Google Play billing.

Non-compliant apps that may require technical work to integrate the billing system have been given a year (until September 30, 2021) to complete any needed updates.

Play’s billing system is not required for apps that sell physical goods, for example, ride-hailing services, or apps that don’t require any transactions.

For new apps submitted to the Play Store, this policy comes into effect from January 20, 2021, and includes categories such as fitness, game, dating, education, music, video, and other content subscription services.

Google said its Play Store continues to help Indian developers scale and reach wider audiences.

Consumer spending on apps and games created by Indian developers doubled year to date, compared to the corresponding period last year. Indian developers also saw growth of more than 80 per cent in consumer spending from users outside of India, compared to the corresponding period last year.

Row with Paytm

Noida-based Paytm last week accused the firm of making policies that are over and above the laws of the country after its app was briefly delisted from the Play Store for violating Google’s policy on sports-betting activities.
Asked about the issue, Purnima Kochikar, director, Google Play, said the incident shows “we need to continue to have this dialogue, clarify and apply our policy uniformly and equitably”.

Kochikar said the company has an active conversation with all the developers and the firm is trying its best not to disrupt the user experience. “We have had multiple conversations (with Paytm) and we will continue to do that, because at the end of the day, Paytm is an important partner,” said Kochikar. “We know a lot of our users use Paytm and we will continue the conversation.”

Paytm had launched a UPI cashback and scratch cards campaign on September 11. Its payments app was delisted on September 18 from Play Store.

Paytm had said Google, too, regularly runs similar scratch card campaigns in India. However, Google had said offering cashback and vouchers alone do not constitute a violation of its gambling policies.

LIVE: SC dismisses UPSC Prelims 2020 postponement plea; exam on October 4

 The Supreme Court of India dismissed UPSC Prelims 2020 postponement plea. At the same time, the apex court directed the Centre to consider concessions for those aspirants who are on their last attempt. SC had earlier asked UPSC to file a reply as to why the examination cannot be postponed. Meanwhile, coronavirus patients will not be allowed to appear for the prelims, ruled SC.

The family of the 19-year-old Dalit woman, who died in a Delhi hospital a fortnight after she was gang-raped here, alleged on Wednesday that the UP police forcibly cremated the body in the middle of the night.
 
A special court in Lucknow will deliver the much-awaited judgment today in the 1992 Babri Masjid demolition case in which BJP veterans L K Advani and Murli Manohar Joshi are among the accused.
 
The Congress will today hold internal discussions on the seat-sharing arrangements with like-minded parties for the upcoming Bihar Assembly elections.
 
Stay tuned for the latest news of the day.
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03:19 PM 
India posts current account surplus of $19.8 bn as trade deficit narrows
India’s current account balance (CAB) recorded a surplus of $19.8 billion (3.9 per cent of GDP) in Q1 of 2020-21. This contrasts with a deficit of $ 15 billion (2.1 per cent of GDP) in April-June 2019 (Q1Fy20).
 
The surplus in April-June 2020 (Q1Fy21) comes on top of a surplus of $0.6 billion (0.1 per cent of GDP) in the preceding quarter (Q4 Fy20), said the Reserve Bank of India in a statement. The surplus was due to a sharp contraction in the trade deficit to $10 billion, as the country’s merchandise imports declined sharply relative to exports on a year-on-year basis. Read more
03:03 PM 
Hathras rape case: Congress demands UP CM's resignation
The Congress Wednesday slammed the BJP government in Uttar Pradesh over the Hathras gang-rape victim's family being allegedly denied the right to properly perform her last rites, demanding Prime Minister Narendra Modi ask for Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath's resignation.

"The way she was cremated is a gross violation of her human rights, a Congress spokesperson said in Delhi.

The 19-year-old Dalit woman, who died in a Delhi hospital a fortnight after she was gang-raped in Uttar Pradesh's Hathras, was cremated in the early hours of Wednesday, with her family alleging the local police forced them to conduct the last rites in the dead of the night.

 
02:47 PM 
NTPC eyes Rs 98,000 cr revenue in FY21
NTPC is eyeing Rs 98,000 crore revenue from operations and about 15 million metric tonne of coal output from its mines in the current fiscal year.

The state-owned power giant is also aiming 340 BU (billion units) of electricity generation in 2020-21 as part of its Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the Ministry of Power, a company statement said.

As per the MoU, NTPC will aim to achieve capital expenditure of Rs 21,000 crore and coal production of 15 million metric tonne in the current fiscal year.

 
02:38 PM 
BrahMos supersonic cruise missile test-fired off Odisha coast

02:23 PM 
Govt extends BPCL bid deadline to Nov 16
The government has for the fourth time extended the deadline for bidding for privatisation of India's second-biggest oil refiner Bharat Petroleum Corp Ltd (BPCL) by one and a half months to November 16.

While the Cabinet, in November last year, had approved the sale of the government's entire 52.98 per cent stake in BPCL, offers seeking expression of interest (EoI) or bids showing interest in buying its stake were invited only on March 7.

Initially, the EoI submission deadline was May 2, but it was first was extended up to June 13, then to July 31 and later to September 30.

 
02:05 PM 
Jai Shri Ram: Advani on being acquitted from Babri demolition case
Veteran BJP leader LK Advani, who was acquitted by a special CBI court on Wednesday in the Babri mosque demolition case, welcomed the court verdict by chanting 'Jai Shri Ram', and said it came in "footsteps of another order which paved the way for my dream of seeing a Ram Mandir in Ayodhya".
 
Advani, who was the face of the Ram Janambhoomi Movement in 1992, was acquitted along with all other 31 accused in the case.
 
"It is a very important decision and a matter of happiness for us. When we heard the news of the court's order, we welcomed it by chanting Jai Shri Ram, Advani said in a video message.
02:00 PM 
Govt extends FY19 GST annual return filing deadline by 1 month
The government has extended the deadline for filing GST annual return and audit report for 2018-19 fiscal year by a month till October 31.
 
After obtaining due clearances from the Election Commission in view of the Model Code of Conduct, Government has extended due date for furnishing Annual Return in GSTR-9 and GSTR 9C for 2018-19 from 30.09.2020 to 31.10.2020, the Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs (CBIC) tweeted.
 
In May, the government had extended thelast date for filing annual GST return for 2018-19 by three months till September 2020.
 
GSTR-9 is an annual return to be filed by taxpayers registered under the Goods and Services Tax (GST) regime. It consists of details regarding the outward and inward supplies made or received under different tax heads.
01:51 PM 
Amazon creates over 100,000 jobs ahead of festive season
Amazon India on Wednesday said that it has created more than 1 lakh seasonal job opportunities across its operations network in the country ahead of the festive season.

The new associates will join Amazon's existing network of associates and support them to pick, pack, ship and deliver customers' orders safely and efficiently, the company said in a statement.

"The new seasonal positions will help elevate its delivery experience and boost the company's fulfilment and delivery capabilities to meet the surge in customer demand this festive season," it said.

 
01:12 PM 
UPSC Prelims 2020: Summary of SC directions
1. No postponement of UPSC Prelims 2020
2. UPSC asked to consider granting an extra attempt to candidates who miss the exam due to coronavirus but without extending the upper age limit.
01:06 PM 
Supreme Court dismisses the plea seeking for postponement of the UPSC examination

VA Tech Wabag soars 7% on allotment of 5 mn shares to Rekha Jhunjhunwala

 Shares of VA Tech Wabag surged 7 per cent to Rs 204.65 on the BSE in the intra-day trade on Wednesday after the company allotted 5 million equity shares to Rekha Rakesh Jhunjhunwala, wife of ace investor Rakesh Jhunjhunwala on preferential basis.

VA Tech Wabag, the Indian multinational player in the water treatment industry, had decided to raise Rs 120 crore via preferential issue on August 25.
Consequently, the board had approved issue of 7.5 million equity shares at price of Rs 160 per share, the company said in its BSE filing.

On Tuesday, the board allotted 5 million shares to Rekha Rakesh Jhunjhunwala, 1.5 million shares to Basera Home Finance, and 1 million shares to Sushma Anand Jain and Anand Jaikumar Jain. READ HERE

In the past three months, the market price of VA Tech Wabag has rallied 87 per cent, as compared to 8.6 per cent rise in the S&P BSE Sensex.

At 09:50 am, the stock was up 5 per cent at Rs 200 on the BSE, as against 0.26 per cent decline in the S&P BSE Sensex. A combined around 660,000 equity shares had changed hands on the counter on the NSE and BSE till the time of writing o this report.

Welspun Corp hits 5% upper circuit on receiving orders worth Rs 1,400 crore

 Shares of Welspun Corp hit an upper circuit limit of 5 per cent at Rs 113.70 apiece on the BSE on Wednesday, a day after the company announced it has received multiple orders of approximately 147 kilometre-tonne (KMT) valuing close to Rs 1,400 crore.

"These orders would be executed from India and will help boost the mill utilisation for our India facilities. The inflow of orders is not only from the domestic Oil & Gas (O&G) and Water business but also from exports. This indicates our strong positioning in all the markets," Welspun Corp said in the press release.

With these orders, the company’s order book stands at 755 KMT valued at approximately Rs 6,300 crore, after considering execution up to August 2020, the company said further.

At 09:53 AM, the stock was frozen at the upper circuit band on the BSE against Tuesday's close of Rs 108.30. In comparison, the benchmark S&P BSE Sensex was trading 0.22 per cent lower at 37,891 levels.

Welspun Corp had hit a 52-week high of Rs 233.70 on February 11, 2020, while its 52-week low level stands at Rs 55, hit on May 22, 2020.

BPCL tanks 6% as govt extends deadline to submit EoI to November 16

 Shares of Bharat Petroleum Corporation Limited (BPCL) slipped 6 per cent to Rs 363 on the BSE in the intra-day trade on Wednesday after the government extended the deadline to submit expression of interest (EoI) for the company's privatisation to November 16, 2020.

The government on March 7, 2020, had issued a Preliminary Information Memorandum document (PIM) for inviting Expression of Interest (EOI) for strategic disinvestment of BPCL. "In view of further requests received from the Interested Bidders (IBs) and the prevailing situation arising out of Covid-19 pandemic, the last date for submission of EoIs is further extended to 16th November, 2020 (by 5.00 PM)," the circular said. CLICK HERE FOR RELEASE.

Meanwhile, according to a Reuters report, Rosneft and Saudi Aramco are unlikely to bid in the privatisation of the state-owned refiner.

A Rosneft source told the news agency that the company will not buy BPCL, while another source said the Russian oil major would only be interested in BPCL's marketing business which is comprised of fuel depots and more than 16,800 fuel stations. READ MORE

The government proposes to sell its entire shareholding in BPCL, comprising 1.149 million equity shares which constitutes 52.98 per cent of BPCL's equity share capital, along with transfer of management control to a strategic buyer as part of its strategic disinvestment (except BPCL's equity shareholding of 61.65 per cent in Numaligarh Refinery Ltd), the notice inviting offer had said.

At 11:18 am, BPCL was trading 5.5 per cent lower at Rs 365 on the BSE, as compared to 0.19 per cent decline in the S&P BSE Sensex. The trading volumes on the counter jumped five-fold with a combined 16.3 million equity shares were changing hands on the counter on the NSE and BSE till the time of writing of this report.

Advanced Enzyme extends rally, zooms 45% in 1 week after FPI hikes stake

 Shares of Advanced Enzyme Technologies hit a fresh 52-week high of Rs 332, ralling 13 per cent on the National Stock Exchange (NSE) on Wednesday, on the back of heavy volumes in an otherwise subdued market. In the past one week, stock of the agricultural products company has zoomed 45 per cent after foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) bought nearly 4 per cent stake in the company via open market. In comparison, the Nifty50 index was up 1 per cent during the period.


On Thursday, September 24, Nalanda India Equity Fund bought 4.19 million equity shares, representing 3.75 per cent stake, in Advanced Enzyme for Rs 111 crore. The FPI purchased shares at Rs 263.80 per share on the NSE via bulk deals, the exchange data show.


On the same day, Advanced Vital Enzymes Private Limited, the promoter of the company, had offloaded 3 million equity shares or 2.69 per cent stake at price of Rs 265 per share on the NSE. Post transaction, Advanced Vital Enzymes stake in the company declined to 11.97 per cent from 14.66 per cent earlier, Advanced Enzyme Technologies said. Name of the other sellers could not be ascertained.


Meanwhile, BSE sought clarification from Advanced Enzyme Technologies on September 30, 2020 with reference to significant movement in price in order to ensure that investors have latest relevant information, and to safeguard the interest of the investors. The company is yet to respond.


At 12:21 pm, the stock was trading 11 per cent higher at Rs 327 on the NSE, as compared to 0.10 per cent gain in the Nifty50 index. A combined 1.95 million equity shares had changed hands on the counter on the NSE and BSE till the time of writing of this report.


Lakshmi Vilas Bank slips 5% amid concerns over Clix Capital deal

 Shares of Lakshmi Vilas Bank (LVB) slipped 5 per cent to Rs 19.15 on the BSE in the intra-day trade on Wednesday on concerns Clix Capital’s proposed deal may not materialise after a large section of the bank’s shareholders voted against the reappointment of the top brass.

According to a report by business daily Mint, Clix Capital, which was in advanced talks with LVB for a potential merger, may approach the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) for clarity on the future of the deal after the bank’s shareholders voted out seven board members, including its managing director.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is learnt to have told state-owned Punjab National Bank (PNB) to get ready to take over LVB in case the beleaguered lender’s proposed transaction with Clix Capital does not materialise. Apart from PNB, another public sector bank has been asked to look into the books of LVB, Business Standard reported. However, PNB has clarified that the Bank has not received any such instruction from RBI.

On Sunday, September 27, 2020, the RBI had approved that day-to-day affair of the Bank will be run by a Committee of Directors (CoD) composed of three independent directors. This CoD will exercise the discretionary powers of MD and CEO in the ad-interim.

With a liquidity coverage ratio (LCR) of about 262 per cent as of September 27, 2020, against minimum 100 per cent required by RBI, the deposit-holders, bond-holders, account-holders and creditors are well safeguarded, LVB said.

At 10:55 am, the stock of LVB was trading 4 per cent lower at Rs 19.35 on the BSE, against 0.38 per cent rise in the S&P BSE Sensex. A combined 810,000 equity shares have changed hands on the counter on the NSE and BSE so far.

KPIT Tech rallies 30% in 2 weeks, hits record high as promoters hike stake

 Shares of KPIT Technologies continued their its northward journey, surging 10 per cent to Rs 127 -- the stock's record high -- on the BSE on Wednesday in an otherwise weak market.
The IT consulting & services company's stock has rallied 30 per cent in the past two weeks after promoters bought shares of the company through open market. In comparison, the S&P BSE Sensex was down 3.5 per cent during the same period. The stock surpassed its previous high of Rs 118.90, touched on September 21, 2020.

On September 18, 2020, Anupama Kishor Patil, acquired 1.4 million equity shares of KPIT Technologies at price of Rs 100 per share on the BSE, the bulk deal data shows. On September 22, Anupama Patil had bought an additional 94,000 shares of the company via open market.

Post acquisitions, Anupama Kishor Patil’s stake in KPIT Technologies increased to 0.59 per cent from 0.04 per cent, the company said. The names of the sellers were not ascertained immediately.

In a separate regulatory filing, the company said it released majority of pledge shares lying with the Vistra ITCL (India) Limited (‘Vistra’). CLICK HERE FORE DETAILS

Meanwhile, in the past month, the stock has soared 43 per cent, against 4 per cent decline in the S&P BSE Sensex. In the past three months, it has zoomed 101 per cent, as compared to 8.6 per cent rise in the benchmark index.

As per the management’s initial assessment, there will be significant impact in H1 of FY2021 and it expects recovery to commence from Q3 of FY2021. KPIT has a strong balance sheet with over Rs 380 crore net cash balance and negligible debt.

The company has also taken proactive steps in deferring its medium term capex plans and pulling out levers to manage profitability. It remains confident that it will be able to meet all its delivery & financial commitments in time. With the exception of a few, KPIT has not seen any material changes in production programs and it continues to engage strategically with its customers across the globe, the company said in 2019-20 annual report.

KPIT continues to believe that Europe, particularly Germany will bounce back fast paving way for quicker and strong bounce back, towards the end of FY2021.

RIL gains 1% as General Atlantic to invest Rs 3,675 cr in Reliance Retail

 Shares of Reliance Industries (RIL) advanced 1 per cent ato Rs 2,268 on the BSE in the early morning trade on Wednesday after General Atlantic, a leading global growth equity firm, said it will invest Rs 3,675 crore in Reliance Retail Ventures Limited (RRVL) for 0.84 per cent equity stake.

The stock of RIL was trading higher for the fourth straight day and has gained 4 per cent during the period. It hit a record high of Rs 2,368.80 on September 16, 2020.

"General Atlantic's investment will translate into a 0.84 per cent equity stake in RRVL. The deal values Reliance Retail at a pre-money equity value of Rs 4.285 trillion", RIL said in a media release. READ HERE

This marks the second investment by General Atlantic in a subsidiary of RIL, following an Rs 6,598.38 crore-investment in Jio Platforms announced earlier this year.

Last week, private equity (PE) firm KKR said it would invest Rs 5,550 crore in RIL's subsidiary Reliance Retail for a 1.28 per cent stake. Earlier, US-based PE firm Silver Lake had announced that it would invest Rs 7,500 crore in the retail firm for a 1.75 per cent stake.

RRVL is a subsidiary of RIL, and holding company of all the retail companies under the RIL Group. It reported a consolidated turnover of Rs 162,936 crore ($ 21.7 billion) and net profit of Rs 5,448 crore ($ 726.4 million) for the year ended March 31, 2020.

The stock of RIL has outperformed the Sensex over the past three months on the back of the company's significant deleveraging record, and ability to get on-board new investors and partners in the Digital Services business, setting a new benchmark valuation.

"Long term, we continue to like RIL's business and balance sheet, and believe all three of its core businesses – O2C, Retail and Digital Services – have become self-sustaining and cash generating, with Retail and Digital Services on a high growth path," analysts at HSBC Global Research said in recent note.

IPL 2020, KKR vs RR preview: KKR faces stern test against Rajasthan Royals

 Kolkata Knight Riders will have to bat out of their skin to stop a marauding Rajasthan Royals when the two teams clash in an IPL match at the Dubai International Stadium here on Wednesday.

Having started off as underdogs, the Royals have taken the IPL by storm, chasing down the highest tournament total 224 against Kings XI Punjab in their last match.

In two wins from two matches, the Royals have got past the 200-mark with ease. In their success, they have found two stars in Sanju Samson and Rahul Tewatia, who have outshone marquee players.

In his second coming at the Royals, little known Haryana all-rounder Tewatia has got instant stardom for his 31-ball 53 against KXIP, which helped the side chase down a record 224 with three balls to spare against KXIP.

Struggling to get off the blocks quickly, Tewatia, who was on 17 from 23 deliveries with the team needing 51 from the last three overs, suddenly woke up from the slumber, smacking left-arm quick Sheldon Cottrell for five sixes in an over to turn the tables for RR.

But the season so far belongs to Samson -- the wicketkeeper from Kerala.

Boasting of the season's highest strike-rate of 214.86, Samson has two successive half-centuries that has once again put him in contention for a longer rope in the Indian team as a keeper-batsman.

Skipper Steve Smith has been ever reliable, striking two half-centuries, while opener Jos Buttler will be waiting to explode.

To match or even surpass the Royals, KKR have the biggest stars in Andre Russell to go along with reigning World Cup winning English skipper Eoin Morgan, one of the best in limited-overs cricket.

But both Morgan and Russell have got limited opportunities so far, having dropped down to No 5 and 6 respectively.

The fixture might just finally see them bat higher up, especially the star Jamaican, who was their highest run-getter last season with 510 runs at a astonishing strike rate of 204.81.

Having started off with a familiar defeat to Mumbai Indians in their opener, Kolkata Knight Riders put up a determined show to bounce back against a sloppy Sunrisers Hyderabad.

Talented opener Shubman Gill's unbeaten half-century, aided by Morgan's late firepower overtook SRH's below-par 145 with two overs to spare.

Come Wednesday, it may well be a run feast with no target 'safe' against the Royals.

Dubai has been host to both the Super-Over matches this season. The venue will be an unchartered territory for both the teams who will be playing here for the first time this season.

For the record, the teams batting first have won all the five matches here so far.

Teams:

Kolkata Knight Riders: Dinesh Karthik (C and WK), Andre Russell, Kamlesh Nagarkoti, Kuldeep Yadav, Lockie Ferguson, Nitish Rana, Prasidh Krishna, Rinku Singh, Sandeep Warrier, Shivam Mavi, Shubman Gill, Siddhesh Lad, Sunil Narine, Pat Cummins, Eoin Morgan, Varun Chakravarthy, Tom Banton, Rahul Tripathi, Chris Green, M Siddharth, Nikhil Naik, Ali Khan.

Rajasthan Royals: Steve Smith (captain), Jos Buttler, Robin Uthappa, Sanju Samson, Ben Stokes, Jofra Archer, Yashasvi Jaiswal, Manan Vohra, Kartik Tyagi, Akash Singh, Oshane Thomas, Andrew Tye, David Miller, Tom Curran, Aniruddha Joshi, Shreyas Gopal, Riyan Parag, Varun Aaron, Shashank Singh, Anuj Rawat, Mahipal Lomror, Mayank Markande.

Match Starts at 7:30pm IST.

Coronavirus LIVE: Karnataka replaces Tamil Nadu as the 3rd worst-hit state

 Coronavirus update: A day after recording the lowest single-day rise since September, India on Tuesday registered 80,500 new Covid-19 cases, taking the tally past the 6.2-million mark. With 1,178 fatalities in 24 hours, the country’s death toll reached 97,529. According to ICMR's second sero-survey findings, one in 15 individuals aged 10 years and above were estimated to be exposed to SARS-CoV2 by August, showing that a considerable population in India is still susceptible to coronavirus. Meanwhile, Vice President M Venkaiah Naidu has tested positive for coronavirus. The Centre is expected to announced Unlock 5.0 guidelines today.

Coronavirus vaccine update: The Union Health Ministry has said it does not agree with the Rs 80,000 crore figure cited by Adar Poonawalla, CEO of Serum Institute of India, for buying and distributing the vaccine in the country. The Ministry also claimed that it has sufficient funds for the vaccine.

World coronavirus update: The global tally of coronavirus cases stands at 33,832,531. While 25,135,889 have recovered, 1,011,960 have died so far. The US, the worst-hit country, has 7,405,966 cases. It is followed by India, which has 6,225,763 cases, Brazil (4,780,317) and Russia (1,167,805).

Stay tuned for coronavirus LIVE updates
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02:26 PM 
Covid-19: 415 Pakistani nationals crossed over via Attari-Wagah border

02:23 PM 
Arunachal reports 220 fresh Covid-19 cases, tally rises to 9,553
Arunachal Pradesh's Covid-19 tally rose to 9,553 on Wednesday as 220 more people, including 11 security personnel, tested positive for the disease, an official said. The death toll increased to 16 after a 53-year-old man succumbed to the infection while undergoing treatment at the Tomo Riba Institute of Health and Medical Sciences (TRIHMS) at Naharlagun, State Surveillance Officer Dr Lobsang Jampa said.
 
"The man was suffering from kidney-related problems and admitted to TRIHMS for dialysis. He was diagnosed with Covid-19 and died on Tuesday," he said.
 
Of the 221 fresh cases, 96 were reported from the Capital Complex region, 20 from Upper Subansiri, 19 from West Siang, 13 from Lower Siang, 12 each from Changlang and East Siang and 10 each from Papumpare and Tirap districts.
 
02:08 PM 
Himachal Pradesh's Covid-19 tally up at 14,750

02:00 PM 
Common cold in past may give protection from Covid-19
In a big breakthrough, researchers have found that people who have had a bout of seasonal or common cold in the past may get protection from Covid-19.

The study, published in the journal mBio, also suggests that immunity to Covid-19 is likely to last a long time -- maybe even a lifetime.

The study showed that the Covid-19-causing virus, SARS-CoV-2, induces memory B cells, long-lived immune cells that detect pathogens, create antibodies to destroy them and remember them for the future.

The next time that pathogen tries to enter the body, those memory B cells can hop into action even faster to clear the infection before it starts.

01:53 PM 
Moderna's Covid vax shows promise in protecting older adults
US-based biotech company Moderna's Covid-19 vaccine candidate has shown signs of working in older adults, new results from an early stage trial have revealed.

This study evaluated a two-dose vaccination schedule of Moderna's Covid-19 vaccine candidate mRNA-1273 given 28 days apart in 40 healthy adult participants across two dose levels -- 25 and 100 microgram -- in two age cohorts --ages 56-70 and ages 71+.

These results, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, showed that both the 25 microgram and 100 microgram dose levels were generally well-tolerated in both age cohorts, with no serious adverse events reported one month after the second dose.

"These interim Phase 1 data suggests that mRNA-1273, our vaccine candidate for the prevention of Covid-19, can generate neutralizing antibodies in older and elderly adults at levels comparable to those in younger adults," Tal Zaks, Chief Medical Officer of Moderna, said in a statement.

 
01:21 PM 
Coronavirus LIVE: Covid candidates can't sit for UPSC Prelims 2020, says SC
11:15 AM 
Coronavirus India update: Five most affected states by cases
Maharashtra (1,366,129)
Andhra Pradesh (687,351)
Karnataka (592,911)
Tamil Nadu (591,943)
Uttar Pradesh (394856)
11:07 AM 
Coronavirus India update: Summary of MoHFW data (September 30)
Active cases: 940,441 (Net reduction: 7,135)
Deaths: 97,497 (Net addition: 1,179)
Cured: 5,187,825 (Net addition: 86,428)
Total cases: 6,225,763 (Net addition: 80,472)
10:58 AM 
Less than one-third Covid-19 deaths in Delhi in Sept compared to June: Jain
Delhi Health Minister Satyendar Jain on Tuesday said the city recorded more COVID-19 cases in September as compared to June, but the number of deaths due to the disease was "less than one-third" of what it was three months ago.
 
He also said the health authorities in the national capital have been conducting RT-PCR tests on every symptomatic person.
 
"Delhi reported a large number of cases in September as compared to June. However, the number of deaths reported this month is not even one-third of the fatalities recorded in June," Jain told reporters. Read on...
10:57 AM 
Pakistan opens all educational institutions, six months after closure due to COVID-19

BPCL privatisation: EOI deadline extended again; this time till Nov 16

 The government has decided to extend the deadline for bidding for the privatisation of Bharat Petroleum Corporation (BPCL) for the fourth time in a row from September 30 to November 16, following requests from interested parties citing the pandemic situation.

The Department of Investment and Public Asset Management (DIPAM) said in a notification that 'in view of requests from interested bidders and the prevailing situation arising out of Covid-19 pandemic, the last date for submission of Expression of Interests (EoIs) is further extended to 16th November 2020 (by 5.00 PM).' According to a source aware of the development, prospective bidders had indicated that it would be difficult for them to travel from respective countries, to do the physical due diligence during the time of Covid and to evaluate the assets.

The Cabinet had approved the sale of government's entire 52.98 per cent stake in BPCL in November last year. Offers seeking expression of interest (EoI), or bids showing interest in buying its stake, were invited only on March 7. Based on the current market cap of Rs 79503.11 crore, the value of 52.98 per cent stake in the company is expected to be around Rs 42,120.7 crore. Initially, the EoI submission deadline was May 2, but on March 31 it was extended up to June 13 and then to July 31. Later, it was extended to September 30. According to the notice inviting offer, the government's plan is to sell its entire shareholding in BPCL comprising of 1.15 billion equity shares, with the transfer of management control to a strategic buyer, excluding the company's 61.65 per cent in Numaligarh Refinery in Assam.

The company's stakes in Numaligarh refinery is expected to be sold to another public sector undertaking. So far, a consortium of state-run Oil India (OIL) and Engineers India (EIL) has shown interest in taking up BPCL's 48 per cent stake in Numaligarh. The remaining stake would be sold to the Government of Assam, to increase the state's share to 26 per cent in the venture. N Vijayagopal, director (finance) of BPCL said that the data room for Numaligarh stake sale is open and so far it has got interests from OIL and EIL. On the other hand, the company is also looking to buy the stake of Oman Oil Company in Bharat Oman Refineries (BORL).

The bidding for BPCL includes two stages, one participation of qualified bidders in the EOI stage and then financial bids. Any private company having a net worth of over $10 billion will be eligible for bidding, or a consortium of not more than four firms will be allowed to participate. However, state-run companies are not allowed to participate in the process.

China wanted its tech R&D hub to become global leader. Then came trade war

At a new 400-acre research-and-development center on China’s south coast, Huawei Technologies Co. engineers chat, tap at their phones, or chill out on a small electric tram that whirs them between buildings modeled variously on the Sorbonne or England’s great universities. They move through neighborhoods built in the style of Versailles or Renaissance Italy, passing by some of the 3,000 gardening and maintenance staff needed to keep the vast parklands immaculate.

It’s late July, and on this Disneyland-like corporate campus about an hour and a half’s drive from Hong Kong, Huawei seems to be basking in the wealth from its leadership in 5G mobile technology. No other company has done more to project the image of a technologically advanced China on the international stage. And no other company stands as a greater symbol of China’s engagement with the outside world.

Huawei’s vaulting ambition to be at the forefront of future-defining technologies has landed the company in the crosshairs of the U.S. and other governments that see it as a conduit for the geopolitical objectives of the Chinese Communist Party. In mid-August the U.S. Department of Commerce, at President Trump’s direction, handed down yet another round of restrictions aimed at cutting Huawei’s access to commercially available computing chips it needs to make 5G base stations and smartphones.

The fortunes of China’s largest technology company by revenue are entwined with a vast project that’s now the front line of the hugely consequential tech war between the U.S. and China: the Greater Bay Area, a region tasked by President Xi Jinping with pushing the nation toward global technology leadership.

The GBA’s ability to innovate and integrate enough to succeed in that task is facing its stiffest challenge yet from a U.S.-led global backlash against Chinese tech and Beijing’s political crackdown in Hong Kong. If the GBA’s companies can surmount the obstacles being placed in their path, they could well determine how advanced and prosperous China can become under Xi.

The Pearl River Delta—long one of China’s richest and most economically dynamic regions and rebranded by Xi as the Greater Bay Area—stretches from the forested hills around Zhaoqing in the northwest to the concrete towers of Hong Kong Island in the southeast. It’s the epicenter of Xi’s strategy to attain high-income status, bind the former colonial centers of Hong Kong and Macao into the motherland, and complete what he calls the “rejuvenation” of the Chinese nation. He wants this region of about 70 million people to rival the clusters of Tokyo Bay or San Francisco-Silicon Valley and the role they play in driving innovation, entrepreneurship, and growth.
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Huawei reflects Xi’s grand vision for the Pearl River Delta. But as pressure from the Trump administration grows, executives of the company, which had a record $122 billion in sales last year, show signs of recognizing the changing, narrowing world in which they’re now living.

Guo Fulin, a two-decade veteran of the company who ran parts of its business in Europe and is now its president of international media affairs, deploys gnomic understatement to describe Huawei’s predicament. “The star in the sky will shine either to the west or to the east,” he says, meaning there will be opportunities for Huawei whether the U.S. slams the door shut or not. “We are not targeting every customer in the world. Customers who choose Huawei will eventually live better.”

With his actions—restricting sales of high-end semiconductors to Huawei, banning Americans from doing business with Tencent Holdings Ltd.’s WeChat app—Trump threatened revenue and product development at China’s most innovative companies. The importance of that is magnified by the timing of his actions, which come as China is upgrading its industries, with many sectors still in need of expertise from abroad to complete the development Xi expects.

China’s leaders maintain their public commitment to the open, globalized world economy that’s benefited the nation so handsomely over the past two decades. But Xi is also adopting inward-looking ideas of self-sufficiency in a shift back to an industrial model less integrated into global supply chains. That’s not necessarily in China’s interest, says David Dollar, a former U.S. Treasury emissary to the country who’s now a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution in Washington. “The danger is if you feel you have to respond to the U.S. protectionism with Chinese protectionism,” he says. “If you go down that road, then all this aspiration to become a more innovative economy is pretty hopeless.”

The Greater Bay Area strategy is rooted in an earlier time in Xi’s chairmanship that was all about China going out into the world through investment, acquisitions, and geopolitical partnership-building through initiatives such as the “Belt and Road” enterprise. First mooted by Shenzhen local authorities in 2014, and then elevated into a central government policy blueprint unveiled last year, the plan outlines the ambition to build a tech hub to “target the most advanced technologies and industries in the world.”

Far from Beijing and close to the open sea, the Pearl River Delta has long been China’s most mercantile and innovative place. The crowded islands that form Hong Kong and Macao remain separate jurisdictions even today, with their own laws, currencies, and political traditions shaped by the legacy of British and Portuguese colonialism. In Hong Kong, the differences between local society and the political culture across the border are a major source of friction, with hundreds of thousands of people in Hong Kong taking to the streets in often violent protests last year to push back against increased control by the Communist Party.

Standing among the futuristic towers of Shenzhen, just across the marshy borderland from Hong Kong, it’s easy to imagine the goal of technological leadership being within reach. In this city, mythologized as rising from a mere fishing village to a global metropolis within four decades, companies with a genuine claim to world leadership have their home.

More than a dozen Fortune Global 500 companies in the Guangzhou-Hong Kong-Shenzhen conurbation help drive a trillion-dollar economy that exports more than Japan does. The region spends double the national average on R&D, and Shenzhen alone accounts for more than a fifth of China’s high-end exports.

Huawei began in 1987 with its founder, Ren Zhengfei, repeatedly crossing the border, importing telephone switching gear from Hong Kong that he then resold to customers in China who were desperate for upgraded communications. Today the employee-owned company has sales in about 170 countries. At its corporate headquarters in Shenzhen, lavish reception rooms for visitors are modeled on Japan’s old Kyoto, with refreshments intended to make executives feel at ease before being pitched for deals on telecom hardware.

But the list of nations that see Huawei as a proxy for China’s geopolitical ambitions is growing. Following the U.S. lead, the U.K. is banning the company from its next-generation 5G networks and requiring that Huawei technology already installed in existing equipment be stripped out by 2027. Australia has shut the company out, as has Japan. India may curb Huawei and its tech neighbor in Shenzhen, ZTE Corp., from its networks as relations between the two states deteriorate.

This kind of tech decoupling could cost the world economy some $3.5 trillion in wasted output over the next five years, according to a report in July by Deutsche Bank AG. The costs arise from extra R&D, demand disruption, and supply chain rerouting that would become necessary if the current flow of know-how and parts—much of which already passes through China—shifts permanently.

That’s already happening at Huawei and, more broadly, in China. Huawei says that Trump sanctions enacted in May, which forbid companies using U.S. technology from supplying the Chinese company, cut it off from about 2% of its imported parts, which can’t be sourced elsewhere. To be able to completely replace lost technology could take Huawei an additional five to eight years, it says; outside estimates point to 10 years or more. That’s “a big loss for us,” Yu Chengdong, chief executive officer of Huawei’s consumer business group, said publicly in August.

Chinese leaders have frequently said that pressure from the outside will make the nation redouble its efforts to catch up technologically. There’s evidence that a broad push is under way to increase research and design capacity. Initial public offerings by Chinese semiconductor companies had raised a record $10 billion as of August as companies seek to localize supply chains.

That’s exactly the kind of duplication of effort that Deutsche Bank warns of, and there’s no guarantee that local companies can make up for what they’ve lost from the outside anytime soon. That could leave the GBA in the position of being a leading tech hub within and for China’s domestic market, but falling short of playing that role for the world.

Even as U.S. actions have hurt some tech companies in the Greater Bay Area, the Covid-19 pandemic has boosted others. The headquarters of Shenzhen Mindray Bio-Medical Electronics Co. is an appropriately clinical-looking, 35-story tower in Shenzhen’s Nanshan District. It manufactures, among other products, the SV800 and SV300 series of medical ventilators vital to treating patients severely affected by Covid-19.

The company’s three founders—including Li Xiting, a Singapore resident who was already the city-state’s second-richest man—had added about $17 billion to their combined wealth this year as demand soared. Mindray Vice President Huang Haitao says the company, which plows 10% of revenue back into R&D, aims to break into the global top 20 of medical equipment companies and push the industry’s frontiers into automation and artificial intelligence.

But Mindray, which says its medical equipment is used in the Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore and at Mayo Clinic campuses, may not be immune from U.S. targeting forever. In August, as part of his presidential campaign, Democratic Party candidate Joe Biden vowed to end American reliance on Chinese medical equipment. “Some parts of our equipment are manufactured in the U.S.,” Huang says. “For the sake of supply chain safety, we’ll abide by all American and international laws. At the same time, we’re also actively developing backup plans, which include looking for alternative suppliers.”

Innovation in the GBA is driven largely by companies, not universities, making the pace of progress more susceptible to the business cycle and the fortunes of any individual company. There is no Berkeley or Stanford here. China’s best minds in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics still graduate from Tsinghua and Peking universities in the capital and Fudan University in Shanghai, thousands of kilometers away.

That’s an issue singled out by Eric Guo, chief artificial intelligence scientist at Guangdong Oppo Mobile Telecommunications Corp., the world’s fifth-largest smartphone manufacturer. The 36-year-old former Microsoft Corp. researcher has a Ph.D. from Purdue University in Indiana.

Sitting in corporate offices soon to be superseded by headquarters designed by Zaha Hadid, Guo praises the quality of life in Shenzhen. He points out that branches of China’s top-flight colleges are coming to Shenzhen, but more needs to be done, because the beauty and efficacy of university research is that it’s not constrained by making money in the short term. “Universities are the engines of innovation,” he says.

Less than 20 miles away, in central Hong Kong, it was university students who took to the streets during the summer of 2019, protesting first against a law that would erode the legal separation between the former British colony and the mainland, and then more generally against Beijing’s rule over the city.

In many ways, Hong Kong is doing what it’s always done—getting on with doing business with China—and it’s still the funnel through which most foreign direct investment flows into the wider GBA. But large parts of its population now see closer ties with the mainland as anathema, and rising tensions have divided a community that might have been expected to help knit together the GBA’s future economy.

That doesn’t bode well for what many in the business community see as the best long-term growth opportunities for either Hong Kong or the Greater Bay Area. “Hong Kong’s role is getting GBA companies to go global—a kind of adapter,” says Ben Simpfendorfer, founder of consulting firm Silk Road Associates. “Hong Kong needs to retain its connectivity to international markets.”

Beijing still pledges allegiance to the constitutional principle of “one country, two systems,” but the implementation of a national security law this past summer drew a quick response from the U.S., which removed a long-standing special trade privilege Hong Kong had enjoyed. That in itself “deepens pessimism” about the long-term business prospects in the city, according to a statement issued by the American Chamber of Commerce.

Policymakers in Beijing are plowing ahead with measures to ensure Hong Kong continues to play its role as the offshore financial center of the Greater Bay Area. The so-called Wealth Management Connect, for example, was announced in June, allowing residents in Hong Kong, Macao, and Guangdong to invest across the border.

But uncertainty is riding high. Nicholas Kwan, head of research for the Hong Kong Trade Development Council, stresses that without an open and connected business and political environment, the city can’t play its proper role in the broader strategy. “We can’t just be part of China,” he says. “We also have to be part of the rest of the world.”

Some would say the same of the Greater Bay Area. As it was when Deng Xiaoping opened the region to foreign investment four decades ago, China’s dynamic south has once more been handed the role of driving the nation’s rise. But in an era when China, like Huawei, is being challenged on all sides, grand economic growth projects like the GBA have no guarantee of success, and Xi’s plans for the region now hang in the balance. —With Edwin Chan, Gao Yuan, Venus Feng, and Iain Marlow

'Will you shut up, man': Biden to Trump in first US Presidential debate

 President Donald Trump and Democratic challenger Joe Biden began the first presidential debate with heated exchanges over health care, the coronavirus and the future of the Supreme Court.

Fitting for an edge in their bitter campaign, the two men frequently interrupted each other with angry interjections, with Biden eventually snapping at Trump Will you shut up, man? That was after the president badgered him over his refusal to comment on whether he would try to expand the Supreme Court in retaliation if Trump's high court pick, Amy Coney Barrett, was confirmed to replace the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

The fact is that everything he's said so far is simply a lie, Biden said.

I'm not here to call out his lies. Everybody knows he's a liar. Trump struggled to define his ideas for replacing the Affordable Care Act on health care in the debate's early moments and defended his nomination of Barrett, declaring that I was not elected for three years, I'm elected for four years.

We won the election. Elections have consequences. We have the Senate. We have the White House and we have a phenomenal nominee, respected by all.

Trump and Biden arrived in Cleveland hoping the debate would energize their bases of support, even as they competed for the slim slice of undecided voters who could decide the election.

It has been generations since two men asked to lead a nation facing such tumult, with Americans both fearful and impatient about the coronavirus pandemic that has killed more than 200,000 of their fellow citizens and cost millions of jobs.

The pandemic's effects were in plain sight, with the candidates' lecterns spaced far apart, all of the guests in the small crowd tested and the traditional opening handshake scrapped. The men did not shake hands and, while neither candidate wore a mask to take the stage, their families did sport face coverings.

How you doin', man?" Biden asked the president as they entered.

With just 35 days until the election, and early voting already underway in some states, Biden stepped onto the stage holding leads in the polls significant in national surveys, close in some battleground states and looking to expand his support among suburban voters, women and seniors.

Surveys show the president has lost significant ground among those groups since 2016, but Biden faces his own questions encouraged by Trump's withering attacks.

Trump had arguably his best chance to try to reframe the campaign as a choice between candidates and not a referendum over his handling of the virus that has killed more people in America than any other nation.

Americans, according to polling, have soured on his leadership in the crisis, and the president has struggled to land consistent attacks on Biden.

Biden's performances during the primary debates were uneven, and some Democrats have been nervous as to how he would fare in an unscripted setting.

But his team also viewed the night as a chance to illuminate Trump's failings with the pandemic and economy, with the former vice president acting as a fact checker on the floor while bracing himself for the onslaught that was coming.

The tumult of 2020 was difficult to overstate: COVID-19 has rewritten the rules of everyday life; racial justice protests have swept into cities after several highly publicized killings of Black people by police, and the death of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg allowed Trump to nominate a conservative jurist to replace a liberal voice and perhaps reshape the high court for generations.

MARKET LIVE: Sensex up 100 pts, pharma stocks gain, banks decline

 The Indian markets were trading with 0.4 per cent gains in the afternoon deals on Wednesday.

Among the headline indices, the S&P BSE Sensex was trading around 38,109 levels and the Nifty50 index hovered around the 11,250-mark. Tata Steel (down 2.5%) was the top Sensex laggard, followed by Power Grid and NTPC (both down over 1%). 

Shares of Reliance Industries rose 1 per cent in early days after the company said that General Atlantic, a leading global growth equity firm, will invest Rs 3,675 cr in Reliance Retail Ventures Limited. READ MORE

The trend among Nifty sectoral indices was mixed, with Nifty Bank index, down 1 per cent, leading the list of losers.

In the broader market, the S&P BSE MidCap and SmallCap indexes were trading 0.2 per cent higher, each.
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For bankers delayed monetary policy only adds to their long list of woes

 India’s delayed monetary policy meeting adds to growing uncertainty for bankers over how to bolster lending and handle record levels of bad debt.

The Reserve Bank of India’s decision to reschedule this week’s interest-rate meeting makes it difficult for lenders to price loans and deposits because they usually track the monetary policy’s outlook for liquidity and interest rates. Banks monitor the regulator’s projections for economic growth, which is closely linked to credit demand.

Lenders usually make these decisions at monthly asset-liability meetings, planned for shortly after the RBI’s monetary policy statement, according to bankers with knowledge of the meetings who asked not to be named because they are private. Banks have now rescheduled these meetings, they said.

The RBI on Monday abruptly postponed its policy announcement, without giving a reason. Governor Shaktikanta Das, in recent weeks, has flagged his growing concerns about the health of the nation’s fragile banking system and, in particular, under-capitalized state-run lenders. Banks -- already weakened by a two-year-old shadow lending crisis -- are seeking more guidance from the regulator on how to battle one of the world’s worst bad loan ratios.

‘Non-Communication’

“The monetary policy statement is a very important document for banks as it sets the tone on interest rates, liquidity, growth, inflation and macro-prudential measures like the loan moratorium,” said Rupa R. Nitsure, group chief economist at L&T Finance Holdings Ltd. “It is necessary for future loan pricing depending on the central bank’s outlook and comments on economy, rates and liquidity. RBI’s non-communication adds to uncertainty on these factors.”

October’s monetary policy meeting is important because it takes place half-way through the financial year and gives banks a clear picture of second-half business conditions.

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Bankers were also awaiting more clarity on the regulator’s views on the loan moratorium after the Supreme Court allowed lenders to classify all loans that hadn’t turned bad at the end of August as performing until further orders, overturning an RBI cutoff date.

The central bank has pumped in billions to support banks, but Das is particularly worried about the risk-averse nature of lenders even as he seeks to maintain financial stability. This week’s delay could make banks even more wary to cut lending rates and boost credit ahead of a traditionally busy season of spending during the festival season next month.

“Financial sector stability is perhaps the most critical of all at the moment given the uncertainty around the pace of economic recovery, the prevailing stress on asset quality and inadequate loss-absorption buffers across many banks, including state-run banks,” said Saswata Guha, director of financial institutions at Fitch Ratings Ltd.

Although it’s not unusual to have bank-specific issues surface at times, there have been “several instances of mis-governance across the financial sector in the recent past, which perhaps requires greater regulatory attention,” he said.