Corporate

Tata Steel MD terms new year challenging

Tata Steel Managing Director H M Nerurkar today said the new year would be equally challenging as last year as the global recession is still continuing. - Pak claims India backing insurgency in Balochistan - When the world was not enough - Foreign luxury liquor brands eye India foray - Every third week may see a PSU public issue - Tata Steel invests Rs 5 cr on Keonjhar sports complex - Govt to sell 8.38% in NMDC in 2009-10 "The economy is still pulling out of recession. Last year was extremely challenging. Such crisis we had never witnessed in our career and it was worse than Great Depression," Nerurkar said at a new year"s ceremony here. The recession could not affect India as badly as other developed nations in Europe for government"s initiatives and strong banking system in the country, he said. Tata Steel Managing Director regretted that mineral-rich Jharkhand could not progress to its expectation due to political instability. "The new state government is expected to provide economic stability and bring the state back on the road to progress," he said. Nerurkar said the global economy was slowly picking up but the steel sector was not as booming as 2007. Expressing satisfaction over the consumption of steel in India, he said, "The pressure on the prices would be there despite over-production."


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):

News of the day
Upto Centre to resolve Telangana issue: TRS chief
TRS supremo K Chandrasekhar Rao today threw the ball in Centre"s court on the creation of a separate Telangana state and insisted that Hyderabad will be the capital of the proposed state.
Popular Articles
payday loans

Gammon Infra to acquire Spanish partner's stake in JV
Gammon Infrastructure Projects today said it has entered into an agreement with the Spain-based Dragados for acquiring the firm"s stake in Indira Container Terminal Pvt Ltd (ICTPL) in phases.

Headley cooperating with FBI to avoid death penalty
Pakistani-origin US national David Coleman Headley, a LeT operative charged with criminal conspiracy in the 26/11 terror attacks, now appears to have turned into informant to FBI to avoid death penalty.