Indian startups fired more than 18,000 employees in 2022 amid a funding winter and macroeconomic uncertainty
BCL Industries is the only company in India and the South Asian region to have a forward and backward integrated distillery ethanol plant
Comparing India and China's Fortune 500 performance may not be entirely fair, but it offers some thought-provoking facts at a time when India is flaunted as the only decent economic game in town
India is diversifying its crude import sources and in 2021 imported Guyanese Liza crude
Indian companies have overtaken American firms in gross leasing of office space for the first time, with almost a 50 per cent share in the total demand, according to CBRE India. In its report released on Thursday, CBRE said that the gross leasing of office space rose 40 per cent in 2022 to 56.6 million square feet across nine major cities from 40.5 million square feet in the previous year. Out of the total absorption of office space in 2022, 27.73 million square feet area was leased by domestic firms while 20.37 million square feet by American companies, according to CBRE. The total gross leasing of office space in 2022 was the second-highest leasing activity ever after it touched the peak in 2019 with a 65 million square feet area. "In a first, domestic firms overtook American firms in annual leasing, accounting for nearly half of the leasing share in 2022, mainly led by flexible space operators, technology corporates and BFSI firms," CBRE said. Bengaluru, Delhi-NCR and Mumbai ..
Firms plan to go on a hiring spree; flag rising rates, weak demand as major concerns
Krishna Kumar, well known as K K, served as the managing director (MD) of Tata Global Beverages from May 1991 to January 1998
Insurance regulator intervened, India Inc stepped up but the road to awareness and acceptance remains long
Honasa Consumer was valued at $1.2 bn in January, making it the first unicorn of 2022
FMCG firm Tata Consumer Products Ltd (TCPL) on Thursday said it has acquired 23.3 per cent additional shares of South Africa-based Joekels Tea Packers for Rs 43.65 crore through a step-down subsidiary. Tata Consumer Products Overseas Holdings Ltd (TCP Overseas) -- a step-down wholly-owned subsidiary of the company through Tata Consumer Products UK Group -- "has decided to purchase 23.3 per cent of the share capital of Joekels Tea Packers, Republic of South Africa from its Joint-Venture partners," said a regulatory filing. This is as per the terms of the share purchase agreement and the shareholders' agreement, finalised and executed, amongst TCP Overseas, Joekels and the JV Partners, it added. Over the cost of the acquisition of the stake, the Tata group FMCG arm said it is for a consideration value of Rs 43.65 crore plus the adjustment amount. As a result of the acquisition, the "holding of TCP Overseas in Joekels will increase from 51.7 per cent to 75 per cent" of the equity shar
Non-promoter shareholding in the company exceeded the 10% ceiling prescribed for TReDS operators
As both he and PM Modi are from the same state, it makes him the easy target of baseless allegations, says Adani
Brokerages have a mixed outlook on margin trajectory for the sector
The combined entity will have a market share of more than 50 per cent in India's organised mattress space
Industry players say some companies plan to re-file their DRHPs so that they can have another stab at listing
SARFAESI and Debt Recovery Tribunals have yielded recovery rates comparable to the IBC mechanism, says Trend and Progress Report
Mid-market firms with revenues of $10 million to $1 billion faced 45% of attacks; only 21% were large ones with over $1 billion in revenue; smaller firms suffered 34% of attacks
Keeps adequate inventory levels for now; onboards multiple vendors to mitigate risk
Thousands lost jobs amid deepening funding winter in 2022 as massive layoffs by the tech companies this year alone surpassed the levels from the Great Recession
The top court's order and cash-for-loans scandal later, rocked the group across verticals; its fate now hinges on SC's ruling on bankruptcy even as the quid pro quo case involving Kocchars goes on