• CNBC ties up with Moody's for Mutual Fund awards

    Submitted by ITV Production on Jan 31, 2002

    Moody‘s Investors Service will time the entry of its mutual fund rating service in India with a collaboration with CNBC India on the Mutual Fund of the Year Awards.
    A leading global rating agency, Moody‘s announced today that is strengthening its business in the Asia Pacific region and establishing closer linkages with the country, which it sees as one of the largest emerging markets in the world.

    CNBC‘s Mutual Fund of The Year Awards (MFA), which were launched a year ago, serve to showcase the credit rating firm‘s expertise in mutual fund analysis and ranking. The first MFA was held in February 2001.

    CNBC India CEO Haresh Chawla says the mutual fund industry was playing a significant role in developing the equity culture and a healthy long term investing ethos. Therefore, it is essential to recognise the expertise and performance of this critical investment service, he added.

  • CNBC ties up with Moody's for Mutual Fund awards

    MUMBAI: Moody's Investors Service will

  • Mythos help Creative Eye do better in Q3

    Submitted by ITV Production on Jan 31, 2002

    Divinity, unlike human frailty is more consistent at producing tangible results, at least for television production houses.

    Ask Creative Eye. The production house that has an assembly line of mythologicals in its stable, has posted an 83 per cent increase in its net sales for the quarter just ended over the previous quarter. While the company‘s income from operations does not compare favourably with figures of the same period last year (Q3 2001 stands at Rs 61.1 million as against Q3 2000 net sales of Rs 157.9 million), the revenues are better than those in Q2 2001 which stood at Rs 33 million. The company claims that net profit after tax is up by 156 per cent over the previous quarter; the figure of Rs 9.2 million is however, much lower than Rs 14.5 million reported for the same quarter last year.

    The better performance of the quarter can probably be attributed to the production house‘s lessening dependence on Doordarshan and its perceptible shift to the satellite channels. The company, that came out with an IPO in late 2000, posted net sales of Rs 33.4 million in the second quarter of 2000.

    After its second quarter results, company officials had said that Creative Eye would spend Rs 30 million to upgrade and add to the additional facilities of its existing studios. Plans are in the pipeline to invest Rs 20 million to set up another studio.

    The cost of software has gone up from Rs 28.4 million to Rs 38.2 million over the previous quarter, but the figures are nowhere close to the Rs 135.1 million incurred on software in Q3 2000.

    The company currently has Shree Ganesh on Sony, Jap Tap Vratt on Star, Om Namo Naaraayan on Sahara, Jai Santoshi Ma on Zee, Om Namah Shivay (Tamil) on Star Vijay and Jaane Anjaane on DD1. It has also been commissioned to make Nav Graha Shakkti for the still-to-be-launched Mak TV and Kya Beti Paraya Dhan Hai for ETV Hindi.

    The company has announced that it has already utilised Rs 110 million of the Rs 252.2 million raised during the IPO and has invested the balance in fixed deposits with nationalised banks.

  • Mythos help Creative Eye do better in Q3

    Divinity, unlike human frailty is more consistent at producing

  • CNBC ties up with Moody's for Mutual Fund awards

    Moody's Investors Service will time the entry of its mutual fund rating service in India with a collaboration with CN

  • Zee-Turner hopes to get the combos right with new subscription packages

    It's all about getting the combinations spot on.

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