From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 14
Page 180
FII Investment is allowed in any instrument , including commercial paper , subject
to 70 per cent of their portfolio being in securities , with a limit of 5 per cent in the
equity of any one company . The registration fee was reduced to $ 5000 and ...
FII Investment is allowed in any instrument , including commercial paper , subject
to 70 per cent of their portfolio being in securities , with a limit of 5 per cent in the
equity of any one company . The registration fee was reduced to $ 5000 and ...
Page 181
2002 FIIs were allowed to hedge their entire exposure in Indian equities
compared to the earlier level of 15 per cent . They could trade in derivatives
subject to the prescribed position limit . By 2003 the number of FIIs exceeded 500
, with over ...
2002 FIIs were allowed to hedge their entire exposure in Indian equities
compared to the earlier level of 15 per cent . They could trade in derivatives
subject to the prescribed position limit . By 2003 the number of FIIs exceeded 500
, with over ...
Page 183
But the allotment to the retail investor was small , partly because the discretionary
quota allowed to merchant bankers went to large investors . The rationale for this
discretion was to allow selection of quality investors who would contribute to ...
But the allotment to the retail investor was small , partly because the discretionary
quota allowed to merchant bankers went to large investors . The rationale for this
discretion was to allow selection of quality investors who would contribute to ...
What people are saying - Write a review
We haven't found any reviews in the usual places.
Contents
developing a responsive regulation | 13 |
race to the bottom | 29 |
electricity reforms in Eastern Europe | 49 |
Copyright | |
8 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Deregulation and Its Discontents: Rewriting the Rules in Asia M. Ramesh,Michael Howlett Limited preview - 2006 |
Common terms and phrases
activities agencies allowed approach areas Asia Asian auction capacity capital Central changes chapter companies competition consumers continue contracts corporate costs countries crisis demand deregulation East economic effective efficiency electricity emissions energy environment environmental example expansion firms fuel global household impact important improve incentives increase India Indonesia industry infrastructure institutions interest intervention investment investors involved issues Journal less limited Management measures natural obligations participation particularly pension funds percent performance period Philippines plans political pollution possible power sector practices Press pressure privatisation problems production projects provident reduce reform region regulation regulatory renewable Report requirements response result Review schemes share social Source standards strategies structure studies subsidies supply Thailand third trading universal service University utilities Washington World Bank