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IRB Infra jumps on highway deal
The IRB Infrastructure Developers scrip rose 6 per cent to Rs 148.15 on securing a highway project in Rajasthan. The company emerged as the lowest bidder for the highway project to be built between Jaipur to Deoli section of NH12. The Rs 1,500-crore project is on a grant basis with a concession period of 25 years. It has sought a grant of Rs 306 crore for the project from NHAI.

AAI raised Rs 380 cr this year; fares to remain unchanged
The Airports Authority of India (AAI) raised Rs 380 crore till September this year through short loans for funding various development projects but the borrowings will not lead to increase in passenger fares, the Rajya Sabha was informed today.

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Firms may seek compensation if spectrum delayed: DoT
With no clarity on availability of third-generation (3G) mobile spectrum, the government is considering, among others, restricting the number of private players to just two to avoid a situation where it would need to pay damages to operators.
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Goldman plans to expand charity programme: report

Financial services major Goldman Sachs plans to expand a programme that would require executive and top managers to give a certain percentage of their earnings to charity, as it tries to soften criticism over bonus issue, says a media report. - What oil did next - Putting on the squeeze - Commodities back as gurus eschew financial assets - Return to normal - Goldman Sachs may shift London ops: report - BRIC to become economic leader in new decade: Goldman "Goldman Sachs is considering expanding a programme that would require executives and top managers to give certain percentage of their earnings to charity," the "New York Times" has reported. The report noted that move would be the latest in a series of initiatives by Goldman to soften criticism over the size of its bonuses, which are expected to be among the largest on Wall Street, bringing average pay to about $5,95,000 for each employee — with far higher amounts for top performers. According to the publication, a programme, "Goldman Sachs Gives" was created in 2007, under which the company"s partners are required to give an undisclosed amount to charity each year. In October, Goldman said the firm itself would donate $200 million to its charitable foundation, nearly doubling its size, the report noted. Besides, Goldman was planning to further reduce the portion of revenue dedicated to compensation in the fourth quarter, the daily said. Goldman set aside $16.7 billion for compensation in the first nine months of 2009, it added. The compensation at the American banks have become a hot topic, since the US government had infused billions of dollars as bailout money at the height of global financial crisis in 2008, and the firms are trying to remove the public uproar over bonus issues. Last month, Goldman said it would pay its 30 most senior executives their last year"s bonuses in stocks rather than cash.


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