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Strategies & Market Trends : India Coffee House -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mohan Marette who wrote (6448)9/7/1999 8:08:00 PM
From: Mohan Marette  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12475
 
Unit Trust of India Mastershare discloses portfolio

UTI
unittrustofindia.com

Our Mumbai Bureau
7 SEPTEMBER

UNIT Trust of India?s (UTI?s) biggest close-ended equity scheme, Mastershare-86, with a corpus of around Rs 900 crore, has disclosed its portfolios for the first time since inception.

The fund?s exposure to consumer products is highest with 23.25 per cent, followed by pharmaceuticals at 11.06 per cent and information technology at 8.30 per cent. Its portfolio has undergone a change in the last year and its exposure to the so-called 'Golden Triangle' has increased significantly, sources said.

The top 10 holdings of the fund account for almost 42 per cent of the net assets under management. These stocks include Hindustan Lever (8.58 per cent of its corpus), ITC (8.43 per cent), Reliance Industries (Rs 3.59 per cent), Ranbaxy Laboratories (3.52 per cent), Infosys Technologies (3.25 per cent), Telco (3.16 per cent), Hindalco Industries (3 per cent), NIIT (2.84 per cent), VSNL (2.79 per cent) and Nestle India (2.71 per cent).

The current net-asset value of a Mastershare unit stands at Rs 21.28 (ex-dividend). Its NAV rose by 22 per cent last year. Factoring the bonus and rights issues, one Mastershare unit bought in 1986 has now multiplied to 7.2 units, and has given a compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) of 24.4 per cent as on September 1, 1999, since inception..
. economictimes.com



To: Mohan Marette who wrote (6448)9/7/1999 8:21:00 PM
From: sea_biscuit  Respond to of 12475
 
A friend of mine who lives in India says that he bought a car that had all the power features like power door-locks, power windows etc. But when one of the power door-locks failed, that's when he discovered the abysmal commitment to maintenance...

The company that sold him the car apparently has no intention of servicing it. So, he was forced to take it to one of the "traditional" auto maintenance guys, but when he saw the latter come out with a hammer (yes -- a hammer!) to "fix" the problem, well... that's when he decided to simply live with the problem! <g>



To: Mohan Marette who wrote (6448)9/7/1999 10:33:00 PM
From: JPR  Respond to of 12475
 
Mohan:
Daewoo Motors (India) exports first lot of Matiz cars to Egypt
Pyramidal Mistake
The Egyptians made a Himalayan, pyramid-size, pyramid-tall and pyramid-wide blunder by buying Indian-made jalopies. If I were an Egyptian, I would have opted for Pakistani-made cars. I feel sorry to see that good money is wasted on this beggar-nation, that is India.
JPR: An all round Idiot from a beggar-nation

PS: When the Consort of Queen Elizabeth said in a factory about a bad fuse " An Indian must have put it"
I am that Indian.
A screeching and scratching Langor Monkey from Indian jungle