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Mint is not published on Sunday. Every Saturday, it prints its sister magazine, Mint Lounge. It was India's first newspaper to be published in the Berliner format. [4] [5] The former editor of the Wall Street Journal India, Raju Narisetti ran Mint from its founding in 2007 to 2008. [6]
Analysts at Livemint and Ajmera associates, Anagram capital and Ace financial services ascribed a number of reasons for this, ranging from large sales by foreign institutional investors (FII), withdrawal of money by the insurance sector. They all felt that the Sensex could rise by at the most 20–30% in 2009, from its them level of 9000 points ...
In the internet space, Hindustantimes.com was relaunched and Livemint.com was introduced. To further expand its digital presence, HTCampus.com was launched in June 2010 to provide information on colleges, courses, exams and careers for higher education in India. [3] [9] HT Media acquired Radio One (India) in 2019, [10] and VCCircle from News ...
The India Government Mint (ISO: Bhārata Sarakāra Ṭakasāla) operated four mints in the country for the production of coins: Mumbai, Maharashtra; Kolkata, West Bengal; Hyderabad, Telangana; Noida, Uttar Pradesh [1] The functions of the mint were replaced by the Security Printing and Minting Corporation of India in 2006.
This includes Hindustan Times, Zee News, Live Mint, Republic, India Today, ABP Ananda, Aaj Tak, ANI, NDTV, WION etc., while Republic Bangla leads the list publishing the highest number of fake news reports. [32]
According to the deal, Raghav Bahl would own 74% stake and Bloomberg the remaining 26%; the pact was for a 10-year period, as reported by Livemint. [20] NASSCOM, T-Hub and Government of Karnataka partnered with BloombergQuint to launch ScaleUp an initiative to help emerging companies and start-ups scale for growth.
The India Government Mint, Kolkata was first established in 1757, [2] and was located in a building next to the Black Hole in the old fort – where the GPO (General Post Office) stands today. [3] It was called the Calcutta Mint and used to produce coins with the mint name Murshidabad .
India: India Government Mint Indonesia: Perum Peruri: 1971 State-owned Government of Indonesia Ireland: Currency Centre: 1978 Italy: Istituto Poligrafico e Zecca dello Stato: 1928 Japan: Japan Mint: 1871 Jordan: Central Bank of Jordan: 1964 Lesotho: Central Bank of Lesotho: 1978 Lithuania: Lithuanian Mint: 1990 Malaysia: Royal Mint of Malaysia ...