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West Palm Beach (HedgeCo.net) – India hedge fund manager, Taurus Mutual Fund, launched India’s first actively managed Equity Oriented Shariah compliant fund, the ‘Taurus Ethical Fund’.
With a minimum investment of INR 5000 ($100K), the open-ended actively managed mutual fund opens on February 19, 2009 and closes on March 20, 2009.
Launching in Mumbai, the fund has been certified by an independent Shariah Board named TASIS (Taqwaa Advisory and Shariah Investment Solutions).
“It’s all about investing in the right businesses and Shariah compliance ensures that," Waqar Naqvi, CEO, Taurus Mutual Fund said, "The need to pick businesses that foster wealth creation over the long term and distribute it equitably forms the basis of Shariah investing. It also provides an effective filter to identify and avoid speculative businesses. No wonder, Shariah compliant businesses have weathered the sub prime crisis”.
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Business Standard – Tatas’ voting powers in Bermuda-based hotel firm to rise if shareholders approve reclassification of shares.
The Tata group-controlled Indian Hotels Company’s voting power in Orient Express Hotels (OEH) will increase if the shareholders vote for annulling the powers of its class B shares.
This, if it goes through, will be beneficial for Indian Hotels, which had earlier made unsuccessful attempts to increase stake in the Bermuda-based luxury hotel chain.
OEH has convened a shareholder’s meeting on October 10 to get shareholders’ approval. The directors of OEH, who hold 81.2 per cent voting rights, have asked shareholders to “vote against the resolutions as these are contrary to the best interests of the company” in a statement issued in Bermuda.
West Palm Beach (HedgeCo.net) - Harbinger Capital Management, an activist hedge fund, has accumulated a 4.9% stake in Cablevision Systems Corp, according to The Wall Street Journal.
In a regulatory filing, Harbinger said that it had bought 11.45 million of Cablevision’s Class A shares. Harbinger, now Cablevision’s fifth biggest shareholder, was not present at meetings with the company’s top executives and large investors this week, the Journal said, citing a person familiar with the meetings.
The move may have prompted CEO James Dolan to explore options. Cablevision shareholders rejected a $36.26-a-share buyout from the founding Dolan family last October. That bid was the family’s fourth attempt to take the company private.
The Dolan family owns 75% of the voting rights for Cablevision. It remains unclear what Harbinger intends to do with its holding. Harbinger isn’t currently planning a proxy fight with the company, said a person close to the company.
Cablevision last month acquired 97% of Newsday Media Group ("Newsday") through the formation of a new partnership with Tribune Company. For Cablevision, the completion of this transaction adds a complementary print and online media group with local content in the New York area.
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Forbes- Four hedge funds that own shares in Jelmoli Holding AG. have failed to win over investors at a vote over a proposed stock split and a special dividend at the Swiss retail and real estate companies.
The four funds Franklin Mutual, Fortelus, Sandelman und Obrem had filed a motion at Wednesday’s annual general meeting for a 5 to 1 split of the bearer shares and an extraordinary dividend of 115 Swiss francs, which would have resulted in owners of bearer shares losing voting power to holders of registered shares.
Investor Georg von Opel, who owns 25.2 percent of Jelmoli’s share capital but 52.9 percent of the voting rights, opposed the plans.