2. A public company or publicly traded company is a limited liability company
that offers its securities (stock/shares, bonds/loans, etc.) for sale to the
general public, typically through a stock exchange, or through market makers
operating in over the counter markets.
3. Company Country Capital IQ Industry R M Mohite Industries Ltd.
India Clothing, Textiles and Accessories R Systems International
Ltd.
India Software and Technology Services R T C L Limited
India Real Estate R&A Telecommunication Group Berhad
Malaysia Software and Technology Services R&C Union S.A.
Poland Restaurants and Leisure R&S Networks Co., Ltd.
South Korea Semiconductors R-Tec Holding Inc.
United States Computers and Electronic Equipment R-Tech Ueno
Ltd.
Japan Pharmaceuticals and Biotechnology R. C. Core Co., Ltd.
Japan Building Products & Construction Materials R. L. Polk & Co.
4. A private company limited by shares, usually
called a private limited company (Ltd.) (though
this can theoretically also refer to a private
company limited by guarantee), is a type of
company incorporated under the laws of
England and Wales, Scotland, that of certain
Commonwealth countries and the Republic of
Ireland. It has shareholders with limited liability
and its shares may not be offered to the general
public, unlike those of a public limited company
(plc).
5. Bank of Baroda
Bank of india
Bank of Maharashtra
Canara Bank
Central Bank of India
Corporation Bank
Dena Bank
IDBI Bank
Indian Bank
6. Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank
American Express Bank
Bank Internasional Indonesia
Bank of America NA
Bank of Ceylon
Bank of Nova Scotia (Scotia Bank)
Bank of Tokyo Mitsubishi UFJ
Barclays Bank PLC
BNP Paribas
7. Nepal SBI Bank Ltd. 2050-3-23 877.4 50 State Bank of
India; India
Everest Bank Ltd. 2051-7-1 831.4 20 Punjab National
Bank; India
NABIL Bank Ltd. 2041-3-29 689.2 50 National Bank
Ltd.; Bangladesh
Standard Chartered Bank
Nepal Ltd.
2043-10-16 620.8 75 Standard Chartered Grind Lays
Bank Ltd.; Australia & UK.
Nepal Bangladesh Bank Ltd. 2051-2-23 744.1 25 IFIC
Bank; Bangladesh
8. Acid Import Data
Aluminium Import Data
Bearing Import Data
Ceramic Tiles Import Data
Chocolate Import Data
Citric Acid Import Data
Coaxial Cable Import Data
Computer Parts Import Data
Contact Lens Import Data
Copper Import Data Diesel Engine Import Data
Dry Fruits Import Data
9. Imitation Jewellery Export Data
Auto Parts Export Data
Automobile Components Export Data
Bathmat Export Data
Bed Spread Export Data
Beverages And Liquor Export Data
Blanket Export Data
Brass Handicraft Export Data
Builder Hardware Export Data
Bulk Drugs Export Data
Cables Export Data
10. The current account balance is one of two major
measures of the nature of a country's foreign
trade (the other being the net capital outflow). A
current account surplus increases a country's net
foreign assets by the corresponding
amount, and a current account deficit does the
reverse. Both government and private payments
are included in the calculation. It is called the
current account because goods and services are
generally consumed in the current period.[1]
11. Comprehensive Foreign Trade Policy to make India a global trade
player - focus on employment generation, along with massive
push to exports.
Target plus scheme to achieve quantum increase in exports.
Special package for agriculture - new scheme “Vishesh Krishi Upaj
Yojana” to boost exports.
All goods and services exported exempt from service tax, all
exporters with minimum turnover of Rs 5 crore exempt from bank
guarantee requirement, major procedural simplification and
rationalization measures.
Improvements and additional flexibilities in EPCG scheme, DEPB
to continue till replaced by suitable alternative.
Free trade warehousing zone to make India a global trading hub.
EOUs exempted from service tax.
New rationalized scheme of status holder categorization
introduced. Special focus initiatives introduced in five areas.
Bio-technology parks to be set up.