Public Company

Prasad holds 17,433 shares in RIL

Reliance Industries today said PMS Prasad, who has been recently inducted into the company board, holds 17,433 equity shares in the company but does not own any derivatives of the shares. - RIL denies hoarding charges - GAIL signs pact for buying gas from RIL"s KG-D6 - Govt may allow Cairn to sell Rajasthan crude to pvt refiners - RoC gives clean chit to RIL-Reliance Petro merger - Gas field validation independent; no deals with RIL: Mustang - Reliance battlers write to OilMin on gas supply to NTPC In a regulatory disclosure to the National Stock Exchange RIL said, PMS Prasad has informed the exchange that "I do not have the derivatives of the company"s shares." Prasad, who has been with RIL for over 28 years and heads the company"s petroleum business, has been inducted into RIL"s board as executive director with effect from August 21, 2009. As on the date of assuming office of director, Prasad held 17,433 equity shares in the company, the filing said. The company has also appointed Crisil"s former chairman R Ravimohan as executive director on the board. With the appointments, the RIL board has expanded to 14 with seven members being independent directors. Shares of RIL were trading at Rs 2,007.15, down 3.23 per cent in the late afternoon trade on the BSE.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):

News of the day
Now, access Gmail, Facebook on cable TV
New technology allows access to webpages without internet.
Popular Articles

Bharat Forge Q4 consolidated net down 68%
World"s top forging company Bharat Forge reported a sharp decline of 68.03 per cent in consolidated net profit to Rs 20.33 crore during the fourth quarter of the financial year 2008-09 as against Rs 63.6 crore posted over the same quarter a year ago.

India loses crops of Rs 50,000 cr to poor post-harvest handling
India is losing food items worth a whopping Rs 50,000 crore every year due to poor post-harvest handling of farm produce, a development that analysts say may jeopardise the Centre"s plan to formulate a food security law, especially in view of a "below-normal" monsoon.