NTPC to raise US $300 million through ECB
State owned power generator NTPC plans to raise a syndicated loan of US $300 million to finance its ongoing capacity addition initiatives. A senior management team of the state-run power major last week held meetings with foreign banks to discuss the timing for mobilising the proposed loan. The move is crucial for NTPC despite it has cash reserves worth Rs 18,000 crore. NTPC has proposed capex of Rs 29,000 crore for the current year. The company with an installed generation capacity of over 30,000 Mw, is currently engaged in adding capacity of 22,000 Mw.
An NTPC official, who did not wish to be named told “The board has already given its clearance to raise a syndicated loan of US $300 million essentially through external commercial borrowing (ECB). The company can go in for ECB of US $500 million. Foreign banks and lenders have projected that the loan can be available at the interest rate of around 3 per cent.” The official said the management team held discussions with the representatives of HSBC, KFW, Deutsche, UBS, Standard Chartered, City Bank and Bank of Tokyo & Mitsubishi.
The official also informed that NTPC had already prepared a war chest of around Rs 1.6 lakh crore for the next five years. During 2008-09, NTPC had raised term loans of Rs 11,575 crore from banks and financial institutions and raised bonds worth Rs 1,900 crore. In the next financial year, it tied up the corporate loan of Rs 8,500 crore with a public sector bank and had signed loan agreements of Rs 4,850 crore with other domestic lenders.
Business Standard


David Leppard
TWO serving MI6 officers have allegedly leaked confidential information to a firm of private consultants with links to the
family of the president of Kazakhstan.
The consultants are said to have been commissioned to obtain the information at a time when the American justice department
was investigating allegations of bribes paid by American oil companies to **********, the Kazakh president, and his top
officials.
A 300-page report, said to have been prepared by the consultants, purports to summarise confidential MI6 files on political
and economic issues affecting the oil-rich state.
One MI6 officer is said to have divulged that MI6 was “closely observing” the role of Hurricane Hydrocarbons, a Canadian oil
company, and financial arrangements involving oilfields in Kazakhstan. A second MI6 officer is alleged to have revealed
information that the service held on Akezhan Kazhegeldin, the former Kazakh prime minister. The report also contains
information that it claims was given by Scotland Yard detectives.
The leaked document has been circulating in Washington for several months. Lawyers with knowledge of the case accept that the
authors of the report may have embellished details of their contacts with law enforcement officials on both sides of the
Atlantic.
Yesterday a Whitehall security official said the report did not appear to match MI6’s own records. Arman Baisuanov, a
counsellor at the Kazakhstan embassy in London, denied that his government had been involved in any inappropriate or illegal
activity.
********** is chairman of the Commons foreign affairs committee which is responsible to parliament for overseeing the affairs
of MI6. He said he was alarmed at suggestions that serving British intelligence officers might have leaked information that
could have found its way into the hands of people whom the agency was monitoring.
“If true, these allegations raise very serious concerns and I expect the government to investigate them,” he said.
The Sunday Times has seen a copy of a report by Global Options Management, a firm of private security consultants with
offices in Washington and, previously, in London.
The company is chaired by **********, who is an economic adviser to the Kazakhstan government and a director of the country’s
sovereign wealth fund. Political opponents of the Kazakh regime claim that ********** is ********** “point man” in Washington
and that he helps to manage some of the Kazakh leader’s wealth.
********** last week declined to comment. **********, his spokesman, said: “********** is a respected business consultant
based in the United States who rigorously abides by the laws and regulations of any country in which he operates.”
Privately, aides said ********** was “aware” of a report. But, shown a copy of the relevant extracts of the report, they
declined to comment publicly.
********** has admitted in the past that he has had dealings with **********, the president’s daughter who is an opera
singer. But he denies that his firm had been hired by her to compile the document.
**********, the president’s former son-in-law, has claimed that ********** has diverted billions of dollars in state assets
and has long taken commissions from foreign companies doing business in Kazakhstan.
David Leppard
TWO serving MI6 officers have allegedly leaked confidential information to a firm of private consultants with links to the
family of the president of Kazakhstan.
The consultants are said to have been commissioned to obtain the information at a time when the American justice department
was investigating allegations of bribes paid by American oil companies to **********, the Kazakh president, and his top
officials.
A 300-page report, said to have been prepared by the consultants, purports to summarise confidential MI6 files on political
and economic issues affecting the oil-rich state.
One MI6 officer is said to have divulged that MI6 was “closely observing” the role of Hurricane Hydrocarbons, a Canadian oil
company, and financial arrangements involving oilfields in Kazakhstan. A second MI6 officer is alleged to have revealed
information that the service held on Akezhan Kazhegeldin, the former Kazakh prime minister. The report also contains
information that it claims was given by Scotland Yard detectives.
The leaked document has been circulating in Washington for several months. Lawyers with knowledge of the case accept that the
authors of the report may have embellished details of their contacts with law enforcement officials on both sides of the
Atlantic.
Yesterday a Whitehall security official said the report did not appear to match MI6’s own records. Arman Baisuanov, a
counsellor at the Kazakhstan embassy in London, denied that his government had been involved in any inappropriate or illegal
activity.
********** is chairman of the Commons foreign affairs committee which is responsible to parliament for overseeing the affairs
of MI6. He said he was alarmed at suggestions that serving British intelligence officers might have leaked information that
could have found its way into the hands of people whom the agency was monitoring.
“If true, these allegations raise very serious concerns and I expect the government to investigate them,” he said.
The Sunday Times has seen a copy of a report by Global Options Management, a firm of private security consultants with
offices in Washington and, previously, in London.
The company is chaired by **********, who is an economic adviser to the Kazakhstan government and a director of the country’s
sovereign wealth fund. Political opponents of the Kazakh regime claim that ********** is ********** “point man” in Washington
and that he helps to manage some of the Kazakh leader’s wealth.
********** last week declined to comment. **********, his spokesman, said: “********** is a respected business consultant
based in the United States who rigorously abides by the laws and regulations of any country in which he operates.”
Privately, aides said ********** was “aware” of a report. But, shown a copy of the relevant extracts of the report, they
declined to comment publicly.
********** has admitted in the past that he has had dealings with **********, the president’s daughter who is an opera
singer. But he denies that his firm had been hired by her to compile the document.
**********, the president’s former son-in-law, has claimed that ********** has diverted billions of dollars in state assets
and has long taken commissions from foreign companies doing business in Kazakhstan.
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