Popular Articles

RCom wants action against its special auditor
Reliance Communications (RCom) has asked the department of telecommunications (DoT) to take action against its special auditor, Parakh & Co, for alleged breach of confidentiality and misconduct. It has also asked DoT to scrap Parakh’s report, saying the conclusions are incorrect, unilateral and biased. generic levitra

payday loans online
South Africa is new kid on LPO block: report
India’s place as the leading location for legal process outsourcing (LPO) could face intense competition from emerging nations like South Africa and Philippines during 2010, according to a research report from LPO consultancy firm Fronterion.

News of the day

Bank charges may be capped
Banks may soon have to cap the charges on basic services such as issuing a draft, remittances or for stop-payment instructions.
Management

Rolls Royce rolls out Ghost

Will be available from next year for Rs 2.5 cr. - Who"ll ride the Ghost? - GhostNets are here to stay - Free for all - Course corrections and dramatic swings - Honeywell eyes Jaguar engine replacements British super-luxury car manufacturer, Rolls Royce, unveiled an all-new, four-door, premium saloon model called the Ghost here today. It is priced at about Rs 2.5 crore each and will be available in the country in the second quarter of 2010. The company hopes to sell 50 to 60 Ghosts in the domestic market each year. Since Rolls Royce cars are made to order, and exclusively manufactured in the company’s UK facility, the time taken for delivery is between two to three months after a booking. The Ghost, earlier code-named RR4 and popularly tagged as ‘Baby Rolls Royce’, is smaller in dimensions than the company’s current Phantom model and is aimed at widening the appeal of the brand. “Ghost is a more informal design that broadens the appeal of Rolls Royce cars,” said Colin Kelly, Asia Pacific Regional Director. Rolls Royce sold 1,212 units of the super-luxury cars last year, in which India accounted for around two per cent of total global sales. As an indication of India’s growing importance for Rolls Royce cars, the interior of the new Ghost incorporates wood sourced from Kerala. “This wood is called the Malabar variety and our preferred clientele like the straight-grain finish the Malabar wood exudes,” says Dan Balmer, product manager of Ghost. The Malabar wood will be used in 15 per cent of the Ghosts that will be rolled out next year. Other variants of wood that will be used in the construction of Rolls Royce’s luxurious interiors are dark wenge wood from Africa, walnut burr and elm cluster sourced from the UK, and the common piano black wood. Next year, after the roll out of the Ghost, the company hopes to sell around 70 Rolls Royce cars in the domestic market, 60 being the Ghost and the rest being Phantoms. The latter costs about Rs 3.5 crore each.


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