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  • TV 18 opens at a whopping 1000 per cent premium; to launch portal on Budget Day

    Submitted by ITV Production on Feb 19, 2000

    TV 18 listed at a massive 1,000 per cent premium on the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) today. It opened at RS 1,950 and touched an intra-day high of RS 1,990 on the first day of its trading. The RS 10 scrip was issued at RS 180 and had received a overwhelming response when it was oversubscribed by 55 times. A whopping 150,000 shares were traded in the first ten minutes trading and the volumes rose to 3,50,000 in just two hours. The share was hovering around RS 1,600 after a couple of hours of trading. The market had already speculated the opening price to be RS 2,000 on the day prior to its listing. The company has announced its plans to launch a business portal on 29 February which would coincide with Budget Day. "The portal will be different from any that is around today. It will take synergies from the television channel CNBC to offer the consumer a unique experience," says TV 18 managing director Raghav Bahl.

    The project is estimated to cost RS 200 million. Already having invested RS 30 million, the company would at some stage go in for Venture Capital. "We are incubating the portal under TV 18 currently. Later on we will spin it off as a 100% subsidiary. We cannot afford the portal dragging down the earnings of TV 18," says Bahl. The company hopes the portal to break even within three years of business. Officials, however, refused to disclose details about the project.

    Earlier, TV 18 made history on 15 February when the Bombay Stock Exchange invited brokers for a pre-listing meet which was the first of its kind, at the trading ring of BSE. Raghav Bahl, Managing Director, Television Eighteen (TV 18) addressed the stock brokers and the media about the company profile and its operations and appeared to be confident about his stock.

    The stock is expected to show wonders for the investing community with very few media scrips to invest in. The questions which still remain to be answered are whether the company with revenues just around
    RS 300 million will continue to attract investor sentiment when biggies like UTV and Nimbus make their listings on the stock exchange. It does not have much library product like UTV and Nimbus as it mainly makes commissioned shows. Its only USP is its partnership business channel CNBC India. Bahl will have to take steps to remedy that at some stage.

  • Sri Adhikari Brothers to launch Sabe TV by mid-April

    The much awaited free-to-air Hindi entertainment television channel Sri Adhikari Brothers Entertainment TV (Sabe TV)

  • Sri Adhikari Brothers to launch Sabe TV by mid-April

    Submitted by ITV Production on Feb 18, 2000

    The much awaited free-to-air Hindi entertainment television channel Sri Adhikari Brothers Entertainment TV (Sabe TV) is all set to launch in mid-April. Sabe TV would focus on general entertainment and would be broadcasted for 18 hours per day initially. Already having a library consisting of over 2,000 hours of programming valued at Rs 520 million, the company is working on creating 25 new programmes for Sabe TV.
    Already financed to the tune of $25 million through private placement of equity to Foreign Investors (FIs), Sabe TV hopes to break even within three years of its operations. The channel is expected to take a pay route at a later stage.

    Sri Adhikari Brothers has also invested $4 million in creating a distribution network in Europe for Sabe TV.

    The channel seems to be prepared to take on the giants like Zee TV and Sony TV. With a huge library of software, Sabe TV can hope to fit in the same bracket.

  • Budget belies expectations

    Budget 2000 was as insipid as they come for the television industry.

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