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Dr.

Hamadou Boubacar Volume 5 Number 1 January 2011 The Financial Performance Of Foreign Bank Subsidiaries The objective of this study is to take into account the organizational characteristics that bind the parent banks and their subsidiary companies to explain the financial performance of banks foreign subsidiaries. This study reveals the average data (from 2001 to 2005) of a sample of 123 bank subsidiary companies (with or without majority ownership). The results show that the percentage of the capital held by the parent banks, an indicator of its capacity to influence the strategy of subsidiaries, is not without consequence on their performance.

Dr. Ramesh Chander & Mr. Jai Kishan Chandel Volume 5 Number 7 July 2011 Financial Viability of Tier-II Cooperative Credit Institutions A Study Of District Central Cooperative Banks In India In the present study, an attempt is made to analyze the financial and operational performance of 372 DCCBs for the period of ten years (1998-2008) by implementing CAMEL model, Altman Z-score model and other financial parameters. The results reveal that the recovery percentage has been high in these banks, but the banks did poorly on other financial parameters like-capital adequacy, liquidity, earning quality and management efficiency. These banks had been a part of bankruptcy (weak performance) zone throughout the study period. The Banks should emphasize on generating more profits by efficient utilization of their capital, assets and improving the productive efficiency of their employees. G.Saravanan & G.Saravanan Volume 5 Number 2 February 2011 Recent Financial Crisis And The Role of Foreign Institutional Investors In India - With Reference To NSE In this analysis, regression model and graph has been used. Presence of FIIs in India during the crisis period shows the destabilizing impact on stock market in India, as their outflows from the market are for a shorter period that increased drastically during the crisis period. Further, during the non-crisis and crisis period, FIIs adopted positive feedback-trader strategy and negative feedback-trader strategy respectively and suggests that FIIs optimally use their portfolio and get huge returns both in crisis and non-crisis period.

Dr. G. Naresh & S. Mahalakshmi Volume 5 Number 12 December 2011 Analysis of Performance of Disinvested Public Sector Enterprises Using DEA Approach This study deals with the disinvestment of Public Sector Enterprises was considered as an urgent necessity for the Indian economy for the last two decades. The primary goals of disinvestment of Central Public Sector enterprises include raising revenue for the state, promoting economic efficiency, reducing government interference, promoting wider share ownership, providing the opportunity to introduce competition, and to subject the Public Sector Enterprises to market discipline (Megginson and Netter, 2001). Anindya Chakrabarty Volume 5 Number 12 December 2011 Empirical Analysis Of The Borrowing Behavior Of Indian Firms On The Backdrop Of The Pecking Order Model The study explores various facts of the pecking order theory over 147 BSE listed AGroup companies for a period of ten years (2000-2009) and obtained a mixed result. When, on the one hand, it supports Halov and Heiders finding that pecking order is a special case, which works best when the external investors do not care about not knowing the risk of the project, on the other hand, it questions the aggregation model used by Shyam-Sunder and Myers and others in defining the financial deficit for testing the theory. The study further reveals a non-linear (Ushape) relationship between the change in the borrowings and the change in the retained earning position of the firms, which accounts for the inclination of the firms toward higher debt at times of high profitability. Dr.Prasanta Paul Volume 5 Number 5 May 2011 Financial Performance valuation - A Comparative Study Of Some Selected NBFCs This paper intends to assess, compare, test and analyze the financial performance (FP) of five listed NBFCs as measurement and comparative analysis of financial performance of the companies are intended to assist the finance managers analyse their companies activities from a financial standpoint and provide useful information needed to take right kind of managerial decisions. Different statistical tools like; Arithmetic Mean, Standard Deviation, Coefficient of Variation, Correlation and Analysis of Variance (ANOVA) have been used extensively to

validate the findings of the study. Various kinds of financial ratios have also been used to analyse the financial performance of the selected NBFCs. Two sets of hypotheses have been tested. This paper concludes by saying that the selected companies differ significantly in terms of their financial performance indicators from one to another and there are no significant differences in the last five years in the management of financial performance but the companies have performed well in the last five years.

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