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  • Airports tend to be uncomfortable places. Many are decrepit, badly lit and poorly designed – every one in India springs to mind, as does the sprawling Heathrow airport in west London.
  • Bharat Forge is in an enviable position. Founded in 1961 by the father of CEO Baba Kalyani, the company's net income hit Rs2.49 billion (US$54.8 million) in the 2005/2006 fiscal year, up 26% year-on-year, and is forecast to rise 35% next year, with earnings per share on target to increase 24%. And Kalyani is extremely bullish; he believes that Bharat Forge is on track to raise its annual turnover from US$2 billion today to US$25 billion by 2015.
  • Agile Property began life as a furniture maker in Zhongshan City, Guangdong, and entered real estate development in 1992. Since then it has become one of the biggest land developers in China's Pearl River Delta, and was listed on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange last year.
  • Died on October 26, aged 52
  • Recent scandals and failed transactions have shrouded Japan's alternative investment market in gloom. But while such woes have made profit-seekers conscious of the risks, they have failed to dampen their enthusiasm. Only a lack of domestic trading talent clouds an otherwise promising horizon, writes Ken Ohara.
  • 1. GREAT EAGLE, Hong Kong Return on Equity (RoE) – 51.45%
  • Despite its ramshackle roads and affinity for vintage vehicles, India has all the necessary parts in place to churn out hordes of low-cost small cars, scooters and bikes, as well as auto components. Elliot Wilson test-drives the theory that the nation is on course to take a leading position in the auto world.
  • Industrial and Commercial Bank of China broke global equity records with its US$19.1 billion initial public offering, dominating the market and giving some major revenues to the joint underwriters.
  • Co-published with Atherstone
  • A firm in America has gained notoriety for launching the first hedge fund which it says is compliant with the shariah law that governs Muslims, even though short-selling is forbidden. Controversially it has also hired one of the world's few qualified shariah scholars as a full-time adviser. No one has been accused of cheating, but credibility and reputations are on the line. Chris Wright lifts the veil on a little-understood world.
  • Consolidation appears imminent in Taiwan's fragmented banking sector. A combination of attractive valuations, compatible scale, the possibility of control, fewer bad loans and government support should help domestic institutions to unite, while overseas investors are busily competing to establish a presence on the island. Mergermarket reports.
  • A large amount of former prime minister Mahathir Mohamad's criticism of his successor, Abdullah Badawi, lies in the latter's decision to cancel some of Malaysia's mega-industrial projects inherited from his time.