
U605 Hose Coupling
Materials:
Body: Body: Brass
Surface: electronic Chromium plated
Bushing: Brass
seals: Buna-N
Features :
Designed for use between the hose and the pipe, or between the hose and other equipments.
U605 provides 360 swivel action.
The full-circle swivel reduces the physical strain of aligning the nozzle with fill-pipe.
100% Factory Tested.
Package:
Product ID Net Weight Cross Weight Dimension
U605-A/B 21kg/case of 100 24kg/case of 100 24x24x38 cm /case of 100
U605-C/D 30kg/case of 100 33kg/case of 100 30x30x40 cm /case of 100
we are committed to create the best workplace, encourage our staffs to put their own personalities into their jobs, and provide them a stage to show themselves.
regions,�says Mr Tesseyman, who meets plenty of them.
These are admirable aims, but clearly they are not going to be achievable by all banks. The alternative ambition�
and perhaps the real aim of every private bank in Russia bar one or two—is to sell out to foreigners at a fancy
price. Now that Impex has sold for almost three times book value, sellers of the bigger private banks are going to
be arguing for four times or more.
How about a listing?
For larger private banks, fancy prices may also be available through the stockmarket. Sberbank has enjoyed a long
run as the only listed Russian bank stock wi fuel dispenser th any liquidity. Its shares have been much in demand, tripling last
year (see chart 8). That left Sberbank trading at 20 times historic earnings this year, much higher than most
commercial banks. Other Russian banks want to follow if the markets hold up. Analysts say that Rosbank may go
this fuel dispenser year, and that Vneshtorgbank and Gazprombank, both state-controlled, may list minority stakes next year.
Buyers will have to proceed with caution. Russian assets are no longer
cheap, and Russian banks are moving targets. Loan portfolios are
growing fast, but there are not nearly enough data to model the risks,
and such few as are available have been collected during an economic
boom. Credit quality may look very different when a downturn hits. At
best, says Richard Hainsworth, who runs a bank credit-rating agency
called RusRating, “we can look at the experience of other countrie fuel dispenser s, we
can make the assumption that the Russian population will behave in a
similar way, but that assumption is tendentious, to say the least.�
Nor is the Russian government s behaviour all that easy to predict. In
principle it welcomes free enterprise and foreign direct investors. In
practice it hates any loss of administrative control over industries it
considers of strategic value. One issue holding up Russia s bid to join
the World Trade Organisation has been the government s refusal to ease
restrictions o