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Hero Motocorp up 5% as Q4 earnings surprise

Written By Unknown on Senin, 29 April 2013 | 12.44

Two-wheeler major Hero MotoCorp shares rallied more than five percent in early trade Monday, after the company's fourth quarter numbers announced Friday were better than analyst estimates.

Net profit declined a lower-than-expected 5 percent year-on-year to Rs 574 in January-March quarter FY13. Quarterly revenue too was above street estimates, rising 2 percent from a year ago to Rs 6,146 crore.

Analysts on average had expected a net profit of Rs 493 crore on revenue of Rs 6,020 crore, according to a CNBC-TV18 poll.

Hero's EBITDA margin in the quarter improved to 13.83 percent. Margins had hit a two-year low of 12.6 percent in Q3.

Meanwhile, the maker of Splendor, Passion motorcycles and Pleasure, Maestro scooters has increased prices across its brands. The price hike will be in the Rs 500-1,500 range and will come into effect immediately.

Kotak Securities has maintained  its 'Add' rating on the stock.

"We expect two wheeler industry growth to revive if monsoons are normal. All current estimates on monsoon indicate it is likely to be normal this year which we believe could boost two wheeler demand. We expect Hero Motocorp to lose market share but expect pricing to remain stable as we believe industry growth will revive," said the Kotak note.

Jefferies recommended a buy rating on the stock with a target price of Rs 2119.

"The company reported strong margins, a weaker yen and lower commodity prices could boost margins further," Jefferies report said.

At 09:27 hours IST, the stock was quoting at Rs 1,677, up 5.01 percent.



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Lanco Infra up 11% after litigation with Perdaman ends

Lanco Infratech 's shares surged 11 percent on Monday after the company said the protracted litigation for a claim of AUD 3.5 billion initiated by Perdaman Chemicals against Griffin Coal (a subsidiary of Lanco), Lanco Group and its Officers, in the Supreme Court of Western Australia has ended.

"Lanco has agreed to pay Perdaman a nominal amount of AUD 7.5 million plus legal costs to be taxed by the Court, without admission of any of the allegations of Perdaman," the release said.

"The purpose behind making this nominal offer was to put an end to this litigation now and move forward with our mine expansion plans," Lanco said.

Also Read - Hexaware Q1 net up 20% QoQ to Rs79cr; shrs gain

Nagaprasad Kandimalla, CEO - Business Development at Lanco Infra said Lanco has always maintained that Perdaman's action was baseless and without any merit.

"The company will reinforce its focus on its business and mining operations in Western Australia, including the proposed expansion of the Collie mine and the enhancement of the export facilities at the Bunbury port," he said.
 
At 09:41 hours IST, the stock was quoting at Rs 11.65, up 10.85 percent amid large volumes on Bombay Stock Exchange.



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Citi raises Maruti Suzuki to 'buy' on strong Q4 results

Moneycontrol Bureau

Citigroup Global Markets upgraded Maruti Suzuki to "buy" from "neutral" on Monday driven by significantly better-than-expected growth in fourth quarter earnings, and said after two years of stagnant growth, the passenger car industry was showing signs of bottoming out and  as a market leader, the company was positioned to gain from the industry growth.

"Maruti has been gaining share in the domestic car market up 300 bps year-on-year to 46 percent in FY13. We expect a further gain in share, once 1.5 lakh diesel engine capacity is commercialized in second half of FY14," said Citi analysts Jamshed Dadabhoy and Arvind Sharma.

Competition in the Indian market is increasing with Honda's recently launched Amaze taking Maruti's DZire compact sedan head on and Nissan is also set to launch its Datsun brand in the country in July. But the analysts expect Maruti to manage these challenges, given strong brand value and widest sales and service network.

The Citi analysts have raised their target price on Maruti to Rs 1,966 from Rs 1,677 and also upgraded their earnings per share target for FY14 by 21 percent and 17 percent for FY15.

Higher EPS reflects margin expansion of around 150 bps in both years, 125 bps from  Yen appreciation and 25 bps from localisation initiatives, Dadabhoy and Sharma said.

Maruti Suzuki shares hit a new 52-week high of Rs 1,704.35 on Monday morning. At 10:45 hrs, the stock was up 1 percent at Rs 1,689.90 on NSE.



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Marriot gung-ho on expansion as hospitality sector limps on

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 27 April 2013 | 12.44

India's hospitality sector has been struggling for traction through 2012, but international hotel chain Marriott seems to have had no such trouble, reports CNBC-TV18's Farah Bookwala .

International hotel chain Marriott has, over 15 years in India, opened only 18 properties, mainly because the focus has been on profitability. And this has paid off.

Over the last five years, revenues and profits have shown 15-18 percent yearly growth. In 2012, its revenue per available room grew 5 percent Y-o-Y, when the industry saw it fall 6 percent, making India the second-fastest growing country in the Asia Pacific region.

So, to take things to the next level, Marriott plans to open six more properties in the country in 2013 as part of an aggressive expansion exercise undertaken in the country .

50 hotels are under development, and will open their doors by 2015, giving the chain 15,000 rooms, against the curent 4,000.

Rajeev Menon, VP - South Asia and Australia, Marriott Hotels India says, "The different brands we operate have great reputation. Be it JW Marriott as a luxury hotel or a 4-star such as Courtyard . It is very well established. Also it has a lot to do with our very strong loyalty programmes. We now have 400,000 members in India alone."

JW Marriott, the flagship 5-star brand and Courtyard by Marriott, its 4-star brand will lead this expansion.

Of the 24 hotels that will be up and running by the end of 2013, 11 will be Courtyard by Marriotts, and five will be JW Marriotts. In addition, Marriott will bring in two new brands from its global portfolio -- luxury brand Ritz Carlton, and mid-tier brand Fairfield.

So that's two new hotels in Banglore this year. Marriott says Fairfield will lead the next expansion thrust in the future

Menon says, "We see great opportunities for Fairfield. And therefore we have gone into a joint venture with Samhi Hotels that is currently developing properties around the country. We believe Fairfield, between today and 2015, could see 8-10 operational hotels with another very strong pipeline of about 20--25 hotels for the future."

Under this JV, Marriott will develop Fairfield hotels at a cost of USD 25 million.
While the Marriott group operates all its properties in India solely through management contracts, the group is now looking to experiment with the franchising model for its brand Fairfield as it would enable them to scale up the brand quickly.

However, the management is firm that the franchising model will remain a small part of their operating model and that franchise contracts would be entered into only with select developers.



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Amazon shares hit on growth concerns

Amazon.com Inc's stock sank on Friday on concern about slowing growth at the world's largest Internet retailer.

Late Thursday, the company reported slower revenue growth and offered a disappointing outlook for this quarter, exacerbating uncertainty about the health of its business beyond the United States.

Amazon faces a sluggish European economy and inconsistent efforts to break into emerging markets such as China, where competition from the likes of Alibaba is intense.

"Amazon's now growing at about 2x eCommerce, compared to 3x a year ago," Doug Anmuth, an analyst at JP Morgan, wrote in a note to investors following the company's results.

Traditional retailers are losing less market share to Amazon than they used to as they increase selection online, price-match more aggressively, and work to combat showrooming, Anmuth argued.

Amazon shares were down 7.3 percent at USD 254.63 late on Friday morning on the Nasdaq.



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Bajaj Auto awaits final rules on quadricycles

Even as Bajaj Auto waits for a government-appointed committee to come up with the final rules on quadricycles, the two-wheeler major continues to face opposition over the RE60 in India from competitors who have raised safety concerns amongst other dissenting voices. 

However, CNBC-TV18 learnt exclusively that the company is seeing interest picking up from export markets .

The deputy Prime Minister of Singapore will be visiting Bajaj Auto on May 4 to discuss export potential for the RE60. Singapore is not the only country. Similar interest has been expressed by countries both from the Latin Americal as well as the African region. This export interest is coming in for Bajaj at a time when its domestic competitors are becoming increasingly vocal.

Earlier on Friday, Maruti pointed to the safety concerns in the RE60, which is Bajaj Auto's four-wheeler and comes under a new classification of vehicles called the quadricycle.

Tata Motors ' Karl Slym, in two different tweets, said, "The number of wheels do not automatically make us better. It is adherence to tried and tested safety and emission norms. Why? The government and industry have been accelerating efforts in traffic safety and environment now we consider the quadricycle."

What all these companies are pointing to is that the safety and other norms for quadricycles and cars are different at the moment. Something which Bajaj Auto refutes by saying that a quadricycle is not really a car and that it should be sufficient if the Indian norms follow globally established norms.

The governments report clarifying what the guidelines and specifications are for the quadricycle category is awaited.



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Gujarat NRE Coke to consider issue of Rs 550cr; shares rise

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 25 April 2013 | 12.44

Gujarat NRE Coke shares rallied three percent Thursday after the company said its board is considering  a fund-raising proposal on Monday.

The board of directors of the company is going to consider issue of securities (including foreign currency convertible bonds) for an amount not exceeding USD 100 million or Rs 550 crore, whichever is higher, on April 29, according to a release sent to exchanges.

"The board will also consider to make investment/loan and/or give guarantee/security in excess of limits under Section 372A of the Companies Act, 1956."

At 10:06 hours IST, the stock was up 3 percent to Rs 17.20 on Bombay Stock Exchange.

The share touched its 52-week high Rs 23.80 and 52-week low Rs 16.55 on 10 January, 2013 and 23 April, 2013, respectively.

Market capitalisation of the company currently stands at Rs 1,070.47 crore.



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MM Financial spikes 20% after strong Q4 earnings

Non-banking finance company Mahindra & Mahindra Financial Services rallied 20 percent in early trade to hit a 52-week high of Rs 247.25 on Thursday after reporting strong fourth quarter numbers.

Net interest income of the company rose by 32 percent year-on-year to Rs 721 crore and total income increased 34 percent to Rs 1,185 crore.

High recoveries, capital gains and stable disbursements drove robust operational performance for the company.

Meanwhile, profit after tax was up by 43 percent YoY to Rs 346 crore in January-March quarter, boosted by exceptional income of Rs 30 crore.

Exceptional income includes profit on stake sale in subsidiary MIBL for Rs 66 crore.

In financial year 2012-13, total income grew by 41 percent to Rs 4,113 crore and profit after tax moved up by 44 percent to Rs 927 crore compared to previous year.

Disbursements were up 22% and asset under management was up 35 percent in FY13 YoY.
 
At 10:21 hours IST, the stock was up 9.75 percent to Rs 226.15 amid large volumes on Bombay Stock Exchange.

Trading volumes increased nearly three times to 6,13,600 shares as compared to its five-day average of 2,22,225 shares.



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Dish TV gains on UBS buy report

Dish TV gained more than one percent on Thursday after brokerage house UBS recommended a buy on the stock.

UBS has set a price target of Rs 100 for the stock.

"The recent move by DTH operators to increase the price of set top box and base packages indicate emergence of pricing power, which bodes well for Dish TV," UBS reasoned.

The stock was up 1.10 percent to Rs 69.20 on Bombay Stock Exchange at 10:31 hours IST.



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OMCs should hike diesel prices more often: Kirit Parikh

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 24 April 2013 | 12.44

The oil ministry has started to urge state-run oil companies to revise petrol prices daily in-line with international rates and the rupee's value against the dollar . Currently, oil retailers like Bharat Petroleum , Hindustan Petroleum  and Indian Oil Corp revise petrol price every fortnight based on average regional bulk market prices and also after taking into account the value of the rupee against the dollar.

Speaking to CNBC-TV18, Kirit Parikh, former Planning Commission member and oil- and-gas expert, says that consumers have accepted revisions in petrol prices. "Daily petrol price revision is the right thing to do."

Highlighting that less frequent price revisions would lead to OMCS charging more, he recommends bulk diesel buyers to be charged at market rates. "OMCs should be allowed to hike diesel prices more frequently by 45 paise every fortnight."

Below is an edited transcript of the interview on CNBC-TV18

Q: Do you think it is feasible and practical for the government to move from fortnightly revision of petrol prices, to a weekly and perhaps a daily revision?

A: I don't see any problem in the government initiating a weekly or daily revision of prices. Just as the consumer is aware of the frequent change in vegetable prices, he will also take the daily change in petrol prices in stride. It is already clear that the frequent revision of petrol prices has not caused any significant problem and has been accepted by the consumer.

Q: Was this something discussed while formulating the report on deregulating the oil sector?

A: We had suggested that oil prices should be deregulated. But we did not go into the details as to the frequency of the change in prices. We recommended oil companies be allowed to change prices as and when it was necessary.

Q: Though global crude prices saw a sharp decline over the past fortnight, it did not affect the retail petrol prices. But what do you think will happen if global crude prices begin to appreciate sharply?

A: The consumer can't have it both ways- you want prices to come down when the international crude prices are going down, but you don't want let it come up when international crude prices go up.

The consumer has to understand that crude is a product that is imported in huge quantities at prices that change frequently. Of course, the oil companies adjust this by importing periodically. However, if there are a number of participants in the market, it will ensure that a reasonably good price will be set and in the long run, the consumer would benefit.

Q: Don't you think it is only fair that the government moves towards a daily price revision or at least a more frequent price revision when it comes to bulk diesel because you earlier mentioned that bulk diesel buyers have to pay market rates and yet you do not give them the benefit of a fall in prices because the prices are revised after a considerable period?

A: I agree that it should apply to bulk diesel buyers as well. Unfortunately, most of the bulk diesel buyers are public sector consumers like the railways and state transport corporations. Many of the private bulk buyers have found other ways to take care of this. However, nonetheless the principle should be the same for bulk diesel buyers as well as for petrol.

I would even argue that this whole idea of setting diesel prices no more than 45 paise should be relaxed. Oil marketing companies (OMCs) should be permitted to change prices more frequently than once a month if necessary.

Q: Will the oil ministry be able to implement a daily revision in petrol prices?

A: The decision is usually taken by the Cabinet. In the past, the ministry of petroleum and natural gas was unable to implement such initiatives. It will be very difficult to predict what will happen.



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Union Bank of India raises USD 350 m through bond sale

State-run Union Bank of India ( UBI ) has fallen short of its overseas bond sale target, managing only USD 350 million, merchant bankers said.

The city-headquartered bank had hit the street to raise a "benchmark issue" or an issue with a size of USD 500 million or more, but garnered only USD 350 million, they said.

It raised the money in 5.5 year REG S (unsecured senior bonds), priced at 3 percent over the US treasury rate and have a coupon rate of 3.625 percent, Standarad Chartered's managing director for debt capital markets, Jhujar Singh told PTI.

After a series of successes for Indian bond issues, including that of the largest lender SBI, UBI had hit leading Asian and European finance centres with an offering last week and was hoping to close the issue within the week.

However, it had to embark on a fresh set of roadshows before closing the issue, Singh said. It can be noted that SBI had set a new benchmark earlier this month in bond pricing by selling USD 1 billion worth fixed rate five-year senior unsecured bonds.

So far, 11 companies through 13 issuances raised a whopping USD 7.5 billion this year, as rupee funds remain too costly at around 12-14 percent, as against foreign funds which are much lower. The highest pricing of these debts is just under 6 percent, while the lowest coupon rate is the 3 percent HDFC Bank is paying to its investors for the USD 500 million issue sold in January.



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Sebi orders Saradha Realty to close schemes, refund money

Market regulator Sebi today ordered Kolkata-based Saradha Realty India to close all its collective schemes and refund the money collected from investors within three months, amid continuing protests against the alleged fraudulent activities of the group.

In a late night 12-page order, the capital market regulator also barred Saradha Realty India and its Managing Director Sudipto Sen from the securities markets till the time it winds up all its Collective Investment Schemes (CIS) and refunds the entire money to investors. Investors and agents of various investment schemes launched by Saradha group in West Bengal have been protesting for many past days.

Also read: Chit fund scam: Police seize Saradha Grp promoter's assets

Meanwhile, Sen was arrested today in J&K. Sebi said it would initiate proceedings against Saradha Realty and its directors if the company fails to wind up its CIS schemes and refund the investors. The regulator also warned of launching a criminal case for "fraud, cheating, criminal breach of trust and misappropriation of public funds" and initiation of winding up of the entire company through a reference to the Ministry of Corporate Affairs, if its orders are not complied within three months. Sources said investigations are on by Sebi against some other entities of Saradha group for similar violations of its CIS regulations.

The Sebi order against Saradha Realty follows an investigation launched about three years ago by it after a reference was received from the Director Economic Offences Investigation Cell, Government of West Bengal in April 2010. Sebi found that the company was collecting money from public in the range of Rs 10,000 to Rs 100,000 for 15 months to 120 months, with a promise of returns of 12-24 percent.



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Jet Airways up 4% on deal talks with Blackstone

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 23 April 2013 | 12.44

Moneycontrol Bureau

Jet Airways' shares rose 3.73 percent to Rs 570 on reports that private equity player, Blackstone has held preliminary talk with the airline's frequent flier unit, JetPrivilege for buying a stake.

Discussions are at an early stage, according to a Times of India report which further said that Jet Air could offer upto 50 percent stake and it whether deal talks would progress. 

Jet Air has been talking about hiving off JetPrivilege into a separate division so that it can increase its customer base.


Simultaneously, the airline also has plans to expand global operations by connecting 23 Indian cities to Abu Dhabi.The airline will make Abu Dhabi its hub for launching flights to North America and West Asia. The airline has sought an extra 42,000 seats-a-week to Abu Dhabi in addition to the 4,500 it is currently allowed to operate at a time when it is negotiating a stake sale deal with the carrier.


Read This: Jet Airways up 7% on expansion plan in Abu Dhabi .



 


 



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Why govt babus and CEOs should pack up at 60

R Jagannathan
Firstpost.com

This is an age-old question: what is the right age to retire? Especially if you are working for government  and we taxpayers have to pay for your services.

It is symptomatic of the casual way in which we address the issue that a Group of Ministers (GoM) led by P Chidambaram will be deliberating on whether or not to raise the age limit (at the time of selection) for public sector CEOs from 58 to 60, as recommended by the SK Roongta Committee.

There is nothing wrong with the idea as such, but it can't be done in isolation. Can one decide what is the right retirement age for one set of public sector employees and not the rest? Especially since the age bar can, by exception, be extended at political whim? Example: E Sreedharan, the iconic chief of the Delhi Metro, retired only at 80 last year.

This writer believes that the case for not raising the retirement age in India is stronger than the case for doing so. For one main reason: in a young country, where two-thirds of the population is below 35, it does not make sense to let retiring people block growth for younger leaders.

But before we elaborate on this argument, consider the completely arbitrary nature of the age limits we now have: while government servants retire at 60, there is a proposal to raise the age limit to 64 . In the judiciary, Supreme Court judges retire at 65 and High Court judges at 62. Wonder why less wisdom or experience is required in the high courts than in the apex court? Some senior jurists think the retirement age for judges should be 70 .

Army chiefs, on the other hand, have to retire at 62. But it's not so simple : armed forces personnel retire at 56 if they have not crossed the rank of Lt Colonel by then; Colonels retire at 58, Brigadiers at 59, Major Generals at 60, Lt Generals at 61 and the Chief of Army Staff at 62.

Politicians, of course, never retire. They only leave office feet first. In contrast, US Presidents are packed off after two years (eight years) whatever their age.

Before we come to definitive answers, let's hear the arguments for and against raising the retirement age in any public sector service whether it is a commercial undertaking, or the judiciary, or the army or an administrative service like the IAS.

It is argued that we need to raise the retirement age in all our government/public sector services for the following reasons.

One, the country would lose valuable experience and wisdom if we let people go at 60 (or whatever is the current official age of retirement now in any service).

Two, with overall health parameters improving, age does not usually bring disability or inability to function at one's peak for longer. If people could work well till 58 earlier, now 60 seems more natural. In future, 65 may seem just a fine.

Three, raising the retirement age opens up the possibility of giving leaders longer tenures a five-year tenure for a CEO is possible only if he becomes CEO at 55. Else he will get less. If the retirement age is raised to, say, 65 across all government employment, more CEOs will get longer tenures even if they get the top job a bit later.

Four, raising the retirement age also delays pension payments, enabling more contributions into the kitty for longer. In countries with a growing proportion of old people (as in Germany, Denmark, etc), this is the preferred solution to avoid underfunding of pensions.

Five, chronological age is not a determinant of fitness for any job.

On the other hand, let's look at the downside as well. The arguments against raising the retirement age are as follows, and look stronger:

One, keeping people longer means lowering opportunities for brighter and younger people especially in leadership positions. The brightest and the best may thus leave the public sector for better prospects elsewhere.

Two, a hypercompetitive world needs younger, more nimble leaders and older people are less willing to adapt to the new challenges, whatever their level of experience.

Three, some jobs are simply not right for older people for example, active service in the army, or in technology jobs. Rude physical/mental alertness is always a function of age, and cannot be understated. Whatever be their relative experience levels, and whatever the actual outcome in one particular tournament, a Magnus Carlsen at 23 will always be a stronger chess player than a Viswanathan Anand at 43. A 50-year-old general will be mentally and physically more fit than a 60-year-old though there will be the odd 60-year general who will be better than a 50-year-old.

Four, asking people to retire early is not the same as not using their experience fully. Retired generals, executives and government servants do not have to be army chiefs or secretaries to be of use. E Sreedharan could always have been a mentor to a Delhi Metro chief without being the executive head.  Moreover, retirement from an official job is not the same as a vegetative experience a second career can well be the answer after 60.

Five, chronological age matters, not because one specific 65-year-old can't be fitter or more agile than a 60-year-old, but because in government you can't have norms that will be subjectively applied depending on the individual. This is precisely the arbitrariness we are trying to avoid.

The reason why American Presidents have term limits is to ensure that there is a constant infusion of new blood and one popular president can't stay on forever. Bill Clinton demited office when he was barely 55 but is anyone arguing that he couldn't have handled one more term or that he didn't deserve one? Ronald Reagan, who was one of the oldest presidents to be installed in office, may well have continued but for the term limit. (Stupidly, though, in the US system, Supreme Court judges decide their own retirement age and some have stayed on well past 80, even when they may have been partially senile).

To be sure, even the current retirement age is practically meaningless in our system of political patronage, where retiring bureaucrats and judges and public sector officers find ways to extend their power beyond 60 with the help of political bosses.

As an Indian Express report last year noted, "Details of nearly 90 such (post-retirement) appointments made in recent years show…civil servants being parked as governors, information commissioners, and as heads or members of a slew of bodies such as the Union Public Service Commission, the National Commission for Minorities, Central Information Commission, National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission and the Central Administrative Tribunal (CAT). Most of these posts enjoy the rank of secretary to the government of India or above. In the case of some officers, new positions have been created to accommodate them." Babus seem to have an ability to extend their retirement ages unilaterally, never mind what the rule-book says.

Some 18 of the 21 Supreme Court judges who retired after 2008 were given sinecures or other powerful positions in various quasi-judicial bodies. Markandey Katju managed to wangle a Press Council job even after 65 when the whole media scene is getting younger and younger. An ability to recite the Hanuman Chalisa is surely no qualification for Katju to remain in office after retirement?

The system clearly needs fixing. The retired should stay retired, even though their expertise can always be used in a consultative, non-executive capacity.

The point is simply that a younger nation needs younger leaders. They can always choose to use the oldies as sounding boards. Having older people block the ambitions of younger people is the quickest way to frustration and rebellion.

The Chidambaram-headed GoM that will consider raising the age limit for public sector CEOs should also scrap the lower age limit for them which is currently 45. There is no reason why the public sector cannot have CEOs younger than 45. Most CEOs of technology companies and even in services are below that age.

The solution to the problem of giving CEOs a longer and fixed tenure does not lie in raising the retirement age, but in making people CEOs or judges or army generals or secretaries to the government at a younger age.

The issue of how good or young you feel about yourself at 60 is irrelevant. No one gives up power easily. It is unfair to ask Sachin when he will retire; that question should really be put to the BCCI, Sachin's employer.

The old must make way for the young . And raising the retirement age in government jobs, or even public sector jobs, is not a great idea in this context. In a country with an average life expectancy of 65-66 years, how does it make sense to ask government servants to stay on their jobs till 65?

The writer is editor-in-chief, digital and publishing, Network18 Group



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Coal India unable to meet power demand: NTPC CMD

The crucial Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs (CCEA) meet held on Monday shelved the coal price pooling issue   - pegged as the second biggest reform after the SEB restructuring - despite getting an in-principle nod in February 2013 for its clearance.

It is known that the power and coal ministries have been sparring over the pooled pricing proposal and analysts say NTPC has been opposed to participating in a pooling arrangement because it could place the power company's plants lower in the merit order of dispatch for SEBs.

Speaking  to CNBC-TV18 about its differences with Coal India , NTPC CMD Arup Roy Choudhury said the company is not sure if the coal giant has the ability to meet the power sector's growing demand. He insisted that the real issue is not about the quality of coal being supplied; that can be sorted out mutually. "The question is if CIL can supply the amount of coal demanded by the sector."


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HMT up 5% after CCEA approves Rs 1,083 cr revival package

Written By Unknown on Senin, 22 April 2013 | 12.44

State-owned watch and tractor manufacturer HMT rose more than five percent on Monday as the Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs (CCEA) has approved Rs 1,083 crore revival package for the company.

The package includes cash infusion to the tune of Rs 450 crore and another Rs 630 crore as non-cash assistance.
 
Meanwhile, the market capitalisation of the company currently stands at Rs 2,904.54 crore.

The stock shot up more than 40 percent in four consecutive sessions.

At 10:10 hours IST, the share gained 5.09 percent to Rs 38.20 on Bombay Stock Exchange.
 
Trading volumes increased one percent to 2,75,613 equity shares as compared to its five-day average of 2,73,116 shares.



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No word on stake sale from govt yet: Coal India

State-run Coal India has not received any communication from the government regarding stake sale in the company, said S Narsing Rao, chairman and managing director of Coal India in an interview with CNBC-TV18.

The government currently holds 90 percent stake in Coal India (CIL) and is keen to divest around 10 percent stake. At the current price, a sale of 56.84 crore shares, or 10 percent of government holding, could fetch around Rs 17,000 crore to the exchequer.

Read This: Coal India, NTPC end year-old scuffle on coal pricing


Meanwhile, talking about its ongoing tussle with NTPC over coal quality and supply issues, Rao said that the latter has raised issues quality check issues from coal supplied from Rajmahal mine. The heads of the both the state-run companies met Coal Secretary S K Srivastava to find an amicable solution to the crisis, he said.


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Will invest Rs 2.15 lakh-cr in equities in FY14: LIC Chmn

India's largest domestic institutional investor, Life Insurance Corporation of India ( LIC ) invested Rs 23,000 crore in equities for the financial year 2013, informs Chairman DK Mehrotra. "We have not rushed into it in Q4 to buy more stocks but it has been smooth and uniform participation for us in 2012-13," he told CNBC-TV18 in an interview.

Also Read: Panel rejects RBI offer to limit FII investment in sec mkt

LIC has booked a profit of Rs 20,000 crore by selling equities this year so far, against Rs 9,000 crore last fiscal. Mehrotra says, it was a "completely commercial decision" and the FY13 profit is the highest for the state-owned insurer in the last seven-eight years.

LIC has invested Rs 30,000 crore this financial year so far, most of it in public offers of state-run companies as it had to bail out the government's share shale programme that was threatened by lukewarm investor response in the first half of the year.

Going forward, Mehrotra says, the insurance firm plans on investing Rs 2.15 lakh crore in equities in FY14. "We have not earmarked investment amount of the first quarter of FY14," he says.


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Labour issues at LPG plant; IOC to augment gas availability

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 20 April 2013 | 12.44

Intensification of labour problems at its LPG bottling plant at Chelari near Kozhikode has led to Indian Oil Corporation making all-out efforts to augment availability in affected areas with additional supplies from its neighbouring LPG plants. Indian oil, in a release, said it was concerned with continuing backlog in refill supply, especially in Malappuram and Thrissur districts, following frequent disruption of operations at the plant since January 2013 due to the 'unreasonable and uncooperative' approach of trade unions.

Indian Oil is resorting to additional supplies from its Kochi bottling plant to restore normalcy of refill deliveries in the affected areas, it said. Though IOC had awarded contracts to handle and load/unload cylinders at the plant in January and February 013 through public tenders, the issue of wage settlement between contractors and labourers working under them has not been amicably resolved, resulting in frequent disruptions in operating the plant.

Also Read: RIL gas output falls to all-time low; shuts ninth well

Several attempts at conciliation by the Assistant Labour Commissioner (Central) and the District Collector of Malappuram has not helped in resolving the issue. Despite wage increase in the interim and the contractor agreeing to pay salaries and incentives as per demand, unions are not honouring the conciliation process, and are instead putting forth additional demands, the release said.

The contractor also took the matter to the High Court, which gave interim directions to the Superintendent of Police and  Assistant Labour Commissioner to ensure the plant works smoothly, despite which contract labourers have disrupted working of the Chelari plant, it said. To ease the situation, IndianOil is making all out efforts to rush additional supplies to the affected districts from its neighbouring plants to wipe out the backlog and restore normalcy at the earliest, it said.



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Companies raise Rs 17k crore through NCDs in FY'13

Funds raised by Indian companies through retail issues of non-convertible debentures (NCDs) more than halved to nearly Rs 17,000 crore in 2012-13, even as the capital mopped up through this route exceeded the targets. According to latest data available with the market regulator Sebi (Securities and Exchange Board of India), a total of 15 companies, including India Infrastructure Finance Company and Rural Electrification Corp, raised Rs 16,982 crore collectively via NCD route in the past fiscal.

In comparison, a cumulative amount of Rs 35,611 crore was garnered by 16 firms through their NCDs in the preceding year. Non-Convertible Debentures are loan-linked bonds issued by a company that cannot be converted into stock and usually offer higher interest rate than convertible debentures.

Also Read: India is not imposing restrictions on investments: FM

Most of the funds were raised to support financing activities and to meet working capital requirements. Four companies -- Indian Railways Finance Corporation (IRFC), Housing and Urban Development Corp (HUDCO), Rural Electrification Corporation (REC) and Power Finance Corp (PFC) tapped the NCD route twice in the financial year ended March 31, 2012.

Also, these 15 companies garnered more than the targeted amount of Rs 13,775 crore through issuance of NCDs.

Barring Power Finance Corp (first tranche), Ennore Port Ltd, Jawaharlal Nehru Port Trust, Dredging Corporation of India Ltd, National Housing Bank and IRFC (second tranche) and HUDCO (second tranche), all the other issues managed to raise more than their targetted amounts.

In 2011-12, the companies had raised Rs 35,611 crore, as against their targetted amount of Rs 31,100 crore.

Individually, IRFC raised raked in a total of Rs 5,373 crore last fiscal, as against the base size of Rs 1,000 crore and India Infrastructure Finance Company mopped-up Rs 2,884 crore against the target of Rs 1,500 crore. Besides, HUDCO raised Rs 2,194 crore against the base size of Rs 750 crore, while  REC garnered Rs 2,017 crore against the target of Rs 1,000 crore. Shriram Transport Finance Company Ltd and India Infoline Finance Ltd raised Rs 600 crore and 500 crore respectively, which were twice their base sizes.



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At $14m, diamond is investor's best friend

Between 2001 and today, stock prices are up about 30 percent. Diamonds, however-at least certain huge diamonds - have done far better.

Sotheby`s yesterday sold a 74.79 carat white diamond for USD 14.2 million, far above the pre-sale estimate of USD 9 million to USD 12 million. Five bidders were vying for the unnamed rock, which has a coveted "D" color designation.

Sotheby`s says the same diamond sold in 2001 for USD 4.3 million, meaning the value more than tripled and provided an annual return of more than 20 percent.

The pear-shaped diamond was part of a record-breaking jewelry sale for Sotheby`s, which brought in USD 53.5 million-the most ever for a spring jewelry auction. Many of the pieces were from the family of Jay Gould, the financier, railroad magnate and archetypal "robber baron" of the 19th century.

One sale doesn`t make a trend, and the jewel market is highly prone to fakes, theft and sudden price shifts. But the white diamond`s sale offers further evidence of the roaring bull market in hard assets (diamonds being the hardest of assets). From collectible cars and coins to stamps, wine, art and real estate, the wealthy continue to move more of their money into investments they can touch, feel and, if possible, enjoy.

Especially in today`s volatile financial markets, top-quality hard assets have become increasingly attractive as safe stores of value. The Sotheby`s sale follows a string of other big diamond sales in recent years, including the USD 115 million Liz Taylor jewelry sale in 2011.

"I generally think of top-quality diamonds not in terms of wealth creation, but instead as wealth retention, tangible assets that have global appeal and global value," said Lisa Hubbard, chairman of Sotheby`s North and South American International Jewelry division

Sotheby`s released very little information about the age or origin of the USD 14 million stone. It would only say that it`s not "historic" in terms of age.

Still, the pear-shaped super-bling was a great investment for the seller. And, if nothing else, a great accessory for the buyer.



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Will start production from Karnataka mine in May: Sesa Goa

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 19 April 2013 | 12.44

Iron ore miner Sesa Goa is confident to start production at its Narrain mine located at Chitradurga in Karnataka by May, following a Supreme Court order issued today, which lifted one and half year long mining ban in the state.

Supreme Court today allowed 63 mines in category A and B to resume operations subject to fulfillment of rehabilitation and resettlement norms. The court also lifted the embargo on grant of fresh mining leases in the state. The apex court had earlier allowed 18 mines from Category A to resume operations. 

"We have to get the forest clearance from ministry of environment and forest and we are expecting in a matter of days because a lot of process has been already gone through and there are last one or two processes we have to go through. So, we are very hopeful that by next month in the month of May we will be able to start production," P K Mukherjee, Managing Director, Sesa Goa told CNBC-TV18 today.

Also read: SC verdict will not give major relief to Sesa Goa: Centrum

Supreme Court order comes as relief for Sesa Goa as most of its operation in Goa are also shut. While the company may be able to resume mining, it will not be able to utilize the maximum potential of the mine due to output cap prescribed by the apex court.   

Narrain mine's maximum capacity is 6 million tonne per year, however Sesa Goa is allowed to produce only 2.29 mln tn. In earlier decision the Supreme Court had stipulated that a maximum of 25 million tonnes of iron ore can be extracted annually from Bellary district and 5 million tonnes from the districts of Chitradurga and Tumkur.

Nevertheless, Vedanta Group company is eager to resume its operation and is also enthusiastic for applying new mining licenses as and when decides to distribute them in Karnataka.

Below is the verbatim transcript of the interview

Q: Its been difficult two years for you, there is some relief that has come in from the Supreme Court as far as Karnataka is concerned. The Supreme Court has set the mining cap at about 2.2 million tonne per annum, your capacity is about 6 million tonnes per annum. So, what happens then to your remaining capacity how do you recover?

A: Remaining capacity we cannot operate, that is very clear, 2.29 million tones to be precise. However in the judgement itself Supreme Court has very clearly stated that in case there is any change in the reserves and resource situation of the mines and the dumping area available for the mines and the evacuation capacity available for the mines, if any changes are there then this capacity can be revisited.

Q: So what would entail a review of that mining cap?

A: If there is any change in any of these three parameters then definitely the lessee can ask for a review of this capacity to the appropriate authorities including the ministry of environment, forest. I have to go through that order exactly to whom we have to go. But Supreme Court has categorically stated that.

Q: But are you hopeful of a review given the context that you are operating in? Do you believe that if you were to seek a review you will be granted a relief?

A: Lets us not immediately start building on that. Let us first resume the production and for some time lets us produce and bring normalcy in the mind of the workers, employees and everybody and then we will revisit this particular point at the proper time.

Q: By when do you expect to actually be able to start operations because our understanding is that the forest clearance by the environment ministry is still pending? By when do you expect the forest clearance to come in, by when do you hope to start operations?

A: We are not thinking in terms of years or months. We are thinking in terms of days. We have to get the forest clearance from ministry of environment and forest and we are expecting in a matter of days because a lot of process has been already gone through and there are last one or two processes we have to go through. So, we expect it in a matter of days. So, we are very hopeful that by next month in the month of May we will be able to start production.

Q: In terms of new mining licenses are you going to be looking at the possibility of applying for any new mining licenses? Is that going to be a priority for you at this point?

A: Yes definitely. Particularly we have invested two years back in Bellary Steel Assets at Rs 200 crore plus, definitely we would like our growth trajectory to go through the value addition route in Karnataka. We will definitely apply for more mining leases.

Q: Can you give us a sense of how many more licenses you are likely to apply for and by when you hope to start that process?

A: These things cannot be predicted just like that. There is a process of mining lease given by the state governments. So, that process one has to go through and one has to see which are the areas accordingly it has to be worked out.



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Adani project violated norms, impose Rs 200cr fine: Panel

A port and SEZ project of Adani group in Gujarat's Mundra today drew flak from an Environment Ministry panel which said that it violated green clearance conditions and suggested imposition of penalty of at least Rs 200 crore.

"There is incontrovertible evidence that Adani project has violated environmental norms," said the five-member committee headed by environmentalist Sunita Narain in its report. It suggested that penalty should be of one per cent of the total project cost or Rs 200 crore, whichever is higher.

Due to non-compliance of environmental clearance rules by the company, there has been widespread destruction of mangroves and deterioration and loss of creeks near the proposed North Port, said the report, which was presented to Environment Minister Jayanthi Natarajan here today.

"Seventy-five hectares of mangroves have been lost in Bocha Island, which was declared as a conservation zone. "The company has not taken precautions to guard against blocking of creeks because of construction activities; satellite imagery shows signs of deterioration and loss of creeks near the proposed North Port," it said.

The committee asked the government to create an environment restoration fund, which should be one per cent of the project cost (including the cost of the thermal power plant) or Rs 200 crore, whichever is higher. "The fund should be used for remediation of environmental damage in Mundra and for strengthening the regulatory and monitoring systems," it said.

The panel did not put the project on hold as it observed that it has moved very far but advised the ministry to cancel environmental clearance of the North Port. Natarajan assured the committee that the recommendations would be looked into by the government. Reacting to the development, the Gujarat-based firm said since the north port has not been developed at all, it would not impact the current operations of the company. The Adani waterfront and power plant project have been in the eye of the storm for its alleged adverse ecological impact.

Based on the complaints received, Environment Ministry had set up the committee to examine the allegations.



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SBI board discusses NPA issue

A couple of days after the SBI Chairman hinted at a drastic reduction in bad loans, the board of the Government-run lender today discussed the issue of NPAs and the ways to reduce them further.

"At the SBI board meeting we sat down on particular cases and looked at them," Financial Services Secretary Rajiv Takru told reporters here. He said the board looked at stressed assets from both ends so as to make sure one with "malafide interests" does not get much leeway while those which can be restructured are not unnecessarily troubled by classifying them as NPAs.

"We are trying our best that no genuine case of restructuring is punished and we are also trying our best to see that no malafide cases of NPAs gets too much benefit because of generosity on our part," he said. Two days ago SBI Chairman Pratip Chaudhuri had said the bank has been able to bring down its gross NPA ratio to 4.50 per cent, or Rs 49,000 crore, at the end of fourth quarter from 5.3 per cent in the previous quarter. SBI is yet to announce its quarterly and annual results and Chaudhuri had said the numbers were provisional.

NPAs have been a major issue for the country's largest lender. Its NPA ratios are among the highest (at 5.3% in Q3,it was much higher than the average of 3% for its state-run peers) in banking system. SBI blames weak economic conditions and structural problems for the stress on its books.

Meanwhile, to a question on whether the Government will reduce its stake in the public sector banks (PSBs) to meet the stringent capital requirements for the new Basel-III model, Takru said such a thing is not on the agenda. "At the moment we are not looking at that (reducing govt stake) possibility at all," the IAS officer said.

Instead, the Finance Ministry, which has asked PSBs to reduce the net NPAs to 1 per cent level, is counting on a reduction in bad loans and the capital support set aside in the Budget to help the banks meet the norms, he said. About the steep fall in gold prices and if the Centre is considering any change in policies because of that, Takru said it is very early days for the Government to act upon and announce changes. "Its (crash) three days old. We don't have horrible knee-jerk reactions," he said.



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CCEA to consider HMT revival plan, stock spikes 7%

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 18 April 2013 | 12.44

State-controlled HMT rose more than 7 percent on Thursday, continuing upmove for the third consecutive session ahead of Cabinet meet.

The cabinet committee on economic affairs (CCEA) will meet today to consider revival plan for the company.

According to sources, the proposal is to infuse Rs 1,083 crore into HMT.

Sources told CNBC-TV18 that HMT's revival plan includes cash infusion of Rs 448 crore while Rs 425 crore infusion into HMT is for modernisation and working capital of the company. Govt loan to HMT will be converted into equity, sources add.

The share rallied more than 31 percent in three sessions. At 09:58 hours IST, the stock gained 7.4 percent to Rs 36.35 amid heavy volumes on Bombay Stock Exchange.
 
Trading volumes increased nearly 200 percent to 3,71,557 shares as against five-day average of 1,30,559 shares.



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Moody's retains negative outlook on Tata Steel ratings

Moneycontrol Bureau

Rating agency Moody's has reaffirmed its negative outlook on the credit ratings of  Tata Steel and Tata Steel UK Holdings. It had assigned the negative outlook to the companies in August 2012 and continues to maintain it.

"In the wake of weak demand and overcapacity seen in Europe, there is a risk that the weakening of Tata Steel's credit metrics continues in FY14," says the report, adding that the Indian operations too are experiencing margin pressures despite higher output, because of the slowing economy.

Moody's expects consolidated adjusted debt/EBIDTA (earnings before interest, depreciation, taxes and amortization) around 5.8 times for FY13 and expects for an improvement to 5.5 times in FY14.

"However, further erosion of credit metrics could precipitate a rating downgrade," says Alan Greene, Vice President Senior Credit Officer, Moody's.

The report also points out that the steel cycle at least in India is past its worst and if Tata Steel can return towards a sustained operating profit of USD 300 per tonne, then the burden of Tata Steel UK Holdings can be borne by Tata Steel.

Moody's believes Tata Steel UK Holdings remains a challenge for the group. "The European steel industry as a whole is suffering from underutilized capacity and Tata Steel UK Holdings along with other companies is looking for higher value added products and cost efficiencies in order to survive," said the report.

Greene believes the expansion of profitable parts of Tata Steel are getting impacted on emergence of funding constraints on account of Tata Steel UK Holdings losses. He suggests further actions like disposal of Teeside Cast Products in 2011 is needed in order to reverse Tata Steel UK Holdings cash outflow.

Moody's concludes the report saying that the Tata Steel's ratings are unlikely to go up in the near future, but could return to a stable outlook. However, negative ratings pressure could develop in the event of a worsening in the operating environment beyond ratings agency's expectations in the next six months.



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Why GMR Infra is keen to sell shares in airport biz

Moneycontrol Bureau

GMR Infrastructure is likely to sell shares in a public offer for its airport division. The firm that runs Delhi and Hyderabad airports along with an international airport in Istanbul, has debt of around Rs 4,000 crore in the vertical.

The company is looking at raising around Rs 2,000 crore to boost expansion and help a clutch of private equity investors to sell shares in the company, says an Economic Times report quoting sources. The firm is working out size and other details related to the potential IPO.

The report further says that the listing is mainly to help investors exit as the company does not have immediate fund requirement. Private equity firms together own around 21 percent stake in the company.

Laden with over Rs 30,000 crore debt, GMR  has adopted asset-light asset- right' strategy by which it will offload stake in its power, road and airport projects and re-deploy proceed from stake sale in new projects. This approach will also help it clean balance sheet

Last month, the company sold 70 percent stake in an energy venture in Singapore and this helped the company reduce debt by over Rs 2,000 crore.

Even GMR's competitor, GVK Power and Infra has in recent past said that it will sell stake in business division to ease liquidity pressures. The firm has a debt of around Rs 16,000 crore with an over Rs 500 crore annual interest outgo.

Considering the fact that the GMR and GVK, both have undertaken big ticket and long gestation projects in all their business verticals, such debt levels is not abnormal, say analysts. GVK is also looking to offlad stake in airport vertical at an appropriate time.

Read This: Buy GMR Infra, says Mohindar



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How banks dress books to meet loan, deposit growth targets

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 17 April 2013 | 12.44

Saikat Das
moneycontrol.com

The loan growth numbers for most banks in FY13, despite being lower than their initial targets, would not have been as bad as the market was fearing, given the weakness in the economy. But a decent chunk of that growth could well be 'inorganic' in nature.

Towards the end of a financial year seasoned bank chairpersons are known to use a few tricks of the trade to achieve RBI projected loan and deposit growth in the last seven days before their book closures. Call it window dressing or whatever, this is the traditional practice.

The non-food credit or the amount banks lend to individuals and companies, had risen 14.03% year-on-year to Rs 51.66 lakh crore as on March 22, 2013 missing the 16% goal projected by the Reserve Bank of India in 2012-13.

However, this rose 17% y-o-y as on March 29, 2013, according to RBI data. Similarly, total deposits grew at a faster pace from 14.25% to 17.38% at Rs 69.36 lakh crore during the same time.

The modus operandi: 

A bank chairman just calls up his potential clients to remind them of their sanctioned loan limits, which they are not yet availed of. Loan sanction limits loses validity after a certain period of time. Using his/her special power, he/she offers some relaxation on the prevailing rate of interest (read spread over and above base rate).

After availing those short term loans many big companies would route those money through their subsidiaries, which in many cases park the same money into the bank's short term deposit schemes ranging from 3 days to two weeks.

"The practice is evident when you will find most of the board meetings happen in last week of the financial year. A chairman is the head of a bank's board also. He gets all those proposals passed by the board to facilitate transactions. There is nothing wrong in it. Ultimately, he is not committing any fraud," said a former CMD of a state-owned bank on condition of anonymity. 

Is it a kind of fraud?

Certainly not! Rather, it is the reality of banking business. According to some senior bankers, the central bank is fully aware of it. However, RBI does not interfere banks' day to day business.

"The central bank is supposed to identify violation of norms. In this case, nothing is violated. RBI will never do something that hurts the general flow of the business. It is not here to pull up stings deliberately," quipped a senior banking analyst from large domestic brokerage.

The play of interest margin

There is no fear of margin loss. For example, a bank really cannot disburse a loan to any AAA rated company below its base rate. It only allows a reduction in spread, which is added over and above the base rate. Currently, the lowest base rate is 9.60% offered by HDFC Bank . So a discounted rate may come around 10 percent. However, bulk deposit rates will be around 8-9% range.

"This is a win-win situation for both banks and borrowers," a former chairman and managing director of a large public sector bank told moneycontrol.com.

"A company gets a dream rate while a bank achieves huge business volume at the cost of a little margin sacrifice. Even after considering CRR and SLR obligations, a lender continues to earn decent interest margin. A corporate honcho is always happy to do this as the practice ensures good relation with a bank" he said.

Cash Reserve Ratio or CRR is the portion of deposits that banks need to keep with the RBI at 4%. Statutory Liquidity Ratio or SLR is the portion of deposits that banks are mandated to keep in government securities. Currently, it stands at 23%.

The corporate angle…

It is undeniable that companies too are supposed to meet some year-end sales target. This leads to some working capital demand. Moreover, companies also buy assets to get the tax benefits on account of depreciation for the full year. For example, a company may buy vehicles at the year-end and thereby, avail the depreciation benefits.

"Like banks, corporates need to shore up sales by the year-end. This is a seasonal phenomenon. I am not sure whether it happens globally," said a senior official from a rating agency.

saikat.das@network18online.com



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Changes in H1B visas to affect Indian IT firms

The proposed changes in the issuing of H-1B visas, the highly sought after US work permits, will badly affect the Indian IT firms which depend heavily on these work visas. The changes under the Comprehensive Immigration Reform (CIR) put a curb on use of H-1B visa for those companies which have a higher ratio of work force under this category. Most of the Indian companies will fall under this classification.

The companies will also have to shell out more fee to get a H-1B visa, if the draft legislation is cleared by the Congress and is signed into law by the US President. The US, according to the 17-page outline of the 'Border Security, Economic Opportunity and Immigration Modernisation Act of 2013', will crack down on abusers of the H-1B system by requiring the dependent employers to pay significantly higher wages and fees than normal users of the programme.

If the employer has 50 or more employees, and more than 30 per cent but less than 50 per cent are H-1B or L-1 employees (who do not have a green card petition pending), the employer will need to pay a USD 5,000 fee per additional worker in either of these two statuses, the outline of the bill said. In case the employer has 50 or more employees and more than 50 per cent of these workers are H-1B or L-1 employees who do not have a green card petition pending, then the companies will have to pay a USD 10,000 fee per additional worker in either of these two statuses.

As such, large Indian IT companies like TCS , Wipro and Infosys will have to pay USD 10,000 for each additional H-1B employee they would be hiring. Such a thing will not be for companies like IBM, Intel or Microsoft who are based in the US and majority of their employee are American nationals. In case of companies like TCS, Wipro and Infosys, which are headquartered in India having large off-site offices back home and depend on a small strength in the US, will be affected by such a provision.

The bill proposes that in the fiscal year 2014, companies will be banned from bringing in any additional workers if more than 75 per cent of their workers are H-1B or L-1 employees. This provision is in accordance with the US plan to crack down on use of H-1B and L visas to outsource American jobs by prohibiting companies, whose US workforce largely consists of foreign guest workers, from obtaining additional H-1B and L visas.

Under the bill, the Secretary of Labour must establish a searchable website for posting H1B positions. The site must be operational and online within 90 days of the passage of the new law. It requires employers to post a detailed job opening on the Department of Labour's website for at least 30 calendar days before hiring an H1B applicant to fill that position.

The bill also restrains employers from recruiting or giving preference to H-1B or OPT workers over American workers. It also proposes to establish significant new authorities and penalties to prevent, detect, and deter fraud and abuse of the H-1B and L-1 visa systems by fraudulent employers.



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HMT soars 20% ahead of cabinet meet for revival plan

State-owned HMT gained as much as 20 percent in early trade on Wednesday as government sources indicated that the cabinet committee on economic affairs (CCEA) will consider company's revival plan on Thursday, April 18.

CNBC-TV18 learns from sources that infusion of Rs 1,083 crore has been proposed as part of the plan.

Sources add HMT's revival plan includes cash infusion of Rs 448 crore while Rs 425 crore infusion into HMT is for modernisation and working capital of the company. Govt loan to HMT will be converted into equity, sources add.

At 10:20 hours IST, shares rallied 15.5 percent to Rs 32.85 on Bombay Stock Exchange.

Trading volumes increased 10 times to 2,89,070 equity shares as compared to its five-day average of 28,912 shares.

The share touched its 52-week high Rs 50.15 and 52-week low Rs 24.50 on 18 October, 2012 and 28 March, 2013, respectively.

Market capitalisation of the company currently stands at Rs 2,497.75 crore.



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CERC allows Tata Power to raise power tariffs, stock spikes

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 16 April 2013 | 12.44

Tata Power Company , one of the largest private power producers in India, gained more than 4 percent in early trade on Tuesday after the Central Electricity Regulatory Commission (CERC) allowed the company to raise power tariffs.

CERC has passed a landmark order extending relief in the form of a compensatory tariff to Tata Power for its project in Gujarat.

While responding to the order, Tata Power said that the order is an important step to resolve coal-based power projects issue.

CERC has asked distribution companies and Tata Power to form a panel within one week.

At 09:29 hours IST, the stock went up 3.29 percent to Rs 97.25 on Bombay Stock Exchange.

The share touched its 52-week high Rs 113.20 and 52-week low Rs 92.90 on 05 December, 2012 and 14 February, 2013, respectively.



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Manappuram, Muthoot crash 8-10% on falling gold prices

Gold loan financing companies Manappuram Finance and Muthoot Finance crashed 8-10 percent in early trade on Tuesday due to fall in gold prices.

Gold prices dropped more than 8 percent on Monday to below USD 1,400 an ounce, heading for the biggest two-day drop in 30 years.

Overall, gold is down 20 percent in 2013, and nearly 30 percent from its all-time trading highs over USD 1,900 per ounce in September 2011.

Currently, gold is down by USD 10.74 or 0.7 percent to USD 1,349.86 an ounce.

Another setback for Manappuram Finance
The Economic Times reported that private equity investors in gold loan firm Manappuram have stepped in to bar the Kerala-based lender from using its branches to accept money for chit funds controlled by its promoter VP Nandakumar, after an audit indicated that a part of the company's network was being used for this, a senior fund manager of a private equity fund said.

The report said, "Private equity firms led by India Equity Partners and Barings Private Equity Partners assigned audit firm KPMG, which found out that less than 5 percent of the company's branches were collecting money from the public for chit funds controlled by Nandakumar."

At 09:56 hours IST, Manappuram is locked at 10 percent lower circuit to touch a 52-week low of Rs 15.70. There were pending sell orders of 291,343 shares, with no buyers available.

The stock declined for the fourth consecutive session today, losing 21 percent since April 10.

Meanwhile, Muthoot Finance fell 7.5 percent to Rs 121.55 on Bombay Stock Exchange. The stock plunged 32 percent in seven consecutive sessions.



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Uttam Galva up 5% on talks with POSCO to set up steel plant

Shares of Uttam Galva Steel rallied 5 percent on Tuesday as sources said South Korean steel major Posco has initiated talks with company to set up a three million-tonne per annum facility in Maharashtra with an estimated Rs 16,000 crore investment.

The deal, if fructifies, would see two of the world's leading steel makers joining hands as Lakshmi Mittal-led ArcelorMittal has 33.80 percent stake in the Mumbai-based Uttam Galva Steel.

A source close to the development said representatives of all the three firms had a meeting last week and are in favour of the joint venture. The shareholding and other details of the proposed project are yet to be worked out.

It generally takes USD one billion or Rs 5,500 crore to set up a steel plant of one million tonne capacity.

CR and galvanised steel maker Uttam Galva Steels Deputy Managing Director Ankit Miglani declined to comment on the development.

Posco India's Chairman and Managing Director Y W Yoon did not reply to queries in this regard. Arcelor-Mittal India spokesperson could not be contacted immediately.

The required 1,700 acres land for the facility, which is proposed to be set up at Satarda in the Konkana region of the western state, would be provided by Uttam Galva Steels which owns the land parcel.

Satarda is closer to Goa, a state with prolific reserves of iron ore. However, the iron ore produced from the state is low-iron bearing. Posco's patented Finex technology of iron producing uses fines (low-grade iron).

The South Korean steel major had intended to use Finex technology in a proposed joint venture with state-owned Steel Authority of India, but the project hasn't taken shape so far due to differences over shareholding structure. While Posco insisted on holding a majority stake in the proposed venture with SAIL, the Indian government was not willing to offer it more than 50 per cent of the holding. Leading global steel makers are increasingly vying for Indian market as the demand for the alloy is set to go up in the coming years to meet its infrastructure needs. India is now the world's fourth largest steel producer following China, Japan and US. Posco had produced 39.1 million tonnes steel in 2011.

At 10:23 hours IST, the stock was quoting at Rs 70.95 on Bombay Stock Exchange. There were pending buy orders of 10,491 shares, with no sellers available.
 
Market capitalisation of the company currently stands at Rs 1,009.34 crore.
 
(With inputs from PTI)



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This is what you can expect from banks in Q4 earnings

Written By Unknown on Senin, 15 April 2013 | 12.44

Moneycontrol Bureau

Lenders are yet to break free of the clutches of the economic slowdown. Banks' fourth quarter (January-March, FY13) earnings are unlikely to have any positive surprises. Private lenders would continue to perform well while their public sector peers can see some moderation in net interest margins. The credit quality pain is not expected to change the trend.

"In January-March quarter, we will continue to see accretion of NPLs," Ananda Bhoumik Director (Banking) India Ratings told moneycontrol.com.

"The trend that you have seen till December will probably persist. A few lenders like Canara Bank and Allahabad Bank have guided that they will bring down bad loans. Others are hopeful that it is bottoming out. Also, there is a very strong restructuring pipeline. Bad loans will continue to rise till September," he said.

Employee costs

According to a report by brokerage house Motilal Oswal, the employee related expenses are likely to grow by around 20% both on a year-on-year basis and quarter-on-quarter basis for state-owned banks.

"During the quarter, banks are expected to provide for the new wage hike related provisions for the entire three months (for a few it would be for five months), compared to two months in 3QFY13," said the report suggesting that adequate capitalization, strong liability franchise (deposit base) and prompt recognition of stress are the triggers to bet on a bank.

Credit growth

Banks loan books have shown a muted growth so far this year. The latest RBI data showed, banks' non-food credit grew a little more than 14% as on March 22, 2013; which is below the RBI projection of 16% in FY13. Analysts too expect muted growth in bank loans for the full year.

"We expect loan growth to come at 15% for FY13, marginally lower than RBI's revised credit growth projection of 16% on back of subdued credit off-take on corporate segments," said a report by Kotak Securities.

"Expect NIM to remain stable QoQ with negative bias. We expect strong treasury profit during Q4FY13 as yield curve movement was volatile during the quarter. However, we are forecasting subdued core fee income on back of muted loan growth."

Lackluster economy

Meanwhile, India's third quarter GDP growth stood at 4.5%, a 15-quarter low. The persistent gloom in growth outlook coupled with policy woes in select sectors is potent enough to thwart banks' growth prospect. Moreover, the rate of inflation has not yet fallen into RBI's comfort zone. The central bank also does not see any further room for interest rate cuts.

"PSU banks are already trading at depressed valuations. Even, higher number of likely new entrants in the sector, creates a structural impediment for PSU banks' medium-term re-rating, as we expect them to lose market share in any case, considering their capital crunch," Vaibhav Agarwal, vice president research, Angel Broking.

saikat.das@network18online.com



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Citi says 'buy' Wockhardt, shares gain

Moneycontrol Bureau

Pharma major Wockhardt reversed Friday's losses and gained near 3 percent on Monday morning, as analysts' views that recent plant inspection and subsequent observations raised by US Food and Drug Administration wouldn't impact business much, eased street concerns.

The stock had tanked near 15 percent in last two sessions after news trickled in that the US drug regulator had issued a 483 form through a routine course of inspection of its injectables facility in Aurangabad.

A form 483 is issued when the FDA observes any violation from standard manufacturing practices. This is, however, routine and may or may not result in any enforcement action by the US drug regulator, analysts say.

"These are mere observations at this point (no warning letter/import alert issued), and there is no immediate impact on the business," Citigroup analysts Anshuman Gupta and Prashant Nair said, maintaining their "buy" rating on the stock.

"We  believe barring an import alert (worst case), the 13 percent decline in the stock over the last two days factors in the worst," they added.

Another foreign brokerage had said on Friday that even if the FDA does end up sending a warning letter to Wockhardt, it would only affect new approvals in injectables and not the current revenue stream materially. It is expecting less than 5 percent impact to earnings should this facility receive a warning letter.

The Citigroup analysts, though, warn that there is a possibility of further action if the FDA is not satisfied with Wockhardt's response to the observations. They note that the injectables facility doesn't contribute much to US revenues, but as seen with other companies in the past, it is likely that the FDA action could be extended to other facilities.

Citi has a target of Rs 2,500 on Wockhardt shares. At 10:25hrs, the stock was up 2.7 percent at Rs 1,800 on NSE.

Nachiket Kelkar
nachiket.kelkar@network18online.com



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Pact with Posco to benefit both firms: JSL's Ratan Jindal

Last week Jindal Stainless Ltd (JSL) signed a three year agreement with Korean steelmaker Posco for selling 200 series steel products to the latter or its subsidiaries. This series is used for domestic as well as industrial applications.

JSL, a part of the USD 15 billion OP Jindal Group was in talks with Posco for almost two years, said  Ratan Jindal, Vice Chairman and Managing Director of Jindal Stainless in an interview with CNBC-TV18

He further said that both companies would also review joint establishment and exploration for a nickel smelter process in Indonesia.

The move will benefit both JSL and POSCO in long term and the pact can be extended further on mutual cooperation, he added

Shares of the company are up 5.84 percent to Rs 57.10

Read This:  Jindal Stainless has resistance around Rs 58: SP Tulsian



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LT to buy out Komatsu stake from equal JV

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 14 April 2013 | 12.44

Larsen and Toubro Ltd (L&T) , India's biggest engineering company, will buy out Komatsu Ltd's 50 percent stake in their joint venture that makes construction equipment and hydraulic components.

After the transaction, L&T-Komatsu Ltd will become a fully-owned L&T subsidiary, it said in a statement on Saturday.

Financial details were not disclosed.



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Why property is biggest con-job on investors

R Jagannathan
Firstpost.com

A real estate exhibition underway right now in Mumbai dubs itself as "India's biggest property expo" and promises "properties across all budgets". It will flop, as many of the previous ones did, for the reality is that property in Mumbai has completely detached itself from the fundamentals of affordability and economic value.

People will come to gawk at the pictures and brochures on display and then swallow hard when they see the extortionate prices mentioned for property situated at non-commutable distances and which will anyway be delivered years later. The ones who actually end up booking or buying will often do so for the wrong reasons.

And what is true for Mumbai property is equally true for Delhi, Bangalore, Hyderabad, Chennai or even tier-2 cities and towns.

Indian property is a bubble waiting to burst, and the only reason why it has not burst already is the artificial constriction on its supply by the politician-builder-criminal nexus.

Prices are high not because of genuine demand, but because our netas and babus and businessmen do not want to let the supply of cheap land rise for fear of destroying the value of their own benami assets.

If you are not convinced, ask yourself: why is it that when property prices are so high their shares have performed so poorly?

Every politician, from the highest to the lowest, is invested in land and property for some reason or the other usually personal gain. We know Sonia Gandhi and her son got possession of a Rs 1,600 crore Herald House in Delhi through a trust they personally control. They even used the Congress party to fund it. We know Sonia's son-in-law Robert Vadra is a big property speculator. We know why BS Yeddyurappa had to lose his job in Karnataka for dubious property deals and for letting the mining lobby run riot. We know why Nitin Gadkari had to give up the BJP's presidentship.

We know that politicians such as Sharad Pawar and Jagan Reddy of YSR Congress are neckdeep in property deals. The buzz in Hyderabad is that Telangana is not happening because several Andhra politicians have bought benami land in and around Hyderabad, which will be the capital of Telangana, when created. If the state is announced before they can encash the land, politicians in Telangana will have the upper hand on pricing.

The short point is this: politicians have a vested interest in keeping property prices high. This is why they want interest rates to be lower, so that more people can buy property; this is why they want to allow FDI in retail, so that more Wal-Marts can buy land in urban areas; this is why they want a Land Acquisition Bill that will artificially boost rural land prices four-fold, and land near the urban periphery two-fold from already high current market prices. This is why the rural development ministry is talking of a Right to Homesteads which sounds like a pro-aam aadmi move, but will end up pushing land prices unaffordably high even in rural areas.

If you don't believe me, ask yourself: what stops city municipal corporations from raising the floor space index (FSI)? Urban land may be limited, but construction can surely be vertical. In Singapore, they construct not only upwards but downwards: they build several stories underground and not just overground. If the normal FSI is one, raising it to two would double the available land. If we raise it to five or 10, as in parts of New York, the land available in urban areas would rise five-fold or 10-fold, and prices would drop like a stone.

So it is a myth to believe that property prices will keep rising in urban areas just because land is scarce. Land is not scarce, it is made artificially scarce.

When every other resource involved in constructing property limestone, cement, glass or steel is subject to the laws of demand and supply, only land has been artificially inflated by politicians and builders because that is where their wealth lies.

This is why they try to foster the myth that property prices have only one way to go: up. If we stop believing this, we won't buy houses we don't need, and pay prices we can't afford.

Here are the usual reasons we trot out to ourselves while buying a home:

#1: Property prices in the city are unaffordable so let me buy something somewhere, even if I never intend to live there. When the price appreciates, maybe I can sell it and buy something more livable. This is why Bangalore's techies buy property near the airport 33 km away as a form of investment.

#2: I already have a home. So let me invest in something that looks cheap today, even if it is 50 km away from my workplace. I may keep it vacant, but surely I will make a neat profit when the price appreciates. This is why Mumbai's propertied classes buy second homes in hill areas of the state, or even in deep suburbs. This is why Delhi's middle classes invest in property along the Yamuna Expressway though they know it is an extraordinarily long commute if they even went to live there.

#3: I already own a small home in the city. If I flip it and buy a larger home half way to Mahabalipuram from Chennai, I can stay there when I retire some time in the distant future, grow potted plants, play golf and live the good life. This logic entices many people, even though they know there is no water supply, or good infrastructure in the place where they are buying cheap property. "Cheap" property is not cheap without a reason.

#4: When interest rates fall, my EMIs will become more affordable. So let me grit my teeth and buy something I simply cannot afford right now. This is a super-flawed argument: interest rates are not your main cost; the price of the property is. When I bought my flat, interest rates were a high 14-15 percent. But low prices were what enabled me to buy.

#5: Living in a rented property is never a viable proposition. I have to buy a house at any cost. When rentals are 1-2 percent of property costs, it makes better sense to rent than buy. Your EMIs will usually be at least two to three times the rent.

Assuming you are not rolling in money or are an expert realtor who knows when to buy or sell property, I would like to suggest that many of the above arguments just don't wash.

The only good reasons to buy property are these: you want to live in it, and have the necessary income to pay the loan bills every month. If you buy for any other reason, you are indirectly supporting the politician-builder nexus.

If you are still not convinced, let me bust the implicit assumption that property prices can never fall. The truth is property prices have both risen and fallen in all countries which run a free market. Even in India they have fallen, but we don't want to believe the evidence.

Take Mumbai's southern tip of Nariman Point. At one stage a decade or two ago, prices for commercial space were upwards of Rs 40,000 per square foot. Today's average is Rs 25,000 per sq ft though the actual price may vary from building to building, from Rs 20,000 to Rs 35,000 per sq ft.

This is not only a steep 37 percent fall, but adjusted for inflation, the fall would be more than 70 percent from the peak.

But, you may point out, residential prices are not following the same trend. Possibly true. The reason why this trend is more apparent in commercial property than residential is simple: commercial property is bought and sold without emotion by beady-eyed finance professionals who weigh the opportunity cost of the money they invest; residential properties are often bought for emotional reasons ("I need somewhere to stay") and pure greed ("Let's buy a second home and make money from the appreciation.")

To be sure, even residential prices do fall, but we tend not to notice it. I remember I had bought a home in Thane (a satellite city of Mumbai) in 1997, and for the next few years not only did the price not rise, it actually fell 20 percent. It was only after six to eight years that the price stabilised and started rising consistently. Now, despite what builders tell us, prices are again levelling off.

If I had bought my small flat just for appreciation, I would have lost money in the initial years. Even a bank fixed deposit would have doubled my money in those six to eight years.

The point I wish to make is this: don't buy property in the belief that it will keep rising. Buy it only if you want to stay in it, unless you are a specialist speculator and know the ins and outs of property buying. The fact that property has risen for the last 10 years first on the basis of real demand and later on artificial steroids is no guarantee that it will rise for the next 10. Sooner or later, the laws of demand and supply will catch up with the reality of unaffordability.

Don't be fooled.

The writer is editor-in-chief, digital and publishing, Network18 Group



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YT Awards: Recognizing finest Indian social entrepreneurs

Young Turks, over the past eight years, showcased entrepreneurs attempting to address real problems in education, healthcare, skills development and access to finance through innovative models. The show partnered with the World Economic Forum and the Schwab Foundation to recognize social change agents via the India Social Entrepreneur Awards for the last eight years.

This year YT join hands with the Sankalp Forum and Intellecap Initiative. Sankalp recognises and supports innovative, sustainable, high impact social enterprises. Over the last four years, it has mentored 100's of social entrepreneurs and facilitated over USD 120 million in equity investments in more than 30 enterprises.

The Sankalp Social Enterprise Awards were organized to recognise the best social enterprise models in five major categories. They are agriculture, food and rural business, clean energy technology, education, vocational training, healthcare, water and sanitisation and technology for development.

The applications for the fifth edition of these awards came in from across the country. The finalists competed to win funding worth Rs 5 crore and a cash price of USD 40,000 as part of the Sankalp-Artha Grand Prize. The finest were vetted through a rigorous three month process by a panel of global investors. Around 21 companies made it to the finals and the winners will be announced on the April 18.

Some of the young finalists of the 2013 Sankalp Social Enterprise Awards are mationed below:

Dialogue in the Dark

Dialogue in the Dark (DID) traces back its journey to Germany in 1988. It has so far reached at 10 million visitors across 23 countries, while also providing employment to more than 8,000 visually impaired candidates. Once, when SV Krishnan tumbled on to one such exhibit, thanks to a delayed flight in Atlanta, it left a lasting and profound impression. Determined to introduce Indian audiences to such an experience, he along with cofounder Sudha Krishnan started an exhibit centre of Ace DID in Hyderabad in 2011.

The concept of Dialogue in the Dark is simple. Visitors are led by blind guides in groups into an area of pitch darkness forcing them to experience what it is like to live life without the ability to see and orient them to a world without pictures. The tour lasts about an hour but the impact Krishnan says is for life.

"We have had more than 25,000 school children coming to Dialogue in the Dark and experiencing darkness and taking back a message on social inclusion and divest education" says SV Krishnan, Co-Founder, Ace Experiences Asia. DID goes to colleges and corporates as well.

The only venture in the world that uses entertainment to educate people on socially relevant themes, Dialogue in the Dark also generates revenues through exhibition ticket sales, its restaurant Taste of Darkness and corporate workshops. DID has grown 80 percent per annum and Krishnan says has grossed revenues of Rs 2.5 crore. After the success of Dialogue in the Dark in Hyderabad, Ace Experiences Asia now wants to create 35 miniatures makeshift versions of Dialogue in the Dark to take the initiative pan India over the next five years.

Institute for Quality Skill Training

Around 80 percent of India's skill development means are at the bottom of the Pyramid. A 39 year old, Aditya Baran Mallik wants to address that market. Founded in 2009, Aditya's Brain Child, the Institute for Quality Skill Training helps skill youth from low income homes investment gold in Jharkhand to ensure a better livelihood. It has trained and placed nearly 10,000 candidates since inception.

Aditya Baran Mallik, founder says, "around the end of 2008, I came up with the idea that maybe we should have a specific model of vocational education, which would enable livelihood for all through skill training. That's how we developed this concept". In January of 2009, he started this company. The idea was to provide the easiest, fastest, cheapest and safest option for livelihoods through skilled training to everyone in the society specifically the disadvantaged.

Aditya and his team of over 100 plan to set up training centers in 13 states of India over the next three years to reach a training capacity of 50,000 students annually. With a turnover of Rs 2.5 crore, Institute for Quality Skill Training has been funded by Kitendo Capital. It is a Switzerland based angel impact investment fund. Aditya is currently working towards a second round of funding through mix of equity and debt.

Hippocampus Learning Centres

It was founded in 2010 by former Infosys employee, Umesh Malhotra. Hippocampus Learning Center provides affordable education to children living in rural India. The venture has established education centers in villages offering a full day kindergarten program and after school primary education as well.

Charging between Rs 1,200-3,000 a year, Hippocampus Learning Centres have taught over 3,000 students across 78 villages in Karnataka. Now it plans to reach three lakh students by 2018. Umesh and team have roped in 220 teachers so far with the emphasis being on training women from within the local communities.

Umesh Malhotra the founder feels that if looking at competition, the government schooling starts at class one. So, for many children, they actually do not have access to any kindergarten in the formal environment. At the same time, the government offers anganwadi. "These anganwadis are free, but they are largely run as day care centers. Therefore, even these centers do not offer pre-primary education to children", he added.

Having received funds from Unitus Seed Fund, the Acumen Fund and Lok capital, Umesh has allocated the money to fuel expansion plans and also provide scholarships to children who cannot afford the fee. It is hoping to clock a turnover of Rs 84 lakh this year. Umesh is now working on expanding Hippocampus's geographical reach.



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SAIL iron ore mine starts production on Friday

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 13 April 2013 | 12.44

Steel major SAIL -owned Gua iron ore mine in West Singhbhum district of Jharkhand will resume production on Friday night following go ahead from state pollution control board, a senior official of the PSU said on Friday.
The mining activity in Gua mines was suspended since June, 2011, in the absence of environment and pollution department clearances, which has now been procured.

Also read; Domestic demand will pick up post sluggish phase: SAIL

"Production will start in three shifts following the green signal from all the departments concerned including environment and pollution control board," A K Singh, DGM, chief of communication, SAIL said.

Singh told PTI that initially, the production capacity of the oldest and largest mechanised Gua mine will be 2.4 million tonne. In February, SAIL chairman C S Verma had said that SAIL's mines were all set to jack up its iron ore production to 39 million tonne per annum in tandem with its mega expansion plan of producing over 23.6 million tonne per annum Hot Metal from the present capacity of 13.2 million tonnes.

The expansion was expected to be completed by 2013-14, Verma had said. SAIL's Raw Material Divison (RMD), which run seven captive iron-more mines at Kiriburu, Meghahatuburu, Gua and Chiria in Jharkhand and Bolani, Barsua and Kalta in Odisha, was working on the modernisation and capacity expansion of mines in the Eastern India. SAIL will invest 10,284 crore for development of the mines under RMD as well as Bhillai to cater its increased iron-ore requirements.

Besides, Verma had claimed that Gua Mine will be developed upto 10 MTPA alongwith installation of beneficiation and pelletisation facilities with an investment of Rs.3000 crore.



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Barring FDI, RBI must control all capital flows: YH Malegam

YH Malegam, CA, S B Billimoria & Co, disagrees with Financial Sector Legislative Reforms Commission (FSLRC) recommendation that finance ministry should get the power to impose capital control instead of the Reserve Bank of India. Malegam, who is a long term board member of the RBI, told CNBC-TV18 that capital inflows coming from foreign direct investment (FDI) should be managed by the government, but all other capital control must rest with the RBI.

He also stressed that capital inflows cannot be looked at in isolation and divorced from monetary policy. India was able to survive the Asian crisis as we had capital controls.

Below is the edited transcript of his interview to CNBC-TV18.

Q: You don't agree with the FSLRC recommendation that power over imposing capital controls must be taken away from the RBI and given to the finance ministry. Why do you disagree?

A: Capital controls can either be managed completely by the government or they could be managed completely by the central bank. Certain problem arises when there is a distinction between the two. So how do you make this distinction?

To make a distinction on the basis of capital inflows and outflows is illogical. I prefer that if everything was managed by the Reserve Bank then they would manage all capital inflows and outflows.

However, I also recognise that capital inflows to the extent arise out of foreign direct investment (FDI), which results in the ownership of Indian assets by non-residents and that is an issue, which is not just limited to the question of foreign exchange. It has political and other implications. All the controversy, regarding FDI in retail business or the extent of participation in insurance business should be left to the government to decide.

Therefore, foreign direct investment which is inward should be managed by the government because of its implication on ultimate ownership of Indian assets by non-residents, but the rest should remain with the Reserve Bank.

I think capital inflows cannot be looked at in isolation. It is a part of monetary policy. If there is volatility, it affects the exchange rate and affects the financial stability. If excess foreign exchange comes in, it may result in a need to de-monetise the excess liquidity, which is created. All these issues cannot be divorced from the ambit of the Reserve Bank. I thought that would be a more logical way of dealing with it.

Q: Can you give us more detail on what the dominant international practice is on capital controls, not only in developed countries but also in emerging markets like India?

A: One has to first make a distinction between countries, which have complete capital convertibility and those, which don't have capital convertibility. If there is capital convertibility then the problem does not arise.

Those countries, which don't have capital convertibility and some of the countries, which had capital convertibility, are now imposing some form of capital controls. If you just allow freedom to non-residents to bring in money and pull it out at their own will then it does have certain implications on the exchange rate and it will have implication on the amount of currency, which is in circulation.

Sometime back we had the East Asian crisis. The survived that crisis because we had limited capital controls.

Even in the last financial crisis of 2008, our capital controls to some extent prevented an outflow of foreign exchange. Importantly, even the International Monetary Fund (IMF), which originally was a strong advocate of total capital convertibility has now recognised that no limited capital controls have some validity.

Once you recognise that there is a need for limited capital controls for most countries then the question, which arises is, who will monitor those capital controls? Would it be left to the government where decisions maybe taken on political grounds, on short-term basis, under political compulsions or should it be left to a professional body like the central bank, which takes a long-term view and has no political overtones in this.

Q: So that is according to you the dominant way in which things are being managed in emerging markets largely today?

A: The present position is that even today under Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA), though the RBI is the ultimate authority for all capital controls, in practice for FDI the government formulates the policy in consultation with the RBI but substantially it is the government which formulates the policy. And for all other matters it is the RBI which formulates the policy.

Now this is a system which has worked well. The criticism which has been advanced and which is also mentioned in the report is the tendency of the government to issue press notes and there is no certainty about the policy mainly concerned with FDI, not with other issues. Therefore if that is not operating as it should be operating, the solution is not to then move it away from the RBI and give it completely to the government. The solution is to ensure that what is today done and practiced is codified into law and therefore a certain degree of responsibility is given to the people who have to administer that law.

Q: FSLRC wanted the RBI to regulate only the banks, not Non Banking Financial Companies (NBFCs) or housing finance companies? You had opposed that move, why did you do so?

A: In some countries there is a single regulator and some countries have multiple regulators. We took a conscious decision that we would have two regulators, one for the banking system and the other for the residual entities. The rational for doing this was that we feel that at least for the moment the banking system is substantially different from other regulated entities and therefore the RBI should continue to regulate the banking system.

The problem arises, how do you define the banking system? Do you define the banking system only as consisting of banks or as consisting of all bank-like entities or entities, which are doing banking business?

Today's NBFCs which are asset financing companies', they are higher purchase companies', leasing companies', and investment companies'. Their asset side is not different from asset side of banks. 

If one look at the portfolio of housing finance companies, 64 percent of the portfolio is with banks and 36 percent with the housing finance companies. Will there be a system where 64 percent of the activity will be regulated by the RBI and 34 percent would be regulated by another regulator.

You look at the other position. What is the size of the NBFC? The assets of the NBFCs are almost about 10 percent or more of the total assets of the commercial banking sector.

There are 42 NBFCs, which in size are larger than the smallest commercial bank. There are two NBFCs, which are larger in size than the smallest public sector bank. So, it is not a small area.

The literature which has come out after the global financial crisis of 2008, almost without exception mentioned that major problems was created because of shadow banks, which were acting in the same sphere without the regulations or the supervision of the main regulator. Therefore, a regulatory arbitrage was created.

One cannot deny that NBFCs are shadow banks and a substantial force in the financial system. So if you accept that proposition then are you not opening yourself out to the same risk, which created the financial crisis of 2008, where one regulator manages the banks and another regulator manages the non-banks, which are doing this business.

Q: Another dissenting member has said that giving the Financial Stability and Development Council (FSDC) statutory powers and making the finance minister its chairman, is a reversal of the process of regulatory independence. You did not object to that. You don't think a future statutory FSDC will threaten regulatory independence?

A: No, it does not worry me. It was a compromise decision and I accept that. Let us look at it as it exists today. Today, though it is not codified, the position we have FSDC, which is chaired by the finance minister and a sub-committee of the FSDC, is chaired by the RBI governor.

It was proposed that FSDC will be a separate entity and not just a committee. Its board would consist of RBI governor, the chief executive of the second regulatory authority, resolution cooperation and FSDC itself.

Its sub-committee will now become an executive committee and all the powers of the FSDC will be in fact controlled and regulated by that executive committee. So in effect we are virtually empowering today's sub-committee with the complete control to run the FSDC.

There are two exceptions, first, if there is a disagreement between the regulators then someone has to resolve, then it goes to the main board. The second exception, if there is a financial crisis then the funding of the crisis may involve the use of public sector funds or government money in which case it is only fair that it should go to the board.

I feel that the actual role of the FSDC hasn't changed very much. It is codified. It will remain a coordinating agency. It will have two additional roles - one role will be that it becomes a repository of all information. So that is the database, which can be accessed by both the regulators.

The next difference is that, will the FSDC be able to identify systematically important entities, which today may not be regulated by individual regulators, but which needs some sort of regulation if for the financial stability.

Q: So it may not just be recodifying, it may end up truncating powers of some regulators for instance at the moment the RBI doesn't have an appellate authority and in some cases it may help for instance when Global Trust Bank got merged with OBC it had to be done swiftly to protect depositors. Now such decisions can't be reviewed and certainly can't be turned back?

A: Today, a regulator does not have within the regulators own administration segregation between the person who enforces the regulation and someone who adjudicates on it. Now what is being provided is that every regulator will have within that regulator itself an entire section which is an adjudication section. For example there will be a member of the board who is an adjudication member, he has no administrative responsibilities. His job i s only to administer the adjudication portion. And within the organisation there will be adjudicating officers.

So let us assume for example that in the RBI, the DBOD decides that there has been a violation and if a penalty is to be levied, may be a committee of deputy governors will levy the penalty. In future what will happen is the DBOD will say there has been a violation. Then that matter goes to the adjudicating officer. Now, since he has not got any views on the matter, he will see if there is a violation and whether it calls for a penalty. He will then impose a penalty and his work will be reviewed by the member of the board. Having done that thereafter, if someone wants to appeal, that appeal will be there. But this process itself wi ll ensure that too many issues will not go through and this will ensure that the problems which you are thinking of will be internally sorted out without going outside.

Q: The commission wants Reserve Bank to be given targets by the government and if they fail to fulfil them, then the RBI will have to explain the reason for that and by when it will achieve them. Firstly, doesn't this look like bulldozing the Reserve Bank's independence? Secondly, many countries have actually moved away from targeting and thirdly, often the Reserve Bank cannot achieve targets because it is the government which holds so many of the cards in its hand?

A: This needs to be clarified. The monetary policy can have several objectives; you could have price stability as an objective, you can have growth as an objective, and you can have foreign exchange management as an objective. So, we have acce pted that there can be many objectives and price stability is not the only objective though that maybe one of the more important objective.

The question was who will determine those objectives ultimately. The government is answerable to parliament and even today objectives are debated and discussed between the monetary authority and the government. But the important point is that the objectives will have to be determined in the medium-term. It is not that you are going to determine an obective for a particular year and say that we believe over the next 3 or 5 years price stability is important or that we believe growth is important. So you determine a policy for the medium-term.

Now, if you determine a policy for the medium-term then how do you evaluate whether that policy has in fact been fructified or achieved? So, you set medium-term targets, you don't set the target, you don't  say that next year you will have inflation of 6.5 percent. In fact, you say our goal is that inflation should be brought down over a medium-term to 5 percent or 4 percent or whatever. Then the question arises that if you have this sort of a goal then you are asking the Reserve Bank to implement that policy and therefore you are giving the Reserve Bank the freedom to take whatever steps are needed to implement that policy. The government does not interfere with the steps that are taken, but the question that still arises is that monetary policy alone cannot achieve many of these targets.

There are other factors, which may come in, whether it is a question of fiscal deficit, whether it is in terms of current account deficit (CAD) and many other issues. Therefore, you should give an opportunity to the Reserve Bank to explain the reason for not achieving the target and therefore to identify the factors, which were there.

We had suggested one important thing that happens even in Bank o f England. One, we have asked for a monetary policy committee. Today there is an advisory committee, but it is purely advisory committee. So we suggested a certain amount of discipline is to be brought on this committee and the members of the committee have to virtually go on record with what their view is, record their vote and so on.

Second, we have provided that even if the governor does not agree with the majority view of that committee, he is free to differ from them and implement the policy as he wants it. However, in all fairness as a matter of transparency, he must explain why he does not agree with the view of the committee.

I thought, this was a reasonable compromise to be reached between the two extreme positions; on one hand you say monetary policy is only the function of the Reserve Bank and government has nothing to do with it or on the other hand, it is the government which will direct the Reserve Bank to execute a monetary policy and Reserve Bank becomes only an agent for implementation. So, this was the sort of compromise, which was reached between the two views.

Q: Given the seminal and vast changes proposed by the commission, how much time do you think it will take to implement all these recommendations?

A: We have not debated this but I would be very surprised if the whole thing is achieved within next five years.



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