Sunday, October 17, 2010

FINANCIAL EXPRESS 17th October

RBI seen stepping up intervention of forex market

  • With the rupee continuing its relentless rise as foreign capital seeks out higher interest rates and strong fundamentals in India, banks and money market players expect the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to intervene frequently in the foreign exchange market.

  • In 2010 so far, overseas investors have pumped in close to $23.18 billion into the Indian economy . On Friday, the Indian currency surged to its highest level since late August 2008,buoyed by record foreign portfolio investments and a shaky dollar. During the day , the rupee touched 43.95/96 against the dollar, its highest since August 29, 2008 and above its previous close of 44.11/12 on Thursday.

  • C Chandrasekhar, senior vice-president, Mecklai Financial said: "The RBI may come up with some kind of cap on the capital flows like many other countries have done. The bank will encourage more inflows on the long term. We believe this kind of strong gain in the rupee is temporary . It may go back to 44.50 levels soon."

  • According to V Balakrishnan, CEO, Infosys Technologies, a stronger rupee will hurt the company's operating margin by 1.5% and the year margin may narrow by 130 basis points.

  • By the information given by central bank country's foreign-exchange reserves rose by $1.6 billion to $295.8 billion in the weekended October 8. While foreign currency assets rose by $1.6 billion to $268 billion but gold reserves remained unchanged at $20.5 billion in the week.

  • If we go with Expert's believe that the impact of a stronger rupee will be seen in the next quarter since foreign inflows have been quite large in September and October on which RBI governor D Subbarao said on Friday that the bank was watching the exchange rate situation and will intervene in the forex market if inflows are lumpy and volatile.

Obama against tax sops for cos creating jobs overseas

  • US President Barack Obama said the US tax code shouldn’t benefit companies that create jobs in other countries, as he criticised Republicans for “rewarding corporations that create jobs and profits overseas.”

  • Obama said that “For years,our tax cde has actually given billions of dollars in tax breaks that encourage companies to create jobs and profits in other countries,but now We should be using our tax dollars to reward companies that create jobs and businesses within our borders.”

  • About 8 million jobs have been lost during the recession and the unemployment rate,after reaching a 26 year high of 10.1% in October 2009, was 9.6% last month. Obama said the nation remains in a “tough fight” to help the economy recover. He said government has an “important responsibility” to help business grow.

  • In the Republican address,U S Representative Mike Pence,o fI ndiana, said Congress should take immediate steps to extend current income-tax rates to remove doubts that are damaging the economy.

  • “No American should see a tax increase in January,and Republicans are determined to oppose any effort to raise taxes on any American in this difficult economy, ” Pences aid.

IOC hikes petrol price by 72 paise

  • This is the second increase in petrol prices since June this year. Now petrol in delhi will cost rs 52.55 a litre ater the hike and price in other cities will vary depending on local taxes and levies.

  • Indian Oil Corporation, the nation's largest fuel retailer, today hiked petrol prices by 72 paise a litre effective midnight tonight.

  • As there is increase in international oil prices which rose over 80$ per barrel due to which companies are having Rs. 1 per litre lose.

  • Oil companies no longer revise petrol prices intandem to avoid being accused of acting as a cartel. The other companies also do not have a uniform price for petrol with IOC selling the fuel three paise.

  • Sources said the three companies are losing about Rs 1 per litre on petrol after international oil prices rose to over $80 per barrel this month. The government had in June freed petrol pricing from its administrative control,allowing the state companies to fixratesinlinewiththecost of production.

Post-suicides, SKS Microfinance willing to cut loan rates


  • SKS Microfinance today said it is willing to reduce the rate at which it lends money, if the RBI or the government asks it to do so. The statement comes within hours of Andhra Pradesh promulgating Special Ordinance to rein in microfinance institutions (MFI) in the state.

  • SKS Microfinance Founder and Executive Chairman Vikram Akula said that "We are willing to reduce our rate of interest if the RBI or Finance Ministry asks us to do so. We reduced rate of interest in the past, voluntarily. We are ready to lend at 24 per cent."

  • SKS Microfinance currently charges 26 per cent interest rate.The issue of capping of interest rate charged by MFIs has divided the stakeholders.

  • When asked about the ordinance, Akula said, "As an NBFC, SKS is under the purview of RBI and is regulated by it. The state government will have to take up (the issue) with RBI and Finance Ministry as far as interest rates are concerned."

  • Since the microfinancers take loans from the banks and lend it to customers at a hefty interest rate of as much as 36 per cent, the government is now insisting that public sector lenders must ask MFIs to cap their lending rates in the range of 20-24 per cent as a precondition to access bank finance.

    CWG-2010: INDIAN HEROES MELDED INTO HISTORY


  • "THE GAMES belong to the athletes and athletes will perform." When 'gold-finger' Abhinav Bindra said this at the start of the 19th Com monwealth Games, we weren't in a position to predict a second place for India in the games and that the host nation would clinch its biggest-ever gold medal tally with its best performance ever. But the Indian contingent rose beyond all that to make their nation proud.

  • Be it the first Commonwealth gold for India in athletics after a yawning gap of 52 years, or the great medal haul in wrestling and shooting, or the inspirational display by the crisis-ridden hockey team that won its first-ever medal, a silver, at the CWG--it has been smiles all the way in the arenas. Picking up 101 medals in all at one single international sporting even was something of a dream till the start of CWG 2010 for this cricket-worshiping nation.

  • Even the Test series with Australia turned out to be an epic victory for the In cricket team, our athletes in the CWG ceived as much attention, interest and sup port from the spectators, if not more, as the men in blue of Indian cricket. If thinking beyond cricket was ever a problem in this country, it just wasn't so over these 11 days.

  • While these games would be remembered for rather avoidable reasons and controversies, spanning from corruption and delays in preparation to mismanagement of volunteers and from empty stands in the stadia to the mad scramble for tickets, they would also be remembered for the Indian contingent's stellar performance.

    Govt could add loan products in fin inclusion plan

  • The government is planning to reach out to the unbanked segments in the country by including loan products under its financial inclusion plan, Department of Financial Services secretary R Gopalan said.

  • Earlier, Gopalan had reviewed the financial inclusion plan process that is being carriedoutby10PSUbanks intheSouthincludingIndian Bank, Andhra Bank, Corporation Bank, Canara Bank, Indian Overseas Bank, Syndicate Bank, Vijaya Bank, State Bank of Mysore, State Bank of Tranvancore and State Bankof Hyderabad. "Corporation Bank is already undertaking such initiatives by opening credit lines to unbanked segment customers to start small businesses like saloon and cycle shops by granting a small value loans of Rs 10,000 to Rs 15,000. This can be replicated by all banks after the ministry approves it at the national scale.

  • Finance minister also said "We are focusing on providing facilities including deposits, withdrawals, remittances, micropension, micro-insurance in the identified FIP pockets."

  • The banking sector is up against a huge HR challenge with about 3-4 lakh staff expected to retire in the next three to four years, he said. "New age banking workers has to reorient themselves for new situation. In the modern day banking, more work will be handled at the back offices with conventional banking adopting Business Process Re-engineering at the front-end to stay relevant. We need people with indepth skills in areas like Risk Management, Forex management, Treasury Management, Credit appraisal.,etc to meet the demands of the modern era banking".


Submitted By:

Kushal Shrivastava

Mahendra Singh

Manas Mishra

THE ECONOMIC TIMES 17th October

Submitted by:

manisha nain

mahima aggarwal,

manas

(sec-e)

Market-

1.IPOs good for investors with long-term horizon-there has been a flurry of IPOs and FPOs by pvt and public sector cos. Some got excellent investors response while others suffered due to over-pricing issues.

2.Finmin rejects RBI proposal on companies acquiring regional rural banks.- The finanance ministry is not in favour of corporates acquiring dedicated rural lenders, regional rural banks, a suggestion mooted by the Reserve Bank of India in a recent discussion paper on new bank licences.

infotech-

1.US studying australian internet security program-The US is reviewing an Australian program that will allow Internet service providers to alert customers if their computer are taken over by hackers and could limit online access if people don't fix the problem.

2.moser baer US unit to invest 11.5 mn dollars in new facility- The US unit of Moser Baer India ltd. said it will invest $11.5 million to buy equipment for a pilot manufacturing line it is establishing. Moser Baer Technologies Ltd (MBT) is partnering with Universal Display Corp and the College of Nanoscale Science and Engineering's Smart System Technology and Commercialization Centre to build the pilot production facility.

Features-

1. Unravelling the brand conscious mind of woman consumer- Style-conscious women account for over two-thirds of total spending on women’s apparel, accessories, and beauty. The style-conscious woman spends three times more than the average woman.
Price is not her most important consideration. Her favourite brands cover all price points and she is willing to pay more to get exactly what she wants.

2. New global players enter Indian baby care, food and beverages market- When Italian baby care brand Chicco from the house of Artsana decided to set up shop in India, it planned to devote over Rs 6 crore to brand building just through year one. It researched the market and unearthed some interesting cultural facts. For instance, when it comes to pampering the little ones, only the French do it better than Indian mamas and papas. On the same parameter South Korean parents pamper their offspring the least.

Environment-

1. In Maharashtra, mining companies decide ecological impact of projects- EIA reports for mining projects — which assess the long-term effect a project will have on the environment — are prepared by the mining firms themselves with the help of private agencies whom they appoint.

2. US launches investigation in to Chinese policies on green tech- The Obama administration has said that it will launch an investigating into Chinese policies and practices affecting trade and investment in clean energy technologies.

v Personal finance-

1. MF chiefs allay fears over high FII inflows, bullish on infra- The Indian capital market remains fundamentally strong, concerns over high FII inflows are uncalled for and the much-feared flight of capital, if it at all happens, will only result in short-term volatility in the market, domestic fund managers have said.

2. Credit card companies offer good scheme in festive season- During the coming week, when you go shopping make sure you corner those extra savings and rewards that your credit card can offer you.

THE MINT 17th October

GROUP NO. - 11

KUNAL PATIL

MADHURESH SHANKAR

MANMOHAN RAI

MONEY MATTERS

Strong results exceeded by expectations :

Infosys Technologies Ltd’s September quarter results are the strongest set of numbers it has reported in the past three years. The last time dollar revenues grew in double digits was in the September quarter of fiscal 2007-08, before the credit crisis hurt the company’s customers and hit demand for IT outsourcing services. Last quarter’s 10.2% growth in dollar revenues came on the back of strong 7.2% volume growth.

The politics of patronage :

If recent events in the Karnataka legislature are any guide, there should be little doubt about where the interests of politicians lie .

Inflation may fall to 6.5% by December: PMEAC

New Delhi: Prime Minister’s economic panel has said inflation is likely to decline to 6.5% by December from “uncomfortably high” 8.6% due to RBI’s steps and the expected fall in food prices on the back of good monsoons. “Our own expectation is (that) by December the inflation rate would come to 6.5%,” Prime Minister’s Economic Advisory Council (PMEAC) chairman C. Rangarajan told PTI.

MARKETING AND MEDIA

Sonia meets medal winners; Kalmadi kept out :

New Delhi: Congress president Sonia Gandhi on Saturday met the Indian medal winners in the commonwealth games but controversial organising committee chairman Suresh Kalmadi was not invited. The congress has made it clear that irregularities in the conduct of the games would not be glossed over and those found guilty would be brought to book.

Currency, passports among items lost during CWG :

Currency, accreditation cards, mobile phones, passports -this is what athletes and officials at the Delhi edition of commonwealth games lost during the past fortnight during the sporting extravaganza. Police registered nine cases and made 15 non- cognisable entries at the police station set up at the games village exclusively for dealing with cases related to athletes and officials.

CORPORATE NEWS

Weak recovery from economic downturn :

Liquidity is leading to currency volatility, says Infosys Technologies Ltd chief executive officer and managing director S. Gopalakrishnan .(The period) 2007-08 was (one) of high growth for the global economy. There was tremendous optimism. Today, the environment is challenging, we are recovering from an economic downturn, but it is a weak recovery. Volatility is high.

Bullish on outcome of government talks :

RIM understands the concerns that nations around the world have regarding security, says Bawa

With over five years of experience in the Indian market, Research In Motion Ltd (RIM) wants to popularize its BlackBerry phones from the boardroom to the classroom, and capturing everyone in between. Frenny Bawa, managing director, India, spoke in an interview about why the Canadian firm is optimistic about the market, what its 11,000 application developers are working on, and the dispute over access with the government. Edited excerpts.

ECONOMY AND POLITICS

AIMPLB to appeal in SC against Ayodhya verdict :

Lucknow: The All India Muslim Personal Law Board (AIMPLB) on Saturday unanimously decided to challenge the Allahabad High Court’s verdict on the Ayodhya title suits in the Supreme Court. “During a meeting of the working committee, it was decided that the AIMPLB will move the SC directly or through the Sunni Central Waqf Board,” Board sources said here.

The 51-member committee discussed in detail the High Court verdict. The Muslim Law Board members had earlier made it clear that the High Court verdict was not acceptable to it as it was based on faith and not on evidence.

Apec nations aim to boost farm produce :

Niigata, Japan: Asia Pacific nations agreed on Sunday to boost the region’s agricultural productivity through technology transfer and information sharing as climate change and a fall in arable land threaten future food supplies. The 21-member countries of the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) also called for “responsible” agricultural investment as rising acquisition of farmland in developing countries by other nations to ensure their own food supplies is causing friction with local people.

IN NEWS :

Ambani’s home the costliest, but not in Forbes list :

New York: Billionaire Mukesh Ambani’s $1 billion new abode ‘Antila´ may outprice any other home in the world, but is not in the Forbes’ list of most expensive homes as the house is not for sale, the magazine has said .