Saturday, May 5, 2018

Sebi extends trading hours for derivatives market till 11:55 PM from Oct 1

Currently, the timings for the derivatives market are 9:00AM to 3:30PM - similar to the cash segment

Image result for sebi stock market
The (Sebi) on Friday allowed domestic stock exchanges to extend equity till 11.55 pm, in a move aimed at attracting investors dealing in Indian products on overseas exchanges in Singapore and Dubai. The new timings will also help in better alignment with commodity — amid implementation of universal exchanges — which function till 11:55 pm.
Currently, the timings for both the equity cash and derivatives segments are 9 am to 3:30 pm. Since started in 2000, the trading timings of both (F&O) and cash market have remained linked.
Longer hours for the derivatives market, which is typically used by investors for hedging, will cater to investors operating out of Europe and the US and will also provide a tool for domestic investors to price in the flow that comes after the market hours.
has said the extended timings will be applicable from October 1, the date set for integration of commodities and equity exchanges. Stock exchanges that wish to extend trading hours will have to seek permission from  The market regulator will evaluate the requests based on the risk management system and infrastructure of these exchanges.
Sources say all exchanges, including the National Stock Exchange (NSE) and the BSE, will soon approach to avail of the new provision.
Interestingly, Sebi had granted the extension of trading hours up to 5 pm for the cash segment. However, none of the exchanges opted for the extended hours on account of resistance from brokers.
Industry players say exchanges might look to extend the trading hours in the cash segment following Sebi’s latest move.
The extended timings will lead to higher costs and manpower, which could weigh on the near-term profitability of brokers, particularly smaller players.
Longer hours, however, are a trend across global exchanges. Platforms such as Singapore Exchange (SGX) and CME Group offer round-the-clock trading in key equity indices.
Shorter trading hours in India are seen as a reason for shift in domestic trading volumes to overseas exchanges.
“Globally, derivative exchanges are already following the extended trading hours. The introduction of the extended hours is a positive development and will bring Indian market in line with the international markets,” said Ashishkumar Chauhan, managing director and chief executive officer (CEO), BSE.
Brokers are hoping that the move will increase volumes and offset increased costs.
“All the market management processes are digitised. There shouldn’t be any transition issues for brokers. However, their fixed costs could go up as the brokers will need more manpower. We hope an increase in volumes will offset the expenses,” said Motilal Oswal, managing director, Motilal Oswal Financial Services.
http://www.business-standard.com/article/markets/sebi-allows-exchanges-to-extend-trading-in-derivatives-till-11-55-pm-118050400653_1.html

Tuesday, April 17, 2018

Which are the jobs that the robots will steal?

The Fourth Industrial Revolution—automation, robotics, biotechnology, artificial intelligence, blockchain and 3D printing—is already impacting jobs in labour-intensive manufacturing and textile industries

Related image

Robots reduce hours worked and wages for low- and middle-skilled workers, but has no significant effect on high-skilled workers.

Will the Fourth Industrial Revolution and widespread automation lead to job losses in countries such as India? Some reports have been alarming—a paper by Frey and Rahbari said China risks losing 77% of jobs to automation, while India risks losing 69%. Thankfully, a new study by the Asian Development Bank on how technology affects jobs gives us hope.
Since fears of job losses have been with us since the days of the Luddites, the key question is: is the Fourth Industrial Revolution—technological advancements in robotics, biotechnology, artificial intelligence, quantum computers, blockchain and 3D printing—different from the ones that preceded it?
Sure, technology will displace jobs. But automation also increases productivity and lowers production costs, increasing demand in the economy. It could also lead to new jobs. A study shows that in India, between 2004 and 2015, electrical trade workers had a significant share of new job titles. Examples of these new job titles are computerized numerical control (CNC) operator, machining technician, CNC setter-cum-operator–vertical machining centre, CNC programmer, smartphone repair technician, solar panel installation technician, and optical fibre technician. These are all new jobs.
A paper has said that China and India stand to lose 77% and 69% of jobs to automation, but another study on how technology affects jobs gives us hope
On the effect of rising demand, the study says if the Indian economy grows at 7% over the 16 years from 2015 to 2031, annual per capita income will rise from $1,500 to $4,900. Given the rate of growth of per capita income, India’s textile market can be expected to grow 2.5 times over that period. This would offset job displacement from future automation in the garment industry.
Moreover, automation is used the most in capital-intensive industries. “The two largest users of industrial robots in Asia, electrical and electronics industries and automotive manufacturers, each accounted in 2015 for 39% of Asia’s robot stock but only 9.2% and 4.2%, respectively, of manufacturing employment,” according to the study. If robots have to be deployed in a labour-intensive industry, they will have to be cheap enough to compete with very low wages. The problem with that argument is, even in Bangladesh, automation has started in the garments industry.
As automation is adopted more widely, some classes of workers will certainly be displaced. The study found that robotics reduce hours worked and wages for low- and middle-skilled workers, but has no significant effect on high-skilled workers. Unfortunately, International Labour Organization estimates show that in India, only 15.5% of employment is in the highly skilled category, with the rest in the medium- and low-skilled group.
If robots have to be deployed in a labour-intensive industry, they will have to be cheap enough to compete with very low wages. The problem with that argument is, even in Bangladesh, automation has started in the garments industry
The research shows that, with technological advances in global value chains, the share of non-routine cognitive occupations increases; for non-routine manual occupations, half the economies showed increased employment share; and for both cognitive and routine manual occupations, the employment share is decidedly negative for manufacturing and mainly negative for services.
What about wages? While wages of skilled and managerial workers would rise, those in routine and manual labour would decline. The worst case would see the wages of less skilled workers not rise at all—this happened during the first Industrial Revolution, says the report, when “the average wage of workers barely increased over several decades despite a dramatic increase in labour productivity in manufacturing.” Trouble is, for many in India, it’s the first, second, third and fourth industrial revolutions combined, all at one shot.
Due to automation, while wages of skilled and managerial workers would rise, those in routine and manual labour would decline
What is to be done? An ILO Employment Policy brief had pointed out that “the challenge of technical change may not be so much whether there will be more jobs destroyed than created, but the facility with which workers are able to transition from old to new jobs in a period of rapid change and to equitably share in productivity gains.” The need to upgrade skills is obvious. In 2016, 46% of employers in Asia and the Pacific reported difficulty in filling vacancies for skilled positions. Moreover, rapidly changing technologies imply workers will continually have to learn new skills. The rise in contract work will result in many being intermittently unemployed. They will need protection. Unfortunately, India’s social protection system is totally inadequate. The ILO says the population covered by any one social security scheme in India is 19%, compared to 63% in China, 28.4% in Bangladesh and 37.9% in Vietnam.
We are already seeing the social consequences of the lack of decent jobs and rising inequality in India. It’s time we heed the warnings
How will increased social security be funded? The ADB recommends taxes on property, inheritance and capital gains. That is unlikely to go down well with our elites.
We are already seeing the social consequences of the lack of decent jobs and rising inequality in India. It’s time we heed the warnings.


https://www.livemint.com/Opinion/gmvEw19NRmJgyHRtC60wMJ/Which-are-the-jobs-that-the-robots-will-steal.html

Thursday, March 22, 2018

‘Amazing’ execution of Narendra Modi government’s insolvency and bankruptcy code trumps rest of Asia for this trader

Cleaning up India’s stressed loans has been a big priority of Prime Minister Narendra Modi in order to attract investments to the country.

narendra modi
Prime Minister Narendra Modi greets as Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh looks on during the Padma Awards 2018 function at Rashtrapati Bhavan in New Delhi, on Tuesday. 
SC Lowy Financial HK Ltd. said it will trade more distressed debt in India, which has become its most important market in Asia, thanks to a hefty supply spurred by the rollout of a new bankruptcy law.
India now accounts for 30 to 40 percent of the Hong Kong-based loan and bond trading firm’s activities, up from 10 to 15 percent just a year ago, said Soo Cheon Lee, its co-founder and chief investment officer. Previously, it was more or less evenly spread in Australia, Korea, China, India, South East Asia and the Middle East.
“India is the main market for distressed debt in Asia for us,” Lee said in an interview. “It’s because of the Modi government’s initiative to clean up non-performing loans at its lenders” and the “amazing” execution of the new insolvency law, he said.
Cleaning up India’s stressed loans has been a big priority of Prime Minister Narendra Modi in order to attract investments to the country. The new insolvency resolution process, born in 2016 after the government overhauled its archaic bankruptcy laws, was designed to clear out distressed companies through asset sales.
Among companies under the resolution process are Essar Steel India Ltd., Aircel Ltd. and Bhushan Steel Ltd. A $2 billion bank fraud at Punjab National Bank will also likely add to the supply of distressed loans.
As a foreign financial firm, it is easier to do business in India than in China, where local partnerships are usually required, Lee said. High returns of about 15 percent from its distressed debt investments in India is a draw too, he said.
Rising bankruptcy cases in the South Asian nation are presenting new opportunities for hedge funds focusing on the latest fallout in banking and other key industries. Regulatory pressure for banks to recognize bad loans has also led to a 30 percent jump in non-performing loans, Fitch Ratings said in a Feb. 22 note.
“The government is fine-tuning the bankruptcy process, which has to continue as they are cleaning up the NPLs,” Lee said. “It is still just the beginning and we expect this to last for at least 1-2 years.”
http://www.financialexpress.com/economy/amazing-execution-of-narendra-modi-governments-insolvency-and-bankruptcy-code-trumps-rest-of-asia-for-this-trader/1107146/

Sunday, February 25, 2018

Banking crises: An Indian history

Photo: Abhijit Bhatlekar/Mint
The Punjab National Bank (PNB) scam has, at least momentarily, shocked the nation. Some headlines suggest this is the biggest banking fraud since Independence. Just a few days earlier, Bank of Baroda was in the news, but far less prominently, for very similar fraudulent activity in South Africa.
Which leads one to wonder: what is going on Indian banking?
One answer is: nothing new.
Bank frauds and bank crises have been an integral part of Indian financial history. It is not for nothing that in 1913, John Maynard Keynes after surveying the state of banking in the country, wrote in Indian Currency and Finance, “In a country so dangerous for banking as India, (it) should be conducted on the safest possible principles”. His warnings have proven prophetic. 
In fact, scams in Indian banking far predate Keynes’s warnings. The year 2017 was the 150th anniversary of the failure of the Presidency Bank of Bombay (PBB). The bank had been started by the East India Company in 1840. It was stable and run prudently till the mid-1860s. This was the period when the British started relying extensively on Bombay cotton markets, as supplies from the US had declined due to the civil war. Thus, lots of cotton companies and banks began to spring up in Bombay catering to a booming demand for capital. 
It is in this environment that PBB began to issue loans recklessly against shares of private companies and even on just personal security. Then, as the civil war ended, the euphoria in the Indian cotton market turned to panic. The hitherto stable bank came to a swift close. A new Bank of Bombay was established immediately in 1868—financial institutions were, of course, central to the colonial project. 
If one reads into the details of the PBB scam as given in Amiya Kumar Bagchi’s history of State Bank of India, the scam is not all that different from the recent events at PNB. The main difference is that while PBB failed, hopefully neither PNB nor Bank of Baroda is headed in that direction.
Even before PBB, there were several bank failures in Calcutta. Several banking organizations mushroomed in the early 18th century, as economic activity concentrated in Calcutta. However, again, the same problems surfaced—overextended balance sheets, accounting fraud, et cetera. At the time bankers in Calcutta blamed the fact that banks had unlimited liability. Subsequently, in 1861, British authorities allowed banks to have limited liability, only for the PBB collapse to show that accounting regulations and reforms can only do so much for prudent banking. 
One response to recent scams has been to point fingers at public sector banks, and suggest that privatization would create the right incentives. But Indian history is, in fact, replete with banking failures in the private and public sectors.
Fast-forward to 1905 and we see another period of euphoria in Indian banking, this time due to the Swadeshi movement. Arising out of the political foment unleashed by the partition of Bengal, the movement called for Swadeshi banks to fund Swadeshi enterprises. 
The entrepreneurial response was overwhelming. By 1913, there were 451 banking companies (accoring to Bakhtiar Dadabhoy's Barons of Banking). No prizes for guessing what happened next. Following runs, prominent banks such as Indian Specie Bank and People’s Bank of India collapsed. The case of Indian Specie Bank is interesting—it had forwarded large loans to a prominent pearl merchant. When the merchant’s business collapsed, so did the bank. In December 1913 one newspaper, The Colonist, said that if the bank’s management had released balance sheets, the fraud could have been detected well in advance of the collapse. A refrain that is all too common to this day.
Most of the banking failures in the 1910s took place in Punjab. In 1913-14, out of 54 closed banks, 28 were from Punjab and 11 from Bombay. The location of failures then shifted significantly towards southern India and West Bengal. The period of 1913-66 sees nearly 1800 banks failing—25% in Kerala, 21% in West Bengal and 20% in Madras. 
For a while these collapses were blamed on the lack of a central bank. Indeed, nearly 350 banks all over India closed between 1913 and 1934. In 1934 India finally got its own central bank. Sure this central bank could now stem the rot in Indian banking? 
Hardly. Banks continued to fail at an alarming rate. Between 1935 and 1947, nearly 900 banks failed followed by 665 banks in the period from 1947 to nationalization in 1969. So much so, in 1950 an elderly citizen from West Bengal wrote to prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru complaining that small depositors who lost their deposits in these banks "scheduled and affiliated [sic] by the Reserve Bank" had come to the conclusion that the central bank was "only meant for the Big Pandas who ... only know how to squeeze" the poor and who were "sleeping with oil in their noses" (RBI History 1951-67). 
Sentiments about banking mismanagement, then, have changed very little.
Though, to be fair, even at the time of the Reserve Bank of India's inception, there was a feeling that the RBI Act did not give the central bank enough powers to regulate the sector. It was felt that additional separate legislation was needed. This feeling was strengthened following the failure of Travancore and Quilon Bank in 1938. It was only much later, in 1949, that the Banking Regulation Act was enacted which gave RBI additional regulatory powers. The statutory liquidity ratio was introduced to build reserves for safety (which later became a tool for financial repression). 
More importantly, both new and old banks were required to apply to RBI for a banking licence. Old banks which could not fulfil new conditions were asked to merge or liquidate their operations. However licensing was a double-edged sword, as RBI could not use it aggressively to clean the system. After all banks are deeply interconnected. You cannot restructure one without unsettling others down the line. For all its regulatory enthusiasm, RBI had to walk a tightrope. 
As always it would take yet another major collapse to expedite regulation. And that happened when Palai Central Bank failed in August 1960. RBI hit the panic button, and large-scale closures were enforced. That failure led to the formulation of deposit insurance rules in 1962, thus enhancing stability in the banking system. 
In 1951, there were 566 banks of which 474 banks were unfit to be included in RBI’s Second Schedule. In 1967, this figure was pared down to 91 banks of which just 20 banks were unfit. These statistics are staggering but is perhaps still inadequate to fully convey the challenges faced by India’s banking system till 1969.
After 1969, RBI became highly conservative and no new bank licences were issued till 1994. This was also a period when banks were pushed aggressively towards financial inclusion leading to an accumulation of bad loans starting from the 1980s. In 1994, 10 new banks were licenced (of which only a few remain now). In the early 2000s, two more banks were licenced followed by another two in 2014. Some special banks like local area banks, payments banks and small finance banks have since been licensed. In all these new beginnings, the process of consolidation has continued with the eight associate state banks being merged with State Bank of India last year.
Thus the last century and a half of Indian banking has not been without its fair share of crises and controversy. RBI has tried to respond to all these crises by tightening and adding more regulations. Regardless, but to a much smaller degree, banking failures continued in some form or the other. There were stock market scams in 1992 and 2001, but arising out of fraudulent banking. Then there was the Indian Bank scam in 1996. Within the newly licensed banks of 1990s, Global Trust Bank played a major role in the 2001 stock market scam. Then there were bad loan crises in 1980s and 1990s. 
All these failures, and the more recent ones,are somewhat puzzling as banking regulations have only got even more stringent over time. Indian banks are now governed by both international Basel norms and domestic regulations. RBI has extensive powers to inspect banks and intervene in their operations. 
In its response to the ongoing PNB scandal, RBI responded as follows: “The fraud in PNB is a case of operational risk arising on account of delinquent behaviour by one or more employees of the bank and failure of internal controls.” 
However, the regulator cannot absolve itself of all responsibility by just saying this, given that it regularly inspects banks and is expected to address these very risks.
Following the crises arising out of the collapse of Lehman Brothers, Indian banking was lauded. Our bankers, it was said, did not follow so-called “Western fraudulent practices” and stuck to the basics. That idea is now up for question.
The current spate of events reminds this writer of a lecture given by the economist Amartya Sen. In the first Paolo Baffi Lecture on Money and Finance at the Bank of Italy in 1991, he posed the following question on financial activity: “How is it possible that an activity that is so useful has been viewed as morally dubious?” 
From 1991 to 2007, the financial sector enjoyed an enviable lustre—several Nobel Prizes went to scholars who contributed to the development of financial economics. Finance became the most preferred sector for young graduates, and big investors became celebrities and role models. After 2007, and with each passing day, finance and banking is again going back to becoming morally dubious.
The Indian government and the regulator could take some comfort from the country's banking history as they have resolved fair number of scams and crises in the past. Having said this, they should also be mindful that these events are far more common than imagined.
http://www.livemint.com/Sundayapp/fjheowjLjiFNsGcjzVZXsO/Banking-crises-An-Indian-history.html

Tuesday, February 13, 2018

10 interesting things to know about Donald Trump’s 2nd budget

The POTUS Donald Trump released a $4.4 trillion budget plan for the United States of America for the financial year 2019 on Monday with a major focus on the military and defence. We take a look at 10 interesting things to know about Donald Trump’s second budget.

President Donald Trump proposed a 6 million in civilian assistance and million in military aid to Pakistan. 
The POTUS (President of the United States) Donald Trump released a $4.4 trillion budget plan the United States of America for the financial year 2019 on Monday with a major focus on the military and defence. “We’re going to have the strongest military we’ve ever had, by far,” President Donald Trump said. “In this budget, we took care of the military like it’s never been taken care of before,” Donald Trump added. This was the second budget under the Trump administration and will be effective from the FY 2019 beginning 1 October.
We take a look at 10 interesting things to know about Donald Trump’s second budget
  1. President Donald Trump reflected administration’s concern about the threat from North Korea and the repetitive missile testing programs in budget 2019. Following which the Pentagon is proposing to spend about hundreds of millions extra in 2019 on missile defence of America.
  2. Further to strengthen the defence, the Pentagon would invest in missile defence systems, ship-based Aegis system and the Army Patriot air and missile defence system, which will be of great significance to combat against the intercontinental ballistic missiles.
  3. In order to put a blockade for illegal crossings in the United States, President Donald Trump proposed a border wall in Texas’ Rio Grande Valley. According to Donald Trump’s 2019 budget, there would be a 104 kilometres (65 miles) long border wall, costing an average of $24.6 million a mile.
  4. President Donald Trump desires NASA (The National Aeronautics and Space Administration) to be out of the International Space Station by 2025 with private businesses running the space station instead. Under the proposed budget for 2019, the US government funding for the space station would end by 2025.
  5. The Justice Department of Donald Trump’s seeks more than $109 million for crime-fighting efforts and the priorities under Trump’s administration would be fighting the opioid epidemic, fighting violent crime and drug trafficking gangs while providing tough immigration enforcement.
  6. Donald Trump’s proposed a budget of $11.7 billion for the Interior Department including $1.3 billion to maintain and improve roads, bridges, park buildings and other infrastructure.
  7. “The budget assumes that Congress will repeal and replace former President Barack Obama’s health care law, although there’s little evidence that Republican leaders have the appetite for another battle over “Obamacare”,” Associated Press reported.
  8. President Donald Trump wants to use $200 billion in federal money over the next decade to support $1.5 trillion in new spending to rebuild the nation’s crumbling infrastructure, Associated Press report added.
  9. The budget 2019 calls for about $500 billion over 10 years in cuts from projected Medicare spending. Trump’s budget proposes major changes to Medicare’s popular prescription benefit, creating winners and losers among the 42 million seniors with drug coverage. Medicare spending totals more than $700 billion a year, and hospitals represent the single biggest category of costs, Associated Press said in a report.
  10. President Donald Trump proposed a $256 million in civilian assistance and $80 million in military aid to Pakistan
  11. http://www.financialexpress.com/economy/us-budget-2019-america-budget-2019-10-interesting-things-to-know-about-president-donald-trumps-2nd-budget-united-states-budget-2019/1064251/

Sunday, February 11, 2018

Modi is making the mistakes Indira made in 1975-77 - of upsetting everyone

Narendra Modi has handed over power to mobs and bureaucrats, so everyone is feeling unsafe; you don't know who might beat you up, who might send you a tax notice, which policeman might harass you.

Narendra Modi
Back in 1980, just before she sent the home secretary home without a posting, asked him his view of her 1977 defeat. He had been the home secretary in the They had got along well before. He had first been a joint secretary and then an additional secretary in the home ministry during 1967-75. She used to consult him frequently on political matters.He was as frank with her in January 28, 1980, as he had been at a meeting at her house on June 28, 1975, two days after had been declared. That frankness had not gone down well, and by July 3 he had been sent back to his cadre, Madhya Pradesh.In 1980 he had just this to say. “You stopped listening in 1974 and when you did listen, you listened to the wrong people.”Who were the wrong people she asked. The Intelligence Bureau, said the officer. She nodded and after some brief chit chat ended the meeting.They never met again. He was relieved of his post and not given another posting for 18 months when he retired.Happens to allMrs Gandhi was not the first, and will not be the last, who stopped listening or listened to the wrong people. The global list – led by – is depressingly long.Indeed, her own father had fallen victim to this problem which led to war with, and walloping by, China in 1962. The same thing, of listening to the wrong people, happened to his grandson Rajiv after the disastrous summer of 1987.By 1995, P V had also cut himself off and listening only to yogis and self-seeking officers. Vajpayee was something of an exception but he too had his favourites. doesn’t count as in any real sense of the word.Modi’s turnNow it is Narendra Modi’s turn. And as the Gujarat and Rajasthan results show, it is becoming abundantly clear that he is listening to the wrong people.He is also making the mistake that Mrs Gandhi made during 1975-77: of annoying everyone at the same time.
Farmers, middle class, rich people, Muslims, Dalits, even his own rank and file – you name the group – and it is upset with him.There are two major reasons why people are upset. One is that everyone – not just the farmers – has suffered a decline in spending power. As a result everyone is feeling worse off.The other is that Mr Modi has handed over power to mobs and bureaucrats. As a result, everyone is feeling unsafe.You just don’t know what will happen to you when: who might beat you up, who might send you a tax notice, which policeman might harass you. This is exactly how it was during the Emergency: a sense of pervasive apprehension, if not fear.Wrong peopleIt is not as if Mr Modi doesn’t know just how oppressive the lower bureaucracy can be. He used to make enough references to it during his campaign speeches in 2013 and 2014.And given his experience of the Gujarat riots of 2002, nor is he unaware of the effect of mobs. Indeed, he has also seen what happened in Delhi in 1984.So why is he doing nothing about it? The answer is simple because his people – sycophants and the – are telling him that all these reports are exaggerated and that whatever is being said is propaganda by the  But the problem is that while until now this might have been true, it is no longer so.In such situations both sycophants and intelligence people become afraid of annoying the boss if they tell the truth. So they keep reassuring him or her that there is nothing really wrong.Chanakya’s adviceAccording to Devdutt Patnaik, Chanakya is once believed to have told Chandragupta Maurya: “A king has a sword in his hand and everyone who stands around him is acutely aware of the sword. So to save themselves they end up lying and flattering the king. It is fear of a king’s moods and opinions that shapes the behaviour in court.”Mr Modi now needs to start listening to others. He has to call off the bureaucracy – in the misuse of Aadhaar to start with – and the mobs. If he doesn’t, he should not be surprised at the election result of 2019.
http://www.business-standard.com/article/politics/modi-is-making-the-mistakes-indira-made-in-1975-77-of-upsetting-everyone-118021100144_1.html

Wednesday, January 24, 2018

What Idea Cellular took 17 years to achieve, Reliance Jio did in 16 months


Related imageReliance Jio reported a revenue of Rs6,879 crore for the December quarter, while Idea Cellular is expected to report a revenue of Rs6,700 crore.
Reliance is estimated to have raced past Idea Cellular in the December quarter, just 16 months after its commercial launch.
Reliance is estimated to have raced past Idea Cellular in the December quarter, just 16 months after its commercial launch.


It’s been only 16 months since Reliance Jio Infocomm Ltd launched commercial operations, but it may have already overtaken Idea Cellular Ltd on revenue. The new entrant reported revenue of Rs6,879 crore for the December quarter. In comparison, Idea Cellular is expected to report revenue of around Rs6,700 crore, based on consensus Street estimates.
Idea Cellular had launched operations in 1997 and it wasn’t until 2014 that it reached a similar size in revenues terms. In other words, what took Idea Cellular 17 years to accomplish, Reliance Jio has done in 16 months. Even Bharti Airtel Ltd took around 13 years before its revenues reached Jio’s annual run-rate of around Rs28,000 crore in 2008.
Of course, the incumbents started slow in the mid-1990s, when tariffs were prohibitive and volumes were low. It wasn’t until 2002-03, when the government started encouraging competition by granting new licences, that growth picked up.
As such, some may argue that it’s not fair to compare Jio’s growth with that of incumbents. Besides, in the third quarter (Q3) an important revenue source for incumbents was hit, after the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India cut interconnect usage charges (IUC) by 57%. Airtel’s India wireless revenues fell 12.2% sequentially, over two-thirds of which was on account of the IUC cut.
Even so, that doesn’t take away from the fast-paced growth at Jio. Its investments—Rs2.15 trillion and counting—are far higher than that of Idea’s gross invested capital of around Rs1.25 trillion. They are even higher than Airtel’s cumulative investments of Rs2.03 trillion.
The high investments have made it clear for some time now that Jio is in a hurry to capture market share.
Still, its pace of growth has taken almost everyone by surprise. “Jio’s revenue outperformance was driven completely by higher-than-expected Arpu (average revenue per user) of Rs154/month. This was on the back of the October 2017 price increase and an increase in the proportion of subscribers opting for higher-allowance/Arpu plans,” analysts at Kotak Institutional Equities wrote in a note to clients.
Data volumes handled by the company are higher than all other telcos combined, analysts at JPMorgan India pointed out in a note to clients. “(This is something) we think must worry Bharti Airtel and the others... Jio’s data traffic of 4.31 billion GB in Q3 is nearly four times Bharti’s data traffic (1.1 billion GB), despite the latter having a subscriber base that’s 1.8 times higher,” they wrote in the note.
Jio told analysts in a post-results conference that the data and voice usage on its network shows that it is the primary SIM for most of its subscribers.
Of course, it’s also true that large incumbents have maintained their subscriber market share despite Jio’s onslaught, which means that the new entrant hasn’t yet been able to wean away their subscribers yet .
The company’s next stage of growth might depend on its success in dislodging these subscribers from incumbents’ networks. After all, while growth in Arpu helped Jio in Q3, this might not continue.
Jio’s tariff cut in January and the many cashback vouchers it has issued since October 2017 may mean Arpu remains flat this year. Growth then has to be driven by increasing subscriber count.
How Jio goes about this task is anybody’s guess. One thing’s for certain though: as Kotak’s note puts it, there’ll never be a dull moment with Jio around.
http://www.livemint.com/Money/JjgQ9OdNQS6K5KXXMkBvCP/What-Idea-Cellular-took-17-years-to-achieve-Reliance-Jio-di.html

Sunday, January 21, 2018

Toothpaste ingredient triclosan could fight drug-resistant strains of malaria

Scientists say a common ingredient of toothpaste, triclosan, could be developed to fight drug-resistant strains of malaria as it has potential to interrupt infections at two critical stages in the liver and the blood
In toothpaste, triclosan helps prevent a build-up of plaque bacteria. Photo: Mint
In toothpaste, triclosan helps prevent a build-up of plaque bacteria. 

London: Research carried out in part by an artificially-intelligent (AI) ‘robot scientist’ has found that a common ingredient of toothpaste could be developed to fight drug-resistant strains of malaria.
In a study in the journal Scientific Reports, scientists from Britain’s Cambridge University who used the AI robot to conduct high-throughput screening said the ingredient, triclosan, showed the potential to interrupt malaria infections at two critical stages — in the liver and the blood.
Malaria kills around half a million people every year, the vast majority of them children in the poorest parts of Africa. The disease can be treated with a number of drugs, but resistance to these medicines is increasing, raising the risk that some strains may become untreatable in the future.
Because of this, the search for new medicines was becoming increasingly urgent, said Steve Oliver of Cambridge University’s biochemistry department, who co-led the work with Elizabeth Bilsland.
After being transferred into a new host via a mosquito bite, malaria parasites work their way into the liver, where they mature and reproduce. They then move into red blood cells, multiply and spread around the body, causing fever and potentially life-threatening complications.
Scientists have known for some time that triclosan can halt malaria parasites’ growth at the blood stage of the infection by inhibiting the action of an enzyme known as enoyl reductase (ENR), which is involved in production of fatty acids.
In toothpaste, this helps prevent a build-up of plaque bacteria.
In this latest work, however, Bilsland’s team found that triclosan also inhibits an entirely different enzyme of the malaria parasite, called DHFR.
DHFR is the target of the antimalarial pyrimethamine—a drug to which malaria parasites are increasingly developing resistance, particularly in Africa. The Cambridge team’s work showed that triclosan was able to target and act on this enzyme even in pyrimethamine-resistant parasites.
“The discovery by our robot colleague that triclosan is effective against malaria targets offers hope that we may be able to use it to develop a new drug,” said Elizabeth Bilsland, who co-led the work.
“We know it is a safe compound, and its ability to target two points in the malaria parasite’s lifecycle means the parasite will find it difficult to evolve resistance.”
The AI robot scientist used in the study — nicknamed Eve — was designed to automate and speed up the drug discovery process.
It does this by automatically developing and testing hypotheses to explain observations, running experiments using laboratory robotics, interpreting the results, altering the hypotheses, and then repeating the cycle. Reuters
http://www.livemint.com/Science/Oac9HXSBY4gYG8uuf89BMN/Toothpaste-ingredient-triclosan-could-fight-drugresistant-s.html

Tata vs Cyrus Mistry: Tata Trusts MD moves Bombay HC against quashing of summons

A Mumbai sessions court had on December 26 quashed the summons issued to Cyrus Mistry and others in the Rs500 crore defamation case filed by Tata Trusts MD R. Venkatramanan
Tata Trusts MD R. Venkatramanan had filed a criminal defamation complaint against ousted Tata Sons chairman Cyrus Mistry for making ‘false’ statements and sought Rs500 crore as damages. Photo: Indranil Bhoumik/Mint
Tata Trusts MD R. Venkatramanan had filed a criminal defamation complaint against ousted Tata Sons chairman Cyrus Mistry for making ‘false’ statements and sought Rs500 crore as damages. 

Mumbai: Tata Trusts’s managing trustee R. Venkatramanan on Friday moved the Bombay high court against a sessions court order quashing summons issued to ousted Tata Group chairman Cyrus Mistry in connection with a defamation complaint filed by Venkatramanan.
On December 26, a Mumbai sessions court had quashed the summons issued to Mistry and others in the Rs500 crore defamation case. A metropolitan magistrate’s court had issued the summons in July 2017, directing Mistry and others to appear.
Venkatramanan’s petition termed the sessions court’s order as “arbitrary and illegal”, saying the court exceeded its jurisdiction while examining the merits of the case.
The petition will come up for hearing before Justice Revati Mohite-Dere in due course, according to the high court roster.
Venkatramanan filed a criminal defamation complaint in the magistrate’s court against Mistry and others last year for making “false” statements and sought Rs500 crore as damages.
http://www.livemint.com/Companies/yFAwPJGQEtAnHNksgXzmBN/Tata-vs-Cyrus-Mistry-Tata-Trusts-MD-moves-Bombay-HC-against.html

Tuesday, January 16, 2018

You may not believe some findings of Annual Status of Education Report: ‘7 out of 10 teens can use cellphone but cannot read basic text’

More than seven out of ten children in the age group of 14-18 years can use a cellphone, but cannot read basic text fluently in their language, says ASER.

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While only 12 per cent males have never used a cellphone, the corresponding number of females is much higher at 22 per cent, it says.

More than seven out of ten children in the age group of 14-18 years can use a cellphone, but cannot read basic text fluently in their language, says the Annual Status of Education Report (ASER). The report also says that females have reduced access to cellphones.
While only 12 per cent males have never used a cellphone, the corresponding number of females is much higher at 22 per cent, it says. The report released here today is based on a survey which was carried out in 28 districts of 24 states, with four domains in focus, namely what are the children of this age group (14 to 18 years) doing, their ability, awareness and aspirations.
“While 25 per cent in the 14-18 age group still cannot read basic text fluently in their own language, more than half struggle with division problems. As for English sentences, 53 per cent can read them. It has also been found that the proportion of youths, who have not acquired basic math skills by 14 years, is the same as that of 18-year-olds,” the report says.
ASER 2017 has focused on 14 to 18-year-olds, who have just moved beyond the elementary school and are the first batch to pass out of class VIII after the implementation of the Right to Education Act, 2009. According to the report, the number of students enrolled in school systems once they move out of the protection of the Right to Education Act, has drastically decreased particularly of girls.
The survey this year has attempted to analyse what do the children do after they move out of the security of the Right to Education Act, how much of what they learnt can be applied in their daily lives, what kind of exposure and familiarity with technology they enjoy, and what kind of career or educational goals they nurture as they get closer to adulthood.
However, the report has found that enrolment in schools or colleges among children at 14 years of age is a lot more than among those at 18 years of age.
The report also observes that the enrolment gap between males and females increases with age. It shows that at 14 years, while 4.7 per cent males and 5.7 per cent females are not enrolled in schools or colleges, at 18 years that gap increases with 27.8 per cent males and 32.1 per cent females out of schools or colleges.
http://www.financialexpress.com/education-2/you-may-not-believe-some-findings-of-annual-status-of-education-report-7-out-of-10-teens-can-use-cellphone-but-cannot-read-basic-text/1017975/

Top Stock picks by Mutual Funds ...STUDY & BUY ...!!!!

SBI to Sun Pharma: Top 10 stock picks by mutual funds in December

Interestingly, after several years, two public sector banks (other than the mammoth State Bank of India) emerged as most chased stocks by fund managers

Chandan Kishore Kant