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Modi's 'maan ki baat' turns into 'dil ki baat' with Obama

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 31 Januari 2015 | 23.24

R Jagannathan
Firstpost.com

After the morning's pregnant-with-hidden-meaning remarks by Barack Obama on the need for religious tolerance in India, the evening's�Mann ki Baat�featuring him and�Narendra Modi�turned into a veritable love-fest between a US President and an India's Prime Minister.

Efficiently RJ-ed by Modi, the Tuesday night radio programme was carefully choreographed to focus on softball issues that few could misinterpret. It was converted into a veritable�Dil ki Baat�rather than just a�Mann ki Baat.�Not surprising, since� Obama had already spoken what was on his 'mann' at Siri Fort , a� speech that was read differently by Modi baiters and Modi bhakts .

But Modi had no intention of turning his pet programme into a controversial discussion on all kinds of ideas. He deftly anchored the discussion away from hard political topics to gooey, sentimental stuff that could not go wrong.

This is not to cynically dismiss the�Mann ki Baat�as just goody-goody stuff, for we got nuggets of info about Modi that we have never heard of before. Throughout the programme, Modi played generous host to Obama's courteous guest.

Despite the elaborate answers from Obama on everything from bringing up daughters to dealing with obesity to what inspires him to the role of today's youth in a globalised world, it was Modi who dominated the radio show by bringing in his own heroes, his own anecdotes, and generally presenting us with his softer side. This is not the side we usually get to see of�Modi.

His reason for bringing out the soft stuff is best explained in his own words: "If we discuss what comes from the heart, and repeat it, hum it, we get a new energy."�(Read the full transcript of their conversation�here).

Modi's research team obviously must have done some homework before the programme, for he began by trying to give us the meaning of Barack. He said: "In Swahili language, which is spoken in parts of Africa, Barack means one who is blessed. I believe, along with a name, his (Obama's) family gave him a big gift."

The reference to Barack's African lineage allowed him to link an Upanishadic idea with an African one. "African countries have lived by the ancient idea of 'Ubuntu', which alludes to the 'oneness in humanity'. They say, 'I am, because we are'. Despite the gap in centuries and borders, there is the same spirit in�Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam�(the world is one family), which (we) speak of in India. This is the great shared heritage of humanity. This unites us."

When he lobbed the ball to Obama, the latter talked about how Modi and he were making "a lot of history in a short time." It was a reference not only to the India-US nuclear and other agreements of the previous two days, but also to the fact that this was the first ever visit by a US president on Republic Day, and the first-ever joint radio programme involving two top leaders of the world's biggest democracies.

A subtle difference in how Obama and Modi saw the world was the former's efforts to bring in god into the conversation. At Siri Fort, where Obama talked of the need for countries to ensure religious freedom,� he had referred to his Christian faith . He said: "In our lives, Michelle and myself have been strengthened by our Christian faith." In�Mann ki Baat, Obama exhorted everyone to "endeavour to seek God through the service of humanity because God is in everyone."

Modi, despite references to Swami Vivekananda, Mahatma Gandhi and Upanishadic ideas, made no direct references to God. Americans apparently need God more than Indians, despite the ubiquity of temples and mosques in India.

Also interesting was Modi's choice of heroes. He mentioned Henry David Thoreau, who inspired Gandhi's civil disobedience movement, John F Kennedy (Modi liked his personality), Martin Luther King, and, most importantly, Benjamin Franklin, one of the founding figures of America, author, politician, scientist and many other things. Modi had an epiphany after reading Franklin's biography. "I find his life truly inspiring. And I tell you too, if you read his biography, you will find ways to transform your life too."

What Modi liked about Benjamin Franklin was his ability to talk about everyday issues and how to deal with them. Questions like: "If we feel excessively sleepy, how can we reduce that? If we feel like eating too much, how can we work towards eating less? He has addressed such issues in his biography. And I tell everyone, we should read Benjamin Franklin's biography. Even today, it inspires me."

What Modi and Obama found they had in common was their humble origins, with both recounting the time when they looked at the White House from the outside, little imagining that one day they would both meet inside it. One of the listeners to the radio programme apparently remarked that he had seen a photo of Modi standing outside the White House when he had gone there as a tourist. The photo apparently shows Modi looking at the White House from outside an iron fence.

It gave Modi an opportunity to relate a story about Obama's gift to him when he went to the White House last September as an official guest. "When I visited the White House, one thing touched my heart. I can never forget that Barack gave me a book, a book that he had located after considerable effort. That book had become famous in 1894. Swami Vivekananda, the inspiration of my life, had gone to Chicago to participate in the World Religions Conference. And this book was a compilation of the speeches delivered at the World Religions Conference. That touched my heart. And not just this. He turned the pages of the book, and showed me what was written there. He had gone through the entire book! And he told me with pride, I come from the Chicago where Swami Vivekananda had come."

Relating the incident also allowed Modi to repeat his favourite phrase that becoming Prime Minister was never his goal. He said: "For a long time, I have been telling everyone, never dream of becoming something. If you wish to dream, dream of doing something. Don't dream of becoming something, dream of doing something."

Obama, for his part, also talked about his own outside-in look at the White House in his youth.

"When I first went to the White House, I stood outside that same fence, and looked in, and I certainly did not imagine that I would ever be visiting there, much less living there. You know, I think both of us have been blessed with an extraordinary opportunity, coming from relatively humble beginnings. And when I think about what's best in America and what's best in India, the notion that a tea seller, or somebody who's born to a single mother like me, could end up leading our countries, is an extraordinary example of the opportunities that exist within our countries."

The only hint of�Mann ki Baat's�tangentially political messaging came when Modi talked about Communism in the past tense. He said: "Once upon a time, there were people inspired primarily by the Communist ideology. They gave a call: 'Workers of the world, Unite.' This slogan lasted for several decades. I believe, looking at the strength and reach of today's youth, I would say, 'Youth, Unite the world'. I believe they have the strength and they can do it.

That's as subtle a put-down of the Left as you can get.

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


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See further softening in interest rates: Chanda Kochhar

From the sidelines of the World Economic Forum at Davos, Chanda Kochhar, MD & CEO of ICICI Bank , says India is at a point where most of the macroeconomic indicators are positive and it is time to capitalise on all the potential that the country has.

When asked on her view whether the Modi government would deliver on its promises, she was optimistic that Narendra Modi would deliver.

On the interest rate front, she expects further softening, which would be good for the whole economy.

Below is the transcript of Chanda Kochhar's interview with by Susan Li & Geoff Cutmore

Li: We spoke earlier with the State Bank of India chairwoman and she said because of this unleashing, more easing and business stimulus from the ECB - is good for India, your thoughts?

A: Of course it is. The more the liquidity in the market, I think that is good for India but what is of course required for India is to maintain its investment climate so that it continues to remain a great investment destination.

Cutmore: Is Narendra Modi going to deliver? That is the question I keep hearing here, a lot of people are very optimistic about India and there does seem to be a rerating going on here but at some point we are going to have to see some real concrete evidence of reforms?

A: Definitely I think he is going to deliver and I think that direction is correct - everything all the policies that he has articulated are growth friendly, they are business friendly. And also it is not that no action has taken place, a lot of small action has taken place, a lot of opening up of the foreign direct investment (FDI) in various sectors has taken place. So I think a lot of the decisions have already been announced but yes, the impact of all those on the real economy always takes a little bit of time.

Li: So you have two months to go until he finishes off his first year in office but I would say there has been a bit of a flip-flopping from Modi because when he was the head of Bhartiya Janata Party (BJP) and there was another administration in office, he was against introducing goods and services tax (GST) but now he said okay we are going to introduce the GST in India.

A: I think GST is very good for the economy. If it gets implemented, it can add almost one percent to the GDP. GST rationalises taxes. So overall it brings about efficiency in taxes and that is how it adds to the gross domestic product (GDP). So I think it is good for the entire economy as a whole.

Cutmore: Modi has got a wonderful opportunity here because India as a buyer of energy is going to see tremendous benefits from this declining oil price. So if not now then it will be a missed opportunity.

A: Yes, I think in that sense everything is working well for India because we have never seen oil prices being what they are and it has a huge positive impact on India but if you look at it even from the various macroeconomic indicators point of view, India is very well placed. So you are right, this is the time for us to capitalise on the potential we have but we are on the right track.

Li: What about rate cuts because we have got that just as a surprise move from Governor Rajan and some say this is just only beginning because we might be in this deflationary spiral because of the weaker oil price?

A: But in India I don't think it was a surprise move. People were waiting for the rate cut, it was quite anticipated and in fact the 25 bps cut that has happened, it is just the beginning. We should see some more softening of interest rates taking place and I think that is going to be good for the economy.

Cutmore: What does it mean for your business specifically because I know the analysts that have looked at have talked about net interest lending margins could be bigger, could be a bit fatter but will that be easy in a market place where interest rates are coming down?

A: No, I think we should expect that net interest margins would be maintained because gradually cost of funds would come down and the banks would pass that on to the consumer so it should neither expand nor shrink.


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Prabhu pitches for greater investments in Railways

Suresh Prabhu said that Railways' financial health is not good and there is an urgent need of increased investments in the areas of modernisation, safety and security of passengers. "We have decided to increase investment in Railways... We have also decided to connect with various states for this (investment).

Railway Minister Suresh Prabhu pitched for greater investments in railways and said development in the sector will help the country grow. The minister was here to flag off two new trains - Ahmedabad-Chennai bi-weekly express and Ahmedabad-Darbhanga Jansadharan express. He also launched Wi-fi facility at the city railway station.

"It is a matter of pleasure for the country that our economy is on the path of improvement and progress. With this, responsibility of Railways has also increased. We need to work on many levels," said Prabhu.

He said that Railways' financial health is not good and there is an urgent need of increased investments in the areas of modernisation, safety and security of passengers. "We have decided to increase investment in Railways... We have also decided to connect with various states for this (investment).

Railways will fulfil the needs for Gujarat's development as well. I will discuss with the Chief Minister on how to work on larger scale for improvement," he said. Prabhu later met with Chief Minister Anandiben Patel.

The minister also claimed that Railways was priority of the Prime Minister Narendra Modi-led government and the sector can contribute to his mantra of 'Sabka Sath, Sabka Vikas' (participation of all for development of all).

"Development of Railways is on the priority list of our Prime Minister. If railways develop, economy will also be strengthened... and GDP (of the country) will also rise by 2-3 per cent. Though our GDP is growing today, with much efficient railways system it will grow rapidly," he said. The minister said further development in the sector will also create jobs for youths.

Prabhu appealed to people to join Modi's flagship 'Swachh Bharat Abhiyan' and said the mission is associated with country's identity.


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IOB to raise Rs 1k-cr to augment additional Tier-1 capital

"Indian Overseas Bank has launched an issue of unsecured, non-convertible, additional Tier-I, basel III compliant perpetual bonds to the extent of Rs 1,000 crore, including an option of Rs 300 crore to augment additional Tier-I capital", the Chennai-based bank said in a statement.

Public sector Indian Overseas Bank plans to raise Rs 1,000 crore to augment the additional Tier-I capital and also to strengthen its overall capital.

" Indian Overseas Bank has launched an issue of unsecured, non-convertible, additional Tier-I, basel III compliant perpetual bonds to the extent of Rs 1,000 crore, including an option of Rs 300 crore to augment additional Tier-I capital", the Chennai-based bank said in a statement.

Tier I capital is core capital and includes equity capital and disclosed reserves.

The Bond will have a face value of Rs 10 lakh per bond and carry a coupon rate of 10 per cent per annum payable annually.

The bond issue was opened on January 23 for subscription and would close on February 4, 2015, it said.


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Does secular socialist have any meaning in constitution?

R Jagannathan
Firstpost.com

The� two missing words (secular, socialist) �in the Information and Broadcasting (I&B) ministry's advertisement featuring the Indian constitution's preamble, whether through default or design, have served two useful purposes. One is to underline the pointlessness of having them in the preamble in the first place when no government feels constrained by their presence; the other is the reality that these words were not part of Babasaheb Ambedkar's well-thought-out original constitution adopted by the constituent assembly. We need to acknowledge that they were not intended to be there at all even if we don't now do anything to remove them.

To take the second point first, Minister of State for I&B, Rajyavardhan Rathore, said the "photo of the original preamble was a way of honouring the founding fathers of the constitution". He slipped in the fact that these changes were inserted in 1976. That was the second year of Indira Gandhi's infamous internal emergency, and the preamble was modified purely for political purposes.

It is doubtful if these changes could have been made without sending most of the opposition to prison. Mrs Gandhi packed off all major political leaders - from the right-wing Jana Sangh (today's BJP) to the various Socialists and the Left - to jail and passed these and several other constitutional amendments in a handcuffed and tongue-tied parliament. So, in a sense, the amendments went against the spirit of the constitution as all major freedoms guaranteed by Ambedkar's constitution were brutally suppressed at that time. The courts were running scared and the media was in chains when these words were incorporated. Their presence was thus an immoral, if not illegal, entry in the statute book.

In today's world, it is unlikely that these constitutional amendments would have passed legal muster for the simple reason that they were passed when both houses of parliament had been gagged. Even ordinary bills cannot be passed if the houses are not in order (hence the recent Rajya Sabha logjam); so can major constitutional amendments be passed when key members were sent in jail?

The reason why "secular" and "socialist" were inserted in 1976 is worth retelling. With leaders from all ends of the political and social spectrum in jail – ranging from the right-wing RSS and Jamait-e-Islami, which were banned, to various caste-based Lohia-ite, Socialist and Left factions - the government's actions clearly lacked legitimacy. They would have been opposed both by left and right. The word "secular" was inserted to validate the action of sending "communal" leaders to prison and banning their organisations; and the word "socialist" was intended to similarly justify the incarceration of the left. Indira Gandhi bunged in these two words to justify her undemocratic actions against leaders from right to left.

Take the word "secular". What extra idea does the insertion of this word convey when Ambedkar's preamble already guaranteed Indian citizens "Liberty of thought, expression, belief, faith and worship..." among other things. Does the word secularism add one iota of extra freedom to the basic idea of liberty of belief and faith as enunciated in the pre-1976 preamble, and additionally expanded on by article 25 of the constitution, which guarantees "Freedom of conscience and free profession, practice and propagation of religion"?

Of course, with the BJP in power today, it suits the party's political opponents, many of them descendents and proteges of some of the leaders jailed by Indira Gandhi, to pretend that they want "secular" and "socialist" to remain in the constitution. In fact, some constitutional experts now claim that these words can�never�be removed since they form part of the "basic structure" of the constitution that has been upheld by the Supreme Court. Arvind Datar is quoted in� The Economic Times �as saying that "not even a government which wins 543 out of 543 Lok Sabha seats can change this."

This view is probably wrong, for it is fanciful to pretend that elements that were never there in the original constitution can suddenly become part of the "basic structure". It beggars reason why a "basic feature" force-fitted into the preamble 26 years after the country adopted Ambedkar's constitution cannot tinker with it 39 years later.

However, it is not important to change what does not make a difference to how the state conducts social and economic policy. The insertion of the word "secular" did not prevent Rajiv Gandhi from overturning the Shah Bano judgment or offering Haj subsidies and quotas on the basis of religion. Nor did the insertion of the word "socialist" prevent Narasimha Rao from moving away from socialism in 1991 or the Vajpayee government from privatising public sector companies.

The words "secular" and "socialist" have been robbed of all meaning in the Indian context. They are two nonsensical terms inserted by the whims of an autocratic PM, and they remain there on the whims of an intellectually-bankrupt political class.

We need expend no further energy on words that mean nothing.

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


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Obama's speech: Gap between what is said what we heard

R Jagannathan
Firstpost.com

The big question we must ask ourselves when we discuss President Barack Obama's Siri Fort speech on January 27 is this: did we all hear the same speech? Or did we dissect it according to our individual biases?

If one were to take a look at the buzz on social media, the traditional Modi-baiters saw in Obama's speech, and especially his message of religious tolerance and diversity, as an oblique criticism of the government and its Parivar backers. Thin-skinned Modi-bhakts were upset that Obama gave us a lecture on secularism when America is far from being a just society.

In fact, what we try to read in Obama's speech – or, for that matter anybody's speech – tells us more about ourselves than about the person delivering it.

Those who believe that Obama had the Sangh Parivar in mind when he talked about "freedom of conscience and….. right to freely profess and practice and propagate religion" should also ponder another sentence: "In both our countries, in all countries…freedom of religion is the utmost responsibility of the government but also the responsibility of every person."�(Read� here �and� here �for some of Obama's Siri Fort quotes).

He said�both�countries, not only India. He was probably thinking aloud about freedom of conscience, which is endangered everywhere, including America, where Christian fundamentalists are busy demonising Islam.

His intent became clear when he mentioned the� Sikh Gurdwara massacre in Wisconsin .�The fact is the US and Europe probably house more Islamophobes than India. Obama himself has been the victim of a bitter Christian right-wing smear campaign that which saw him as a closet Muslim, thanks to his middle name "Hussain."

On the other hand, the internet Hindus on twitter seemed to recoil with a guilty conscience on his call for religious freedom. One wonders why. "Ghar wapsi" is nothing if not an effort to reconvert people who left the Hindu faith, and surely freedom of religion applies as much here as in the reverse. Surely, Obama could not have meant a one-way freedom of conscience and religion. He may not back "ghar wapsi", but it is logically implied when he said article 25 of the Indian constitution guarantees "the right to freely profess and practise and propagate religion."

Then again, Obama said this: "Every person has a right to practice the faith that they choose and�to practice no faith at all�and to do so free of persecution, fear or discrimination." What is objectionable in this? There are, arguably, more critics of atheism in god-fearing America than in India. Heading towards Saudi Arabia from India, Obama could have been referring to that kingdom's complete absence of freedom of religion and the death sentence for apostasy. Atheism and agnosticism have never been issues in Hinduism, and Buddhism and Jainism are essentially non-theistic faiths. So where did he really criticise us for Modi-baiters to get ecstatic about it?

Or take his reference to diversity. Obama said "our�diversity is our strength" and cautioned both India and the US to guard against sectarianism.

Note: the operative word is "our". He did not say diversity is only America's strength, but of both countries. It's a compliment to us. He also expanded on this theme: "IfAmerica shows itself as an example of its diversity and the capacity to live and work together in common effort and common purpose, and�if�India, as massive as it is with so much diversity, so many differences, is able to continuously reaffirm its democracy so that is an example for every other country…That's what makes us world leaders."(Italics mine)

Here Obama is essentially applauding India's diversity in the past and exhorting it to remain so in the future. Note the "if" in both sentences. He is essentially saying that both US and India are great countries only "if" they can retain their diversity and keep sectarian differences at bay.

We know that the US is hardly the exemplar in racial justice, as the recent� riots and violence over the shooting of a Black youth �by the Ferguson (Missouri) police prove. It is hardly likely that Obama had just Sadhvi Niranjan Jyoti or Sakshi Maharaj or the RSS's efforts to call India a Hindu nation in mind. US right-wingers call America a Christian nation – a nation where� nearly half the population believes �that Darwin was off his rocker by giving us his theory of evolution when, in fact, God created the world through "intelligent design." Religion and the narrowness of religious beliefs is as much a problem in America as in India.

About India specifically, Obama said: "India is defined by diverse cultures, creed, languages. When we were born, people who looked like us couldn't even vote in our country. There were times when I was treated differently because of the colour of my skin. My grandfather was a cook in the British army. Branches of Michelle's family were slaves as well as slave-owners. A young boy delivering lunch on a bicycle, a young girl hauling a bucket of water. Even as we live in a world of inequality, a tea-seller can become Prime Minister. Everyone has a chance."

Does this remotely sound like Obama was just giving us a lecture on how secular and just America is superior to communal India?

Then Obama talked about women's empowerment, the girl child, and safety. We could take this as mild criticism of us, given our daily news fare of rape and sexual harassment. Or we could take it as a challenge we all need to meet. He said: "Every girl's life matters. Every daughter deserves the same chance as our sons. Every woman should be able to go about her day...and be safe and be treated with the respect and dignity that she deserves."

This is hardly something to take amiss, when our own Prime Minister talked about the same issues on I-Day and there is now a�Beti Bachao, Beti Padhao�scheme on the anvil.

On climate change, he said what needed to be said: that we have to learn to grow with far less use of fossil fuels than before. Who can argue with that?

The moral of the story is simple: what we got was a heart-felt message from the US President, but we read it as a condemnation of Modi or the Sangh parivar. It goes to prove a basic human truth: there is a gap between what is said and what we choose to hear.

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


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Report card: 10 things that made or baked your money in January

SLIDESHOW

Sat, Jan 31, 2015 at 17:15

| Source: Moneycontrol.com

Copyright © e-Eighteen.com Ltd. All rights reserved. Reproduction of news articles, photos, videos or any other content in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission of moneycontrol.com is prohibited.


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Grasim Industries reports Q3 net profit at Rs 333.61 crore

The company reported consolidated net sales of Rs 7,888.53 crore in October-December period as against Rs 7,063.43 crore during the same quarter of last financial year.

Aditya Birla Group firm  Grasim Industries today reported a consolidated net profit of Rs 333.61 crore for the third quarter ended December 2014. The company had posted a consolidated net profit of Rs 331.93 crore during the same period of previous financial year, Grasim Industries said in a filing to the BSE.

The company reported consolidated net sales of Rs 7,888.53 crore in October-December period as against Rs 7,063.43 crore during the same quarter of last financial year.

The consolidated revenue from its Viscose Staple Fibre (VSF) and Wood Pulp segment was Rs 1,607.26 crore during the quarter under review as against Rs 1,613.45 crore in the same period of last fiscal. Its consolidated revenue from cement division was Rs 5,947.15 crore this quarter. It was Rs 5,169.59 crore in third quarter of FY14.

Revenue from chemicals division was Rs 441.63 crore this quarter as against Rs 259.73 crore in same period last fiscal. Grasim Industries said "figures for the quarter and nine months ended December 2014 are strictly not comparable with previous periods" due to merger of Gujarat cement units of Jaypee Cement with UltraTech Cement , a subsidiary of the company. On the company's performance, Grasim Industries said: "Implementation of growth plans led to significant capacity increase in both VSF and cement businesses.

At the greenfield VSF project at Vilayat, 99K TPA capacity has been commissioned during the year. With acquisition of Jaypee cement units in Gujarat, the cement capacity increased by 4.8 million." On the outlook, the company said VSF sector will continue to face headwinds for some more time due to over capacity and sharp reduction in price of cotton and polyester. Moreover, cement segment would grow as demand growth in the long term is likely to be over eight per cent.

"With additional capacity coming on stream in both the businesses, the company will further consolidate its leadership position," it added.


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Spectrum cannot come cheap, it is super-scarce resource

R Jagannathan
Firstpost.com

The Union cabinet's decision to keep the� reserve price for 3G spectrum at Rs 3,705 crore per Mhz �in the 2,100 Mhz band for auctions scheduled to begin on 4 March is probably the right call. One says probably because no one can predict where prices will go in an auction, or whether the reserve prices are too high or too low. The new reserve price is 35 percent higher than what the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (Trai) had recommended - which Rs 2,720 crore per Mhz. The Telecom Commission recommended a raise, and this is what the cabinet has now approved.

Predictably, the telecom industry is miffed, with Rajan Mathews, Director-General of the Cellular Operators Association of India (COAI), saying that the Trai price was more reasonable and the higher reserve price would inevitably lead to higher tariffs, reports� The Economic�Times .

A few weeks earlier, the cabinet had approved base prices of Rs 3,646 crore per Mhz of 800 Mhz spectrum, Rs 3,980 crore for 900 Mhz, and Rs 2,191 crore for one Mhz of all-India spectrum in the 1,800 Mhz band. Competition is expected to be keen as spectrum licences for Bharti Airtel are expiring in six circles, for Idea in nine, and for Vodafone and Reliance Communications in seven circles each this year. All of them would want to retain their hold on the versatile 900 Mhz band as far as possible. New players in broadband, like Reliance Industries, could also seek extra spectrum for various voice and data services, or to grab prime bands like 800 Mhz and 900 Mhz from the incumbents. The available spectrum in the 2,100 Mhz band is small - 5 Mhz, with 15 Mhz more promised when defence releases them – which could make bidding in this band sharper.

It is possible that the higher reserve/base prices have been prompted by non-tax revenue considerations, given the stiff fiscal deficit target of 4.1 percent this year. But even if this were the case, it would merely be a right decision taken for the wrong reason. Of the Rs 80,000-1,00,000 crore expected from a successful auction, Rs 25,000 crore could come in this financial year itself. Arun Jaitley will be happy to get this money in the till when tax revenues are sluggish.

However, it is time India's telecom industry accepted the reality that spectrum is a super-scarce resource and that it cannot ever come cheap. Their business models and profitability cannot be built on the presumption that underpriced spectrum will be offered in plenty when the resource is actually going to get scarcer in the coming years, given our voracious appetite for broadband services. India has barely scratched the surface of broadband demand, and usage is going to head for the stratosphere with plans for a Digital India being a key driver.

Here are three reasons why spectrum will always be costly in India and why telcos had better understand the reality.

First, Indian has 1.25 billion potential telecom users crammed into a very small geographical area. The US has three times the geographical area and one-fourth the population of India. This automatically means spectrum must be used super efficiently in India. High prices will pressure telcos to avoid spectrum hoarding and use better technology to pump more data through the same available spectrum.

Second, India, as a late starter in mass telephony, is over-dependent on wireless services as opposed to fixed-line telephony. While the decline in the wirelines is a worldwide phenomenon, India has had a very poor legacy of landlines. Hence our dependence on wireless telephony is very high – and growing in leaps and bounds. Of the nearly one billion telephone connections in India, barely three percent will be wireline.

The worldwide the proportion of wireline to wireless telephony is falling dramatically, thanks to the proliferation of mobiles and hand-held devices, the pressure of spectrum will always increase, and more so in India which never expanded much into fixed telephony.

Third, the spectrum prices cleared by cabinet are for the next 20 years. Assuming that the number of uses for spectrum will only rise exponentially as the country gets richer, with data trumping voice usage, the higher tariffs from pricey spectrum can easily be absorbed by the higher spectrum usage in data – especially in the second half of the licence years. In fact, voice will probably become nearly free in due course as data traffic trumps voice in the coming decade.

The only valid reason for keeping spectrum prices steady is that usage is time-sensitive: unlike coal, which can be mined this year or five years later depending on prices and demand, spectrum not used this year is spectrum wasted. However, this makes out a case for flexible pricing and spectrum leasing, not lower reserve prices overall.

What the government can, and should do, is allow spectrum leasing, spectrum mortgage and easy sale of spectrum between parties, apart from allowing easier mergers between viable and unviable telcos.

But, as I have argued before, there is� no real case of going cheap on spectrum pricing .

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


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Indian rupee snaps its 4-week winning spree

The rupee ended at 61.86 per dollar as against the last weekend's level of 61.42, showing a gain of 44 paise or 0.73 percent. It moved in a range of 61.29 and 62.0350 per dollar during the week. The domestic currency had gained by 215 paise or 3.38 percent in the previous four weeks.

The Indian rupee snapped its 4-week winning spree against the American currency, slipping 44 paise to 61.86 per dollar on month-end dollar demand from importers and banks. The rupee resumed slightly lower at 61.49 per dollar as against the last weekend's level of 61.42 and fell further to 62.03 on good dollar demand from importers and some banks.

However, it recovered afterwards to 61.29 on selling of dollars by exporters in view of strong foreign capital inflows into equity market as foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) infused a net USD 779.85 USD million during the week as per SEBI's record.

The rupee ended at 61.86 per dollar as against the last weekend's level of 61.42, showing a gain of 44 paise or 0.73 percent. It moved in a range of 61.29 and 62.0350 per dollar during the week. The domestic currency had gained by 215 paise or 3.38 percent in the previous four weeks.

Meanwhile, the Indian benchmark sensex dropped by 95.89 points or 0.33 percent to 29,182.95 after hitting an all-time high of 29,844.16. Pramit Brahmbhatt, Veracity Group CEO said," After appreciating for four weeks last week Rupee lost its way and depreciated by one percent during the week. The month end dollar demand from oil importers and corporates forced Rupee to trade weak and close at 61.86".

Also the local equities lost its ground last week and posted first weekly loss in three weeks which further dented the movement of Rupee.


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Video: 16 cars nominated for Overdrive Car Awards 2015

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 24 Januari 2015 | 23.24

CNBC TV18 Overdrive Awards 2015, jury round being held here in a sunny Chennai. The jury has the enviable task of putting 16 cars launch this year through a grueling test on the Chennai race track.

CNBC TV18 Overdrive Awards 2015, jury round being held here in a sunny Chennai. 2014 was a terribly slow year for most manufacturers because of a steep dip in volume sales and profitability. None the less it was a terribly exciting year as well because of the sheer numbers of cars and motorcycles and scooter launched that year. The jury has the enviable task of putting 16 cars launch this year through a grueling test on the Chennai race track.


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Indian biz fantastic; one of APAC's pillar: DHL

The e-commerce boom in India has led to logistic companies making significant changes in their business models.Storyboard's editor Anant Rangaswami spoke with DHL's APAC CEO Jerry Hsu to understand how the wordl's largest logistics company is coping with that change.

The e-commerce boom in India has led to logistic companies making significant changes in their business models. Apart from additional business, the largely B2B service providers now find themselves increasingly dealing with consumers and tackling issues faced by B2C companies. Storyboard's editor Anant Rangaswami spoke with DHL's APAC CEO Jerry Hsu to understand how the world's largest logistics company is coping with that change.

Watch videos for more.


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Video report: Gurgaon plays host to CNBC-TV18 Investor Camp

Watch the very special edition of the CNBC-TV18 Investor Camp at Gurgaon. Special because the grand old index the Sensex has closed above 29,000 a level that not many of us thought will come so soon.

Watch the very special edition of the CNBC-TV18 Investor Camp at Gurgaon. Special because the grand old index the Sensex has closed above 29,000 a level that not many of us thought will come so soon. It is been great going for the equity markets, we have has a purple patch, lots of good news and whole host of experts who have joined us as always to discuss the market and the road ahead.


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Young Turk: Hrishikesh Dattar's vakilsearch.com

Now, how cool could it be if you could register company with a click of a button or file for a trade mark copyright or patent sitting in the comfort of your home?

Now, how cool could it be if you could register company with a click of a button or file for a trade mark copyright or patent sitting in the comfort of your home?      

28 year old Hrishikesh Dattar startup, vakilsearch.com claims to help you cut through the hassle of meeting lawyers and countless visits to government offices. The web based legal portal provides a suite of services ranging from preparing your legal documentation to even setting up your business.

Founded in 2011, this Chennai based venture is targeting a turnover of Rs 60 crore by the end of next fiscal. Let's take a look at this lawyer turned entrepreneur's journey.


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Newcastle's ambush marketing attempt

Americas most watched TV when the Super Bowl will play out on 2nd February and while the world's biggest brands make a beeline to associate themselves wit the 49th edition. Heineken Newcastle Brown Ale has released a teaser for its non super bowl add. We think this low cost high impact ambush marketing attempt is pot on.

Americas most watched TV when the Super Bowl will play out on February 2 and while the world's biggest brands make a beeline to associate themselves wit the 49th edition. Heineken Newcastle Brown Ale has released a teaser for its non super bowl add. We think this low cost high impact ambush marketing attempt is pot on.


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Experts' take: What the ECB QE actually means for Europe

The European Central Bank (ECB) announced higher-than-expected monthly bond buying programme of 60 billion euros late Thursday.

A very warm welcome to the CNBC debate live from Davos. The timing of this event is extraordinary. We have just had the European Central Bank (ECB) step up to the play with a Quantitative Easing (QE) program that the markets have decided that they can work with. The topic of our debate here today is recharging Europe and no doubt we are going to talk a little bit in the context of recharging Europe about what QE is going to mean for Europe going forward.

Watch videos for more.


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BJP election campaign wins 'Grand Effie'

The EFFIES 2014: The Big Winners, the award show that recognises effective advertising hosted by The Advertising Club. The 2014 EFFIES were given out last Friday across 24 categories.

The EFFIES 2014: The Big Winners, the award show that recognises effective advertising hosted by The Advertising Club. The 2014 EFFIES were given out last Friday across 24 categories. Ogilvy which last out to low last year was the Agencies of the year thanks to the BJP Campaign which one the 'Grand Effie'.


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In-depth: ECB QE's impact on economies and markets

The European Central Bank (ECB) announced Friday it would start buying 60 billion euros worth of bonds from banks each month until the end of September 2016, or longer, in a step called quantitative easing (QE).

QE in theory increases the supply of money, something that keeps interest rates low and encourages borrowing and therefore spending. Here's how it works.

The central bank creates money, which will be used to buy bonds from financial institutions, this in turn will bring interest rates down and spur lending to businesses thus helping people to borrow more. This in turn should enable people and businesses to spend more boosting the overall economy.

But what has been the record of recent QEs in creating growth? The US Fed unleashed its third and biggest QE in September 2012. US growth in 2102 was 2.3 percent, 2.2 percent n 2013 and 2.4 percent in 2014.

Japan unleashed its QE in April 2013, with the BOJ agreeing to add 60-70 trillion yen in a year. What is Japan's growth? Japan's GDP was 1.5 percent in 2013 and fell to 0.2 percent in 2014.

Recent QE's have not created growth but they have ruffled currency markets. From September 2012 when the US announced its QE3 up to May 2013 when the Fed decided to end QE, the dollar fell from 1.2 to the euro to 1.4, a fall of about 15 percent.

In April 2013 when the Japan QE was announced, the yen was 93 to the dollar, post its QE it has fallen to 118 to the dollar, a fall of 25 percent. Clearly QEs impact markets more than they impact the economy.

To discuss the impact of the ECB QE on the economy and on the markets, CNBC-TV18's Latha Venkatesh spoke with Manoj Pradhan, Global Emerging Markets Economist at Morgan Stanley and Ankit Gheedia, Equity Derivative Strategist at BNP Paribas.

Below is the transcript of Manoj Pradhan and Ankik Gheedia's interview on CNBC-TV18.

Q: Do you think there can be an economic impact at all in Europe because of the QE?

Pradhan: They have already had a series of measures to increase the balance sheet and expand monetary policy impetus into the economy. Don't forget we have had a series of long-term refinancing operations (LTROs) and main refinancing operations (MROs), which have pushed liquidities back into the system.

The banks then use part of that money to buy government bond yields. We had the very famous speech by [EBC chief Mario] Draghi, in which he promised to do "whatever it takes" and that together did bring down yields substantially. So, this is not the first installment of QE.

One of the concerns about the impact is whether it can further bring down yields which we have seen it do. It has brought down the euro but most importantly it gives a very strong signal about monetary policy intentions. We call this kind of QE where the central bank balance sheet has expanded proactively as active QE and that tends to give a pretty good signal about monetary policy intentions.

Q: It did certainly reduce yields and practically pulled some of the potentially exiting nations back from the brink but did it really improve the economy? We only see Eurozone getting into near deflationary status and even near stagnation. Do you see any economic improvement because of this 1.14 trillion euros?

Pradhan: There will an impact. How strong is questionable, because what is the role of monetary policy? The basic role of monetary policy is try and smooth cycles out. It cannot change the structure of the economy. If you are trying to compare, say, the US economy to the European economy, the latter has significant structural hurdles.

Part of the reason that is going into a disinflationary and deflationary period is because some of the structural impediments have not been cleared. Monetary policy cannot clear them, but what it can do is it can try to anchor monetary policy and inflation expectations to a higher level and if those inflation expectations are raised to a higher level then deflation and debt deflation then becomes a slightly smaller problem.

So, it is not that you can solve the economy's problem but you can give it cyclical momentum that can persist for a period of time. Now what the economic impact will be depends on how far yields can go and as I said since yields have already moved down the marginal impact on this might be more a signal that says look, we will do pretty much everything that we can to make sure that inflation expectations move up.

So, yes, there will be an impact, how strong is frankly debatable but keep in mind that as the QE announcement has come in -- the growth story was already starting to lift. The purchasing managers indexes (PMIs) have already come in stronger.

I don't think we should be attributing this to QE but it might be happy coincidence that the impact on oil prices also brings economic growth a little bit better than most people expect.


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Twitter acquires ZipDial for an undisclosed amount

Microblogging website Twitter was in final talks to acquire mobile marketing start up and our Young Turks ZipDial. Young Turks caught up with ZipDial and Twitter to find out more about the deal value and their future plans for emerging markets.

Microblogging website Twitter  was in final talks to acquire mobile marketing start up and our Young Turks ZipDial. Young Turks caught up with ZipDial and Twitter to find out more about the deal value and their future plans for emerging markets.


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Persistent $ revenue up 4.2% QoQ to $79.5mn, declares bonus

Mid-tier IT firm Persistent Systems declared its consolidated dollar revenues grew 4.2 percent sequentially to USD 79.5 million -- a growth of 13.7 percent year-on-year.

Moneycontrol Bureau

Mid-tier IT firm Persistent Systems  declared its consolidated dollar revenues grew 4.2 percent sequentially to USD 79.5 million -- a growth of 13.7 percent year-on-year, filings to the exchanges showed today. The revenue number was in line with a CNBC-TV18 poll that had forecast USD 80 million.

In rupee terms, revenues grew 6.6 percent QoQ (and 14.3 percent YoY) to Rs 494.63 crore.

At the operating level, earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) stood at Rs 99.5 crore, a 4 percent QoQ rise (margin at 20.1 percent). This was lower than the Rs 117.1 crore expected by analysts.

While net profit stood at Rs 74.4 crore, 4.4 percent higher, compared to a forecast of Rs 78.3 crore.

"Technology and innovation continue to be at the center of our strategy to focus on the 'How' of digital transformation," CMD Anand Deshpande said. "During the quarter, we strengthened our leadership team to drive this technology-led strategy along with forming new partnerships and enhancing how we train our employees on the technologies that drive digital transformation."

The board had proposed a 1:1 stock bonus, Persistent said, while also declaring a Rs 10 per share interim dividend .

"2015 is an important year for the company as we celebrate our 25th year. We propose to celebrate the year with multiple different activities that are being planned," Deshpande said.


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India manage a nervous draw, Australia win series 2-0

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 10 Januari 2015 | 23.24

The match was evenly poised in the final session - with India needing 189 runs in 33 overs and Australia an improbable eight wickets away. An Indian win or a draw seemed the most likely results but the dismissals of Murali Vijay (80) and Virat Kohli (46) opened the floodgates.

It seemed the Adelaide nightmare will return to haunt India in the final session of the Sydney Test as well, but some sensible batting by Ajinkya Rahane and Bhuvneshwar Kumar allowed the hosts to overcome a five-wicket loss post tea to secure a nervous draw but lose the Border-Gavaskar Trophy to Australia 2-0.

The match was evenly poised in the final session - with India needing 189 runs in 33 overs and Australia an improbable eight wickets away. An Indian win or a draw seemed the most likely results but the dismissals of Murali Vijay (80) and Virat Kohli (46) opened the floodgates.

India had lost the first Test in Adelaide from the same position, where they lost eight wickets in the final session of the game to concede defeat. And history looked like repeating itself until Rahane (38*) and Bhuvneshwar (20*) buckled down to play out the last 11.3 overs of the day.

Australia declared at their overnight score of 251 for 6, leaving India a target of 349 to win - something that had never been done before at the SCG. And a 74-run stand between Kohli and Vijay kept India in the game.

But both fell soon after tea - Vijay to Josh Hazlewood and Kohli to Mitchell Starc, followed by Starc ending Suresh Raina's Test comeback with a dreadful pair and Saha also getting dismissed for a duck, lbw to Nathan Lyon. And when first-innings half-centurion Ashwin (1) too fell cheaply, the cat was set among the pigeons in the Indian dressing room.

Starc, Hazlewood and Lyon all took two wickets to keep their team interested.

The old ball was nicely reversing for Starc and spinning viciously for Lyon on a breaking SCG track. However, captain Steven Smith chose to take the new ball after 80 overs, which is where India found a window to scrape with a draw.

The Indian innings didn't start on a promising note as the first-innings hero KL Rahul could score only 16 runs before Lyon sent him back.

Rohit Sharma came in at No. 3 and stitched a useful 56-run partnership with Vijay. But he failed to kick on and was caught in the slips by Smith off Shane Watson for 39.

For his 769 runs in the series, including four centuries, Australia's stand-in skipper Smith was named the Man of the Series. He was also awarded the Man-of-the-Match award for his 117 and 71 in this Sydney Test.


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Here's why market may not immediately resume its bull run

In an interview with CNBC-TV18's Sonia Shenoy and Udayan Mukherjee, Nirmal Jain, Chairman of IIFL along with Vineet Bhatnagar, Managing Director at PhillipCapital shared their outlook on where the markets are headed hereon.

According to Jain, although medium to long-term trend is healthier than before, market will remain volatile and consolidated in the month of January. Thereafter, market may not immediately resume its bull run but there will be an unambiguous trend near the Budget or post the Budget.

Furthermore, he does not see Nifty breaching 7,950 - 8,000 levels, as investors are looking at every correction as an opportunity to buy.

Meanwhile, Bhatnagar sees resistance for the Nifty at 8,360 as well as 8,600.

Going ahead, if the market was to remain supportive and as is supported strongly over the next week, Bhatnagar advises investors to buy into PSU banks, private banks for the long haul.

Below is the verbatim transcript of Nirmal Jain and Vineet Bhatnagar's interview with CNBC-TV18's Sonia Shenoy and Udayan Mukherjee:

Sonia: Do you think that the minor correction that we started in December has come to an end or do you see more hurdles in the month of January?

Jain: Market will remain volatile and consolidated in the month of January although medium to long-term trend is becoming even better but in the short-term few factors will weigh heavily on the market – (1) global environment is extremely choppy and volatile (2) earnings will be a mixed bag because energy companies or commodity companies will not report good numbers (3) upgrades and downgrades also have been mixed. So, one has to pass-through this earning season and also people will wait for Budget and people will wait for interest rate cut to happen but if you look at longer term perspective, next year, FY16, then outlook is becoming extremely positive because supposing dollar remains at 50/USD, people are talking about 30-35, keep that aside but even if 60/USD on an average, India is a net importer of 900 million barrel a year – that would mean we saw something like USD 40-50 billion as a nation because we import petroleum products or oil, we have to pay that much lesser – we are talking about 3 lakh crore, which is not a small money – that is what will drive either savings or growth in investment. All these factors will lead to earnings up cycle happening from second half of next year.

So there are two sets of investors; there are investors who will look at longer term, long-only foreign institutional investors (FIIs), they look at this opportunity, so whenever market corrects, they will look at opportunities to buy and there will be hedge funds, traders kind of people who will look at the volatility, they will be cautious and they will be more driven by the events that happen globally or maybe in India also.

Therefore, market in this month will remain volatile; I do not expect it to resume its bull run immediately maybe nearer Budget or after the Budget it will be a clearer trend.

Udayan: In this kind of volatile range, do you see the Nifty breaking below 8,000 or do you see 8,000 as some kind of psychological floor which the index would not violate?

Jain: Unless some catastrophic event happens in the financial markets globally. I do not think Nifty will break 8,000 or 7,950. Nifty will not break this because as I said there are set of people who are looking at every correction or every fall as an opportunity to buy, so I would say that under circumstances which are known or predictable or whatever we can foresee with some degree of probability, Nifty is unlikely to go below this level but if something happens which you and I cannot forecast today or cannot visualise today - you know how equity markets are.

Udayan: The other factor which has caused the market some discomfort of late is the fact that for about five-six weeks on the trot now FIIs have been on the sell side, December included. From the sales desk, what kind of inputs are you getting, what would you put this down to and what could reverse this kind of selling which has come in, which is unusual compared to the experience of 2014?

Jain: In fact, what has happened is that the emerging markets -- there are couple of things that have happened. One is that US has strengthened, the dollar has strengthened, so the allocation of the emerging markets might have been reduced. That is one.

Two Indian markets have pursued to be in high altitude or had run up very swiftly and most of the fund managers are also investing and if they look forward, they expect a correction then they will wait but I think another important trend that we should not miss is the domestic investment because we are seeing money coming through mutual fund and will see that coming through insurance as well as direct equity also. If you look at the numbers from FY10 to FY14, our household savings -- I am not talking about total savings -- has come down from 25 percent to 22 percent and within that financial saving has come down almost from close to 50 percent to 35 percent and if this trend reverses then in last six years, household savings into financial markets has been something like USD 25-30 billion. In next three years alone, it can be close to USD 75 billion. So I think as we have seen in the earlier bull market, the domestic money can play as a huge cushion against the volatile FII flow of money but FIIs also -- I am not bearish, this is just a phase and as we see Budget, probably this will be -- we will talk about dream budget but from the finance minister's point of view, it is the dream situation or dream circumstances to present the budget in. He has got a stable government for the next five years, he has got the crude oil, the macro things are heading his way, inflation is down, so I think we can expect a lot from the Budget I think there can be a trigger point for FIIs to come back in a big way.

Sonia: The stock of last week clearly was Hindustan Unilever Ltd ( HUL ). It went up 15 percent last week, completely unfazed by the market volatility, do you continue to see outperformance there?

Jain: In case of HUL, it is the company that I have worked with in five years. So I maybe a little biased on this but it is a great company but more importantly 50 percent of their sales are raw material, raw material prices have been falling particularly oil and also the petroleum based prices they have been the packaging material which is also significant part of cost -- so I think company like HUL can retain this raw material price benefit because they are strong brands because they don't have to pass back so the market maybe expecting that margins will expand, the demand growth hasn't been very strong in last quarter but people are expecting that demand will become stronger going forward so these are the factors that must be driving demand for HUL stock.

Udayan: What is the sense you are getting from the foreign investors' side first, from the kind of positions that they have been taking on Nifty Futures, does it appear that the correction which started last week or this week has come to an end or is it inconclusive?

Bhatnagar: What we saw at the time of December rollover, where most of the long positions were rolled over by the FIIs and since then what we have seen is that on the Nifty index Futures side they have reduced their long positions by as much as 1/3rd in the last seven trading sessions alone, so something which was about USD 1.8 billion is now standing at about USD 1.2 billion in notional value as of end of today. Similarly, what we have also seen is that the protection that they have taken by way of Nifty Options, has increased to about USD 2 billion and it is distributed over 8,000-8,100 Nifty strikes ,combine it with the fact that the underlying cash market behaviour for these FIIs have been one where they have liquidated their positions, they have taken out as much as about USD 250 million in the last few trading sessions, is indicative of the fact that not only have they reduced the position but more importantly in the last two trading sessions, whatever recovery that we saw in the market on Thursday and a bit of it on Friday, has only been a point where they have gotten out of their some of long positions, so that's the trend that we are seeing in the market right now.

Sonia: In the week gone by the Bank Nifty fell 2 percent and lot of heavyweights like Punjab National Bank ( PNB ), ICICI Bank , State Bank of India ( SBI ) were all down 5-7 percent. Is this is a good buying opportunity or do you think you will get better levels in the near future?

Bhatnagar: It is related to how the overall market behaves over the next two weeks, so I would not like to carve out only a strategy for the bank stocks, it needs to be seen in totality whether there will be an overall pressure on the market or not. Having said that if the market was to remain supportive and as Nirmal was saying 8,000 or 8,100 is supported strongly over the next week or so then there maybe some selective opportunities to pickup few PSU banks and more importantly some of the private banks as well more again from the point of long-term investors as against positional traders.

Sonia: What sense you are getting about how one should approach Infosys  post numbers?

Jain: Infosys has maintained the guidance at 7.9 percent which is better than street expectation but in IT sector I would think that there are better values in stocks like Mindtree  and Tech Mahindra  from a medium-term perspective but if you have to have a larger basket then include Infosys as well.

Udayan: Do you sense that there will be a pre-Budget rally this time around in February or does it depend on the global event, more importantly, do you think these local events like Budget and the interest rate cut are probably February or even March phenomenon from a market trigger point of view?

Jain: I think there will be pre-budget rally because what government will do is they seem determined. There have been quite a few ordinances and if they are able to do coal block options and like spectrum auction which is planned before the Budget, I think that people's expectations from Budget will be higher and there can be pre-Budget rally. I would very strongly expect that there should be one.

Udayan: What did you see for the two big stocks of this week, HUL and Infosys in the kind of position building that happened towards the end of the week and where it has left these two stocks going into next week?

Bhatnagar: I think from the point of view of the way the positions for Infosys were, a lot of pop trading houses as also positional traders were taking position in the Infosys options, the price movement on Infosys today came as a surprise. I think I was looking at the few of the pay-offs based on the strategies that people were putting in the market over the last two days and the general consensus was that the price should not move beyond 2.5 percent up or down and therefore what we saw at the time of closing today for Infosys to have closed 5 percent above yesterday's close has definitely been a surprise and I do not think that many of the option positions that were opened ahead of the Infosys results could have yielded any handsome profits at all. Going forward, I think there will be some assessment of how Infosys will behave in terms of the next two quarters and I subscribe to the fact that there are other stocks in the IT sector pack, which perhaps will stand out more strongly than Infosys and Tech Mahindra in that respect is one of our top picks.

Sonia: How does a retail investor approach this market now? If it is still a buy on dips market then what should you be looking at buying now?

Jain: I think retail investors should approach this market with buying and increasing their asset allocation by equities. A typical retail investor will be better-off buying mutual funds but in case you want to build a portfolio of direct equities then I would say you should have private banks; they have room for further improvement and given the fact that interest rate should go down by at least 100 bps this year. Therefore, private banks will be top pick followed by pharmaceutical, IT, cement and select industrials also. I must say auto sector as well because auto also is looking good.

Sonia: Need your views on oil and gas space because there was news on Friday that Oil and Natural Gas Corporation ( ONGC ) maybe exempt from subsidy payment for the rest of the fiscal and the stock has been spiking up. What would you do with the sector now?

Jain: Oil and gas is not an easy call but if crude oil prices remain low for some time then companies like ONGC do not benefit but in India, the conditions are different because of subsidy burden and delayed payments and the interest cost and things like that but still I would say in this quarter most of the companies will have very heavy inventory losses even oil marketing companies (OMCs) like Bharat Petroleum Corporation (BPCL) and Hindustan Petroleum Corporation (HPCL), so I would say that wait for results for this quarter and also wait for oil prices globally to stabilise and find some level which can sustain but if one has to buy then I would prefer oil marketing companies and not ONGC as such.

Udayan: What is the data suggesting in terms of the range for the January series for the index now?

Bhatnagar: If we look at the Call distribution as far as Nifty is concerned, there is highest concentration at 8,400 Call strike for Nifty. Therefore, our estimate is that there is a resistance that is visible at about 8,360, which is something that will result in the entire decline that we saw this particular week. This is where the Nifty was on Monday when we started off.

Separately, the other resistance that we are quite interestingly looking at is 8,600. Of course for that to come about, it is important that the global events or the turn of global events that are expected to happen in the last week and the third week of this month are supportive. Our present estimate is that the January expiry should be a strong expiry as far as Nifty is concerned.

Udayan: You spoke about skewing asset allocation towards equity, how about fixed income investing in 2015? If interest rates were to come down then some of the longer duration government security fund should also be able to generate some capital appreciation, is that not?

Jain: It will depend on the size of the portfolio and fixed income should do well. So this is one year where your allocation to physical assets like real estate and gold should go down to minimum and incrementally all your money should go into equities followed by fixed income. So in fixed income, if interest rates go down by 100 bps then you may have capital gains of around 5 percent and on top of that, you have 8-9 percent of interest yield but the advantage in equity is that your tax structure is very benign because if you hold it for one year, it becomes almost tax free so post tax your returns in equities will still be much better even adjusting for risk. But having said this, if you are an HNI investor then of course fixed income and equities both should give very good returns and you can allocate assets to both these asset classes.

Sonia: Even amidst this volatility, bulls are finding a lot of value in individual stocks. You can see it in names like Maruti Suzuki, Kotak, Asian Paints, HUL, all these stocks are hitting fresh highs everyday, you spoke about Tech Mahindra that you like. Any other stock that you would recommend a buy into either from the Nifty or from the broader markets now?

Bhatnagar: I think if we were to start looking at which are the sectors that will continue to look strong, if the global cues are not damaging or at best supportive of the domestic situation then names do crop up in sectors like autos and that is where we will pick up Maruti and Mahindra and Mahindra ( M&M ), names do look good in cement, which is where we will pick up UltraTech  and also smallcaps like Prism . We will be interested in fast moving consumer goods (FMCG) and that is where we will pick up names like even Emami  or we will pick up Pidilite . So there are host of names, a combination of both the largecap as well as midcap stocks that are looking quite attractive. The moment we start factoring in the fact that the domestic story is going to play out if not for the whole quarter but at least pre-Budget.


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Mutual Fund NAVs gain as markets end higher

Equity Mutual Funds closed in a positive terrain as the equity benchmarks ended volatile session on a strong note on Friday. The Sensex gained more than 233 points (Nifty touched 8300) in morning trade but those gains washed out (ahead of announcement of Infosys earnings) in afternoon trade. However, in last hour of trade, indices regained strength again supported by major bluechips like Infosys, HUL, Reliance Industries and ONGC. Performence wise Funds in the broader market based like Small & Mid Cap, Large cap, Diversified Equity, ELSS and Index funds delivered stable performance registering very few decline, Whereas Thematic Infrastructure funds declined.

Among sectoral funds Technology and Pharma funds advanced, whereas Banking and FMCG Funds decline.

The 30-share BSE Sensex climbed 183.67 points to 27458.38. The index gained 550 points in two consecutive sessions after falling nearly 1000 points in initial three sessions of the week. The 50-share NSE Nifty rose 49.90 points to close at 8284.50 while the broader markets settled on a flat note.

Check out all mutual fund gainers & losers

Here is the day's performance and the gainers and losers across categories.

Equity diversified: Top gainers

*  Escorts High Yield Equity Plan (G) up 1.65%
*  ICICI Prudential Exports and Other Services Fund (G) up 1.60%
*  Birla Sun Life International Equity Fund - Plan A (G) up 1.37%

Equity diversified: Top losers

*  Baroda Pioneer Infrastructure Fund (G) down 0.88%
*  Religare Invesco Infrastructure Fund (G) down 0.66%
*  L&T Infrastructure Fund (G) down 0.59%

Tax saving funds: Top gainers

*  Escorts Tax Plan (G) up 1.65%
*  L&T Tax Saver Fund (G) up 0.81%
*  L&T Long Term Advantage Fund - I (G) up 0.76%

Tax saving funds: Top losers

*  Tata Infrastructure Tax Saving Fund (G) down 0.64%
*  Reliance Tax Saver (ELSS) Fund (G) down 0.05%
*  JM Tax Gain Fund (G) down 0.01%

Sector funds: Top gainers

*  ICICI Prudential Technology Fund (G) up 3.52%
*  Birla Sun Life New Millennium (G) up 2.94%
*  SBI IT Fund (G) up 2.81%

Sector funds: Top losers

*  SBI FMCG Fund (G) down 0.54%
*  Sahara Banking and Financial Services Fund (G) down 0.52%
*  Reliance Diversified Power Sector Fund - Retail Plan (G) down 0.47%

Balanced funds: Top gainers

*  HDFC Balanced Fund (G) up 0.62%
*  JM Balanced Fund (G) up 0.54%

Balanced funds: Top losers

*  No Losers

Debt funds: Top gainers

*  SBI EDGE Fund (G) up 0.24%
*  DSP BlackRock Constant Maturity 10Y G-Sec Fund - Regular Plan (G) up 0.15%
*  ICICI Prudential Gilt - Treasury Plan - PF Option (G) up 0.14%

Debt funds: Top losers

*  Escorts Gilt Fund (G) down 0.04%
*  Escorts Short Term Debt Fund (G) down 0.01%

For more Mutual Fund News click here >>


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Dakar 2015: Barreda Bort and Al-Attiyah still in command at halfway mark

The 2015 edition of the Dakar Rally, the rigorous off-road rally raid organised by the Amaury Sports Organisation, has now reached the halfway mark. And there were a few surprises along the way during the sixth stage of the event. While the battle in the motorcycle category had been primarily between Spaniard Joan Barreda Bort and KTM rider Marc Coma, stage wins along the way had fallen to various other competitors. And at the sixth stage of the event it was Helder Rodrigues who took a commanding victory. The rider climbed from 10th overall... Read More


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Seven ways to play gold and oil

The trends leave some investors scratching their heads on how to play the commodities, if at all. Traders on CNBC's "Fast Money" offered some insight on what moves to make in the current oil and gold environments.

Oil's well-documented price dive continues, as US crude ended Friday with its seventh straight losing week. Gold has moved somewhat sporadically in recent days with increasingly volatile stock markets.

The trends leave some investors scratching their heads on how to play the commodities, if at all. Traders on CNBC's "Fast Money" offered some insight on what moves to make in the current oil and gold environments.

Gold itself is a solid investment at this point, said trader Guy Adami.

"There's a lot of air up there," Adami said, referring to gold's price.

 Buying into gold miners, rather than the metal, could prove the wisest move, said trader Brian Kelly. He sees upside in the Market Vectors Gold Miners ETF, which is exposed to global gold mining companies. It rose nearly 5 percent on Friday, climbing more than USD 20 per share.

"The Federal Reserve told you they want higher inflation. When that inflation mentality takes over in the market, people are going to at least want a little bit of gold," Kelly said.

Read MoreWhy oil will go even lower

Investors wanting a "torque return" will buy into the fund, trader Steve Grasso said.

Kelly noted that, although oil was hitting new lows, energy stocks and funds had not hit new lows with it. He saw the SPDR S&P Oil and Gas Exploration and Production ETF and Continental Resources as strong plays despite oil's continued collapse.

Grasso recommended the Energy Select Sector SPDR Fund in the current oil environment.

 "I would not go any deeper there until oil finds a base," Grasso said.

Read MoreCarl Icahn: Oil hasn't hit bottom yet

Adami stuck with his earlier pick of offshore drilling company Seadrill.


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Lupin wins outstanding company of the year at IBLA

The India Business Leader Awards (IBLA) aims to recognize leaders who have made the difference, creating an edge above peers. Watch them celebrate excellence in business leadership for the 10th year.

Watch this space.....video will be uploaded shortly.

The India Business Leader Awards (IBLA) aims to recognize leaders who have made the difference, creating an edge above peers. Watch them celebrate excellence in business leadership for the 10th year.


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Storyboard: Best Ads of 2014

Storyboard's Editor Anant Rangaswami discusses the best advertisements of 2014 with Rajiv Rao, NCD of Ogilvy India and Arun Iyer, NCD of Lowe Lintas.

Storyboard's Editor Anant Rangaswami discusses the best advertisements of 2014 with Rajiv Rao, NCD of Ogilvy India and Arun Iyer, NCD of Lowe Lintas.

Watch videos for more...


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Glenburn Tea Estate: Another weekend getaway spot

Weekend Wonderlust heads to the Glenburn Tea Estate.

Weekend Wonderlust heads to the Glenburn Tea Estate.

Watch videos for more...


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BJP poll campaign@Delhi: Modi targets 'anarchist' Kejriwal

Kickstarting BJP's poll campaign for Delhi, Prime Minister Narendra Modi today wooed voters with a host of promises as he singled out 'anarchist' AAP leader Arvind Kejriwal for attack and asked voters to punish him for "wasting" one year.

Without naming Kejriwal or his party, Modi said at a rally here that if the AAP leader wants to be an "anarchist" as he has claimed to be, he should go to jungles to join naxals as Delhi cannot have anarchy. Kejriwal had said about a year ago that he is an "anarchist".

During the 30-minute address, he suggested that Kejriwal has "mastery" in "lies" and dharnas and protests and should be given that role only and that power should be given to BJP which has "mastery" in administration.

At the rally at Ramlila Ground attended by all three new BJP Chief Ministers of Maharashtra, Haryana and Jharkhand, Modi sought a clear mandate for his party to ensure allround development and create a "new" Delhi.

Delhi, which is under President's Rule, is expected to have Assembly polls next month. Promising to take Delhi to new heights of development, the Prime Minister said people here will be given an option of choosing their power service provider on the lines of mobile number portability and pledged to make Delhi slum-free by 2022.

He also promised to usher in a corruption-free system, saying it has been started at the top and gradually it will reach down to colonies. In a apparent reference to Kejriwal's comment made almost a year back that he was an anarchist, Modi said "if somebody is an anarchist, he should go to the jungles and join the naxals. Do not allow Delhi's pride to be affected by anarchy. Delhi will not benefit from it."

Apparently referring to resignation by Kejriwal  government on February 14 last year after being in power for 49 days, he said, "people should punish those because of whom one year of Delhi was wasted."

Committing to provide a corruption-free society, Modi said he already commenced the cleansing from the top and asked if anyone has heard any complaint about him ever since he took over as Prime Minister some seven months back.

"Trust me, I will clean up the system. I have started from the top and I will take it to the bottom. People take money from auto drivers, shopkeeper, the poor people...It will all stop," the Prime Minister said.

Reaching out to the vast slum population, he promised to replace the slums with concrete houses by 2022, saying "your dream is my dream." He said steps have already been initiated in this regard by the Urban Development Ministry.

While talking about schemes benefitting the poor, he referred to Jan Dhan and said bankers, who earlier used to be reluctant to open accounts of the people from lower economic strata, are now going house-to-house to open zero-balance accounts.

"So far 11 crore accounts have been opened as against the target of 7 crore by January 26," he said adding though people had an option of opening zero-balance accounts, Rs 8,500 crore were deposited by them. In Delhi alone, 19.50 lakh accounts were opened under the scheme," he said.

Taking a dig at the Congress over its claim of standing by the poor, he said "who was running government for the rich and who is running government for the poor has been proved by the Jan Dhan scheme."
Promising 24 hour power supply to Delhi, Modi said he will rid the city of generators which will also ensure a cleaner environment. "We will shut the voice of generators in Delhi.

It will also help clean up the air by reducing poisonous gases." He said BJP was all set to take some "revolutionary steps" in Delhi which no one can even think of and talked about portability of choosing power service providers on the line of mobile number portability.

Assuring to end water woes in Delhi, he said BJP-ruled Haryana has promised to provide more water to Delhi after Central intervention. He also hailed people of Jammu and Kashmir for coming out in large numbers and defeat the separatist forces.

Modi termed Amit Shah as the "most successful" party president as under his leadership party has achieved unprecedented success in various states.

Without naming anybody, the Prime Minister said a "factory of lies" has come up in the city and rumours are being spread that if BJP comes to power, the retirement age of government employees will be reduced from the current 60 to 58 years.

He said those spreading lies cannot be defeated by anybody except the people and asked the voters to do so. "The government never thought about it and never spoke about it. And still a lie is being spread. Every day a new lie is being manufactured. Spreading lies is their job and their politics. Modi can never back stab anyone...Elect a good government in Delhi. Give us a clear mandate," he told the gathering.


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Gold rebounds on good seasonal demand, overseas trend

Pure gold (99.9 purity) also rose by a similar margin to settle at Rs 27,050 per 10 grams compared to Rs 26,905

Gold prices rebounded smartly, snapping their three-day downfall at the domestic bullion market here on renewed buying interest from jewellery traders tracking a firm overseas undertone. Elsewhere, silver also regained some lost ground owing to higher industrial offtake. Standard gold (99.5 purity) surged by Rs 145 to conclude at Rs 26,900 per 10 grams from Friday's closing level of Rs 26,755.

Pure gold (99.9 purity) also rose by a similar margin to settle at Rs 27,050 per 10 grams compared to Rs 26,905. Silver (.999 fineness) went up by Rs 270 to finish at Rs 37,360 per kg as against Rs 37,090 yesterday. On the global front, the yellow-metal climbed higher on the back of hectic short-covering as well as funds buying, despite better-than-expected US jobs report and macro data.

Gold February delivery ended at USD 1,216.10 an ounce on the Comex division of the NYMEX late yesterday, while silver March contract moved up to USD 16.42 an ounce. 


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Sports 365: Highs lows of sportsperson in 2014

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 03 Januari 2015 | 23.24

Catch the highs and lows of sportsperson in this special show - Sports 365.

Catch the highs and lows of sportsperson in this special show - Sports 365. For complete show, watch accompanying videos.


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Gyan Sangam: PM promises greater state bank autonomy

Moneycontrol Bureau

Addressing a gathering of chiefs of India's public sector banks, Prime Minister Narendra Modi vowed his government would stay away from "political interference" that has long been seen as its Achilles Heel but called upon them to take steps to strengthen their operations, achieve scale, boost financial literacy and inclusion and help in augmenting economic growth in the country.

The PM was speaking at the culmination of Gyan Sangam, a first-of-its-kind, two-day summit held in Pune that saw senior banking executives and top officials from the government and the Reserve Bank of India gather to discuss ways to strength the public banking sector.

Apart from the prime minister, finance ministers Arun Jaitley and Jayant Sinha (MoS), RBI chief Raghuram Rajan and chief economic advisor Arvind Subramanian too attended the event.

Over two days, the event saw banking officials conduct various seminars and group discussions on key issues such as ensuring greater autonomy for banks, improving risk management practices, their recapitalization needs, improve asset quality and curb black money among others.

They then presented key takeaways of these discussions to the prime minister, in which both short- and long-term action plans were laid out.

No major announcements, but broad change agenda laid out

Among the key commitments PSU banks made were to reorient strategies to enable small ones to focus on niche capabilities, implement steps to shore up talent, use technology in a greater way, strengthen risk management and work more closely with non-bank channels such as payment management systems or bank correspondents.

At the same time, banks urged the government to provide them greater leeway by considering transferring its stake to an independent bank investment committee run by professionals, and in the long run look to reducing its stake below 51 percent – key recommendations of the PJ Nayak committee.

Bank chiefs also stressed upon the need for greater freedom in hiring decisions, lesser scrutiny from vigilance agencies, stronger debt recovery laws and fewer interference from governments in the form of market-distorting debt waivers or interest rate caps.

On its part, the government stayed away from announcing any immediate major decision, either with respect to government control on banks, recapitalization or, importantly, consolidation – on which analysts were expecting something.

On the last point, prime minister Modi stressed upon the need for scale, pointing out how banks in China and Japan featured in the list of the world's top 10 but financial services secretary Hasmukh Adhia said the decision whether some large public sector banks need to get merged with a few smaller ones will be left to them.

RBI governor Raghuram Rajan stressed upon the need to clean up NPAs and then restructure other stressed loans so as to put the economy back on the track.

He added that with the upcoming licensing of the small and payment banks, there would be new players in the industry. "The competition amongst the PSBs will also grow to meet these challenges. Accordingly, PSBs have to develop differentiated products," he was quoted as saying in a press release.

Finance minister Arun Jaitley said that the government had taken up financial inclusion in a big way through the Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana and added that most bank accounts created in the scheme would help in the introduction of direct benefit transfer (DBT).


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Mahindra War Room: The Grand Finale '14

The Mahindra War Room platform is associated with excellence as it presents participants with an opportunity to solve some of Mahindra's toughest case studies. Watch the grand finale of 2014.

The Mahindra War Room platform is associated with excellence as it presents participants with an opportunity to solve some of Mahindra's toughest case studies. Watch the grand finale of 2014.

For complete show, watch accompanying videos.


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Overdrive: Track test of Triumph Daytona 675R

Overdrive's resident two wheeler expert, Shubhabrata Marmar, gets the Triumph Daytona on a racetrack.

Overdrive's resident two wheeler expert, Shubhabrata Marmar, gets the Triumph Daytona on a racetrack.

For complete show, watch accompanying videos.


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Watch supercar owner with rallying champion on race track

On Overdrive, jury member and supercar owner Bharath Reddy gets some drifting lessons from rallying champion Gaurav Gill in his R8 V10 PLUS and a Jaguar F-Tyre Coupe on the Chennai Race Track.

On Overdrive, jury member and supercar owner Bharath Reddy gets some drifting lessons from rallying champion Gaurav Gill in his R8 V10 PLUS and a Jaguar F-Tyre Coupe on the Chennai Race Track.

For complete show, watch accompanying videos.


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Eurozone at risk of entering Japan-type spiral: Lord Turner

As the world economy steers over into the new year, one of the its most worrying spots remains the Eurozone. To discuss prospects for the region, as well as for other leading economies such as the US and China, CNBC-TV18's Latha Venkatesh spoke to Lord Adair Turner.

A British academic, member of the UK's Financial Policy Committee and former chairman of the Financial Services Authority until its abolition in March 2013, Lord Turner is a post graduate in history and economics and has previously worked for Chase Manhattan Bank, McKinsey & Co and Merrill Lynch at various times.

He also lectures part time at the London School of Economics where, in 2010, he delivered three lectures titled 'Economics after the Crisis' which were later published by MIT Press as a book under that same title.

This book criticised conventional wisdom that the objective of policy should be to maximise gross domestic product (GDP) that the way to do this is to promote freer markets and that inequality is an acceptable price for growth.

But Turner is best known for his stint as chairman of the Financial Services Authority (FSA) from 2008 to 2013, where he defended actions of the regulator during the global financial crisis, and said other regulatory bodies throughout the world too failed to predict the economic collapse.

In April 2013, he joined George Soros' economic think tank as a Senior Research Fellow.

Also read: World recovery increasingly dependent on US growth engine

Below is the transcript of Lord Adair Turner's interview on CNBC-TV18.

Q: Let me start with the economy at your doorstep, closest to you, the Eurozone. It has been marked by recession for the better part of 2014. Does it recover to see some growth in 2015?

A: I don't know exactly what the pattern of growth will be in 2015 but the overall picture for the Eurozone is: I have to say, not an optimistic one. We are caught in a deep deflationary, recessionary cycle with a very low inflation and the dangers that it could actually turn into absolute deflation and we have imperfect policy levers within the Eurozone institutional structure to deal with it.

So, without getting involved in the business of predicting a particular year's growth rate, my worry for the Eurozone is that unless we are very careful, the next five or next ten years the Eurozone will look rather like Japan in the 1990s and 2000s.

In other words, a very slow growth and very slow rate of inflation and that is a major risk for the Eurozone whatever the precise level of growth we see next year.

Q: That sounds very dire, 5-10 years like Japan. Won't political dynamics within the Eurozone work to resolve it? Won't you expect a full blown quantitative easing (QE) in the first quarter of 2015 from the European Central Bank (ECB)?

A: We probably will see now something of the form of QE in the first quarter of 2015. The difficulty is that unless it is accompanied by some fiscal relaxation either in the major country which doesn't have a debt problem which is Germany but also in some of the other countries, I am not sure that QE in itself will necessarily be transformative.

I mean QE works through the indirect impact of higher asset prices or it works through reducing long-term yields as well as the short term interest rates, which have already been reduced to a very low level. But the fact is that the Eurozone already has very low interest rates.

Businesses already borrow at very low rates of interest and I think pushing them even further lower and longer along the yield curve through a QE operation although it is bound to have some beneficial effect, I am not sure that in and of itself it is going to be transformative of performance.

From the point of view of financial market investors, it's highly relevant. It probably underpins the price of bonds and to a degree is equated but what we know from the pattern of ultra-loose monetary policy over the last five or five years in the western economies and in Japan in the 1990s and 2000s is that very low interest rates alone can take a long period of time to stimulate the economy.

So yes, I do think the ECB will take action. I think it might be quite significant action. I think it's a majority on the board to do that and the minority who are voting against will accept the will of the majority. My concern is not about whether they will do QE or not but how effective that will be alone in stimulating the Eurozone economy.

Q: There are some critics who think that there could be some kind of political crisis and maybe there is already one developing in Greece. Jim O'Neill on one episode of this show pointed out that there are unusual parties that have come up, political parties that didn't even exist a year ago in countries like Spain. You spoke of a possibility of long recession. Would that lead to social tension and therefore even to (Euro) exit-like situations in some countries like we saw in Greece a couple of years ago?

A: Well, what we are seeing increasingly is a number of populist parties which are either talking about exit from the Eurozone or effectively repudiation of debts. So, we have the Greek left wing party and we'll have to see how they do in the forthcoming elections that we're going to have in Greece. In Italy what we have seen is the Northern league which was previously positioned as essentially a secessionist party within Italy is repositioning itself as essentially a party saying that Italy should leave the Eurozone and then of course we have Podemos in Spain who are arguing for repudiation of debt and then only two and a half years down the line of course we have the French presidential election where an increasing number of observers are beginning to assume that Marine Le Pen, head of the National Front will get through to the second round though most people assume at the moment that she would lose at that point.

So, we do have a set of forces around Europe who are basically arguing that they're not going to put up with a slow growth low inflation path and are arguing for more radical policies. I cannot predict how well they will do and how that plays out. It is possible that each of them will do relatively well but never quite well enough to capture a hold of the political power and put their beliefs into action but the longer that we have a period of slow growth, rising unemployment and low inflation, the greater the dangers that they get that reaction and I would say here that I draw the analogy with Japan in the 1990 and 2000s but it is much more worrying in Europe.

Japan is one country with a debt which is pretty much owed to itself by itself. It is an ethnically and culturally homogenous society and it does not have large immigration flows. The Eurozone is a country of many nations where you can then get blame games and national politics. It has a significant degree of ethnic and religious and cultural diversity with imperfect degrees of integration which then has potential for people to blame each other and for minorities to react against majorities etc and various forms of right wing populism can exploit that and it has a very significant and I fear somewhat uncontrollable immigration flow from our somewhat chaotic neighbourhood in bits of North Africa and to the Middle East and all of that I think makes it far more important that the Eurozone avoids a long period of stagnation.

If we put a long period of stagnation in the Eurozone, the social and political consequences are much more potentially severe than they were in Japan but unfortunately it's not only more important to have radical actions that avoid a long period of stagnation it's also more difficult to get those radical actions because of the particular complex structure of the Eurozone as a country of one central bank but many nations and with the fiscal debt residing at the national level. So it's very important to have as good a leadership, as thoughtful a leadership as possible through this and I'm hopeful that we will manage without severe crisis but this is a worrying outlook I think for the Eurozone.


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Weekend Wanderlust in God's own country - Kerala

Club Mahindra

Top Story

Club Mahindra Top Story | 01/03/2015 @ 07:29 PM

Weekend Wanderlust in God's own country - Kerala

Weekend Wanderlust in God's own country - Kerala

Yatra.com and CNBC-TV18's Weekend Wanderlust takes you to the charming town of Bekal in Kerala. Take the stunning views from the historic Bekal Fort, pick up the catch of the day straight from the ocean, sample home style Kerala cuisine and indulge in the world renowned Kerala spa treatments. Catch the feast for the senses in God's own country.

1266510

http://www.moneycontrol.com/clubmahindra/article.php?autono=1266510&type=top_story

Yatra.com and CNBC-TV18's Weekend Wanderlust takes you to the charming town of Bekal in Kerala. Take the stunning views from the historic Bekal Fort, pick up the catch of the day straight from the ocean, sample home style Kerala cuisine and indulge in the world renowned Kerala spa treatments. Catch the feast for the senses in God's own country.

For complete show, watch accompanying videos.

Weekend Wanderlust,Bekal,Kerala

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Only around 200 Asian lions exist in the wild

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