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Bandwidth of risk is widening for EMs: Andrew Sheng

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 19 Januari 2014 | 23.55

Andrew Sheng has been policy maker in three Asian countries. He was the former Chairman, Securities & Futures Commission, Hong Kong, and worked with Bank Negara Malaysia. He is currently advisor to the China Banking Regulatory Commission.

Also Read: What bank branches can't provide, alternate players can: Mor

He says for emerging markets the bandwidth of risk is now widening because the advanced markets, as they begin to recover and then restore back more and more interest rates, emerging markets will face capital flows back to the rich countries.

He also talks about the state of the Chinese economy and the benefits that may emerge for other emerging economies.

Below is the verbatim transcript of Andrew Sheng's interview on CNBC-TV18

Q: Many believe US, European Union and Japan will largely continue with currency printing and easy money policy in 2014. What will this mean for emerging markets like us in 2014?

A: There are many uncertainties that one cannot completely prevent, because we live in a very complex world of huge inter-dependencies, very complex feedbacks, then make policy judgement in an era of turbulence and huge uncertainty. My favourite phrase is that for emerging markets the bandwidth of risk is now widening because the advanced markets, as they begin to recover and then restore back more and more interest rates emerging markets will face capital flows back to the rich countries and therefore we must be prepared. This means that not only will the long-term U-curve of the advance country interest rates - U-curves will begin to steepen, it has been very flat for a long time, but also the risk spreads for the emerging markets will rise. That has several implications.

Number one, if you overshoot on interest rate issue your growth will slow down and if you keep interest rates too low there will be very large capital outflows with consequent implications on your asset prices. So financial stability, monetary stability, inflation, growth, employment could all be hit by this phase of tapering. The good news of course is that advance country central banks have become much more responsible. They are aware of the implications and they will phase it in a staggered manner or an acceptable manner. I think emerging markets will have a little bit of breathing space to adapt to this new environment. There are many other issues that we cannot predict. For example, territorial complex, technology shifts, diplomatic incidences - all these and maybe civil unrest could disrupt the game, so to be able to predict this is not easy.

Q: There is fear that China could hard land because of rising bad loans or non-performing loans (NPL). There is a fear that monetary and fiscal stimulus given after Lehman led to ghost cities and highways leading to nowhere and all those loans turning bad?

A: Markets are driven by greed and fear and it is the fear of risks that will enable individuals, banks, regulators, corporates to take more caution and deal with it. There is no doubt in my mind that China has fiscal space, foreign exchange space and the policy space to deal with it. It is a very, very large economy. It can take minor stresses to the system much better than many small very open economies. The capital account of China is still not open. The reserves are over USD 3 trillion. There is relatively little foreign debt so far, but domestic debt is rising.

One must also need to understand that even though domestic debt is rising, the counterpart of it is investments of course on an unprecedented scale, but the asset is there and so therefore the question is managing liquidity, managing cash flow, balancing the maturity risk and of course weeding out the weaker players. So in the short-term, yes in absolute terms probably NPLs will rise, in relative terms it would still be manageable.

Q: What's your assessment of Chinese growth in 2014 and 2015? Wouldn't growth slowdown because an appreciating yuan will hurt exports?

A: I do not like to predict the future, because the future is very difficult to predict. Second point is that my own assessment of what is happening is that of course the investment levels will not be as large as before because there is adjustment on the monetary policy side and some control on the credit side, but domestic consumption is beginning to move and there are several reasons for this. It is partly due to the improvement in the changes in the one child policy, urbanisation is still continuing, introduction of e-commerce. There are many minor factors that on their own you would not notice, but cumulatively Chinese domestic consumption is becoming more and more important as an engine of growth.

Q: How exactly do you see the Yuan in 2014? Does it continue to remain stable to appreciating?

A: I think the policy of the People's Bank is to maintain flexibility in its management. I think they want a stable currency, but they would also be interested in allowing market forces to determine the band of fluctuation. When that is going to be widened no one knows, but I think that is the general direction of policy. The issue that one needs to be very clear about is has the exchange rate broadly reached its equilibrium level. I think nobody can say this with precision, but broadly speaking as you can see the way imports and exports are behaving a more equilibrium level is about there.

Q: Indian businessmen tell us that with wage inflation in China and an appreciating currency, they will be able to snatch some markets from China. Your thoughts?

A: Rightly so. The minimum wages have begun to rise. It is part of the 5th Plan. You cannot have domestic consumption rising unless you have wages rising. So rising wages is very good for the domestic consumption area and domestic consumption rise will be very good for imports and so commodity exporters of China will find this very, very useful. On the other hand the rise in the Real Effective Exchange Rate (REER) of China as the wages rise, its export competitiveness is reduced to some extent and that gives export space to countries like India and that is good news for all exporters in this regard.

However, one should also realise that as the wages increase it also forces a productivity adjustment by the exporters and by domestic corporations. So to some extent the increase in wages will be compensated by productivity gains. The total-factor productivity (TFP) will definitely increase also. How it is going to be played out is going to be difficult to see, but I agree with you there will be lots of opportunities for other emerging markets, particularly since the exchange rates are much more flexible.



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Sunanda: Has she paid the price of being a celebrity?

Moneycontrol Bureau

She had come suddenly, she dissappered suddenly. Sunanda Pushakar (junior HRD minister Shashi Tharoor's wife of three-and-a-half years) was found dead in a hotel room on Friday night. Sunanda had checked into Hotel Leela Room No 345 due to renovation work at her home.

Also Read: Sunanda Pushkar found dead in Delhi's Leela Hotel

The incident came as shock because barely 12 hours before both Sunanda and Shashi has issued a joint statement saying all was well in their relationship.

The initial autopsy report, conducted by AIIMS, said it to be 'unnatural sudden death'. Though the report said there were no traces of posion in her blood, injury marks were discovered on her body. The full autopsy details are expected in two days, said AIIMS.

According to Times of India, Sunanda has complained of poor health and depression. She was diagnosed with Lupus and stomach TB for which she was being treated.

Sunanda Pushakar was in the news following an ugly online spat with Pakistani Journalist Mehr Tarar. On January 15, various intimate messages started getting posted on Tharoor's verified twitter account. Those were the supposed messages sent to Tharoor by Tarar declaring her love for him. Tharoor went into damage control mode saying his twitter account has been hacked and he is deactivating it to sort out the issue.

All hell broke loose when his wife Sunanda said that it was she who had posted the messages to show how Tarar is having an affair and 'stalking' her husband. This followed a volley of allegations and counter-allegations to the extent that Sunanda called Tarar an ISI agent.

She even refreshed the controversy surrounding the IPL Kochi team.

Sunanda came into limelight during the 2010 Indian Premiere League. Then a 'good friend' of Tharoor, Sunanda was the co-owner of Rendezvous Sports World, the consortium that bought the Kochi team. It was said that Tharoor had used her as a shield for collecting Rs 70 crore and helping the Kochi owners get their IPL team, Kochi Tuskers.

Following the controversy, Sunanda finally gave up her stake and Tharoor resigned as junior minister of external affairs. Nevertheless, the duo got married in August 2010.

Sunanda told Economic Times that she made a mistake by keeping quiet on her husband's role in the franchise deal. "I took upon myself the crimes of this man during the IPL," she said. However, she later retracted on her comment. She also told NDTV the Congress had asked her not to comment on the IPL scandal.

BJP PM-candidate Narendra Modi at a recent rally had taken a potshot at Tharoor and Sunanda referring to the IPL fiasco. He called Sunanda Tharoor's 'Rs 50-crore' wife. To which Tharoor tweeted, defending his wife, "My wife is worth a lot more than your imaginary 50 crores. She is priceless. But you need2be able2love some1 2understand that."



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Sensex will reach 24000 in FY15: Deutsche AMC

At the India Investment Conference held by the India chapter of the CFA Institute, Sunil Singhania, CIO – Equity of Reliance Mutual Fund, moderated a session comprising Enam's Manish Chokhani and Deutsche AMC's Abhay Laijawala.

Also read: Sensex will reach 24000 in FY15: Deutsche AMC

Singhania: How do you make many in this macro environment?

Chokhani: You could own stocks [for the long term]. I think that is the short point: that one has to be focused on businesses and what they will earn rather than who will buy, when they will buy, why will they buy it? Or who will form the government?

25 years ago, when I had done my MBA, I produced a report on India and I do not kid you, if I just reproduce that report today with updated numbers, it is the same macro problems, the same current account mess, the same fiscal mess, nothing has changed.

We have had reforms. We have had some 16 governments or some such number, it does not go up. The bullish thing is always a micro in India.

Singhania: One thing has changed, you had no money when you were optimist, you have more money when you are pessimist.

Chokhani: Narayana Murthy said that at 18 you should be a communist and at 40 you should be a conservative.

Singhania: On the earnings part, you recently updated your Sensex target to 24,000. What is your earnings growth expectation? We are seeing after 4-5 quarters earnings again trending into double digits. Now the pessimist can argue that it is one or two stocks or one or two sectors, the optimist might say that you are again back to that teen kind of earnings growth. What is your earnings expectation for the next two years and what is the genesis of this target being upgraded to 24000?

Laijawala: Our expectation is 10 percent for FY14 and the team is looking at 14-15 percent growth for FY15. For FY15, we are expecting a more broader earnings recovery. In FY14 it is obviously far more focused on few sectors which everyone knows about.

So that is what the markets are going to look at. A very, very important point is that markets tend to re-rate when earnings reach an inflection point. This is going to be the factor that investors are going to watch out for and this drives our expectation for a 24000 target for this year -- that that moment is going to approach in FY15.

Timing is very difficult. Is it the election? Is it various other variables? While everyone thinks it is the election we think there is far more happening in the economy than just the election. The election may probably decide the pace of change or the delta of change, but there are many other variables which are falling in place for India, which investors should not ignore and therefore that will decide that inflection point.

Singhania: What is your view on tapering? Everyone is concerned about tapering. We had done a study sometimes back on these new terms which get coined and which create havoc in the minds of investors, we had fiscal cliff, we had tapering and we had so many other things. We did a Google analysis of the search trends and we found out that these trends last for two months, they hit the peak and after two months people forget and the economists then coin new terms. This tapering has been going on for the last six months. The day tapering was announced all equity markets went up including the US. So what is your in-house expectation of the pace of tapering?

Laijawala: At Deutsche, we believe that the tapering will be done by the end of the year. There are fears that the taper could be more accelerated should the US economy move at a faster pace than anticipated. The bigger concern that is beginning to emerge now is an earlier-than-anticipated move by the Fed on the rate cycle. So while the consensus expectations for this year are for the rate cycle change in 2015, what if the US economic recovery is even stronger than the estimate and the pace of the acceleration is stronger the current expectations of a normalisation of monetary policy?

The other point that investors must watch out for is the short-term rates in the US. I think the environment or the trajectory of short-term rates in the US will have a very important impact on market sentiment. Because yes, you can see equity prices move up during times of economic recovery when bond yields are rising, but when short end rates tend to move up, that is when nervousness comes into equity markets.

Singhania: On the tapering front you did mention about the risk of equity flows impacting yields, currency everything. We have this new governor who has been very articulate about his policies as far as managing the forex is concerned and we have this huge flow which came in from FCNR and we have this huge buffer. What do you think will be the impact of a major taper and an aggressive taper, both on the currency as well as the debt market in India?

Mehta: As far as debt market from foreign flows is concerned, it is really not there.

Singhania: But first trend is we have seen USD 2 billion come in, right?

Mehta: When we say foreign money on debt market there are two types of investors: one is traders and H1, and one is the real money guys. If you step back a little bit in May, we almost reached a peak of USD 41 billion on the debt side.

In that how much is the real money guys, real money guys will not be even USD 4-5 billion, which are there today also. They are still there. It is the arbitrage guy and arbitrage guy has no view on country, no view on currency, no view on anything, they are pure arbitrage guys. They are logged in into currency and they are running a carry game of 1 or 2 percent. So it is a completely forward game. If the forwards are lower and you are able to make 1 or 2 percent carry they will always come in.

What happened in May, the forwards went up, you thought you would make 1-1.5 percent carry, your forwards went up by almost 2 percent. So it made sense for you to unwind that position. So from a currency point of view it just helps the sentiment, but it is currency-neutral because he is unwinding his hedge too.

So all these guys, whether they come or go has no meaning. It is the real money guy, who actually comes in will impact because these are the guys who will come unhedged just like equities. In equities 90 percent of the guys are unhedged.

So when the real money guys come in and they are coming unhedged, that will have impact on currency. A lot of real-money accounts are not even set up to invest in India. We had a problem of withholding tax. A great timing to solve that problem was along with Fed taper that we announced the withholding tax rationalisation and people started looking into it, we have one more chance.

People are in the process of setting it up, so that is why I am not too worried about taper. It will just have a headline impact. Once they are set up and actually in the debt market we are in the situation where we were in 1996 in equities. Real money guys have not just invested in India. So they will have to come at some point of time, but the biggest challenge still remains the flow which comes on the equity which will really impact the currency.

So now if we look at FCNR (B), a lot of money is again the FII money, the same bank money as same as FCNR (B) because you have India exposure and stuff like that, but it is again giving you sentimental-wise comfort because three years forward they have already sold it to the same banks.

So you have temporary buffer, but when you have outflows coming in and if there is negativity there is chance of not getting the right government and that could impact the sentiment.

That is the worry you have. Even the right government may take time to change things and all that, but at least there will be bridge inflows coming in because of positive sentiment, positive momentum.

Singhania: So it can have some volatility.

Mehta: Absolutely.



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Ramesh Damani probes: Profiting from the Indian media boom

“The medium is the message," said the famous saying by Marshall McLuhan.

In a freewheeling interview with Vanita Kohli-Khandekar, media specialist and contributing editor for Business Standard, and Salil Pitale, Executive Director - Investment Banking, Axis Capital, renowned investor Ramesh Damani, for his special CNBC-TV18 show RD360, discussed the scope of the Indian media business.

Both believe the ongoing digitization wave is going to be a game-changer for Indian media companies.

"The single biggest change that television is seeing in a couple of decades is at a head," said Khandekar.

Pitale said that average revenue per user (ARPU), which has been stuck at around Rs 150 for over two decades since the launch of cable TV is set to go up drastically. "It could go up to Rs 500 in five years."

This, he said, will increase profitability of all three players in the game: broadcasters, distributors and content owners.

Also read: Not giving up on India; media long-term pick: Akash Prakash

The duo also discussed opportunities in the online and the print media spaces.

Below is the transcript of the interview.

Q: Last year, you wrote a column [for Business Standard] titled 'Good news on TV'. What is the good news?

Khandekar: The good news is: the single biggest change that television is seeing in a couple of decades is at a head -- digitisation is moving on schedule.

If I go by the ministry of information and broadcasting's numbers -- and they are quite alright -- three metros are fully digital [in phase 1], while phase ii is almost complete with 38 towns, except for know-your-customer forms that have to be filled up.

This means three things. It increases bandwidth -- the pipe that takes a TV signal to your house, its capacity increases. Once that happens, cost goes down because your tariff fees get eliminated, a whole lot of the junk is eliminated. So that is a little more money into the broadcasters' kitty.

Second, your pay revenues go up. For the broadcaster and for the trade itself because transparency goes up. I think the only person who will protest is the last-mile cable operator but even he will also realize as time goes up and average revenue per user (ARPUs) go up, he will also earn more money.

Lastly and most importantly, variety goes up because now the game changes from being a distribution game to a game of getting people to pay with their money to watch and subscribe to a channel.

The moment that choice comes into a play, it is no longer just sell-in-bundles, and you have to create content for which people are willing to pay extra money.

Q: That happened in multiplex, isn't it?

Pitale: It happened in a big way. Seven-eight years back, the multiplex business was nascent, or really did not exist at all. Your subscription price points, the ticket prices in the entire exhibition chain was so abysmally low, they used to be at Rs 30-40, that was a price of a ticket to watch a movie.

I remember, we did the initial public offering (IPO) for a company called Fame in 2005. They were planning to price tickets at Rs 100 and we were all palpitating over why anybody will pay Rs 100. Today, in 2014, you realize that ticket prices have gone higher.

It is because of the fact that you got a quality entertainment destination, which is the analogy here: that a quality pipe in a digital format, which is available to consumer today, is able to fulfill the requirements and content across board.

Q: People will pay if there is a value proposition?

Pitale: Definitely. I think so.

Q: What is the ARPU now stuck at?

Pitale: The ARPU has been stuck at a number between Rs 150 and Rs 200 forever. When cable TV started in India in 1991, people were paying Rs 150. Today, the average ARPU is Rs 170.

We watched five channels then at that ARPU. Today we are watching 600 channels. We are spending two and a half hours in front of a television everyday and we are still at the same ARPU today.

So yes, in terms of the math, with 150 million homes, at that ARPU level, it is a Rs 30,000 crore business.

Q: And it will grow you think?

Pitale: Definitely, it will grow.

Q: Does the 10+2 ad cap (12 minutes of ads per hour allowed) kill the profitability of broadcasters?

Khandekar: I think most broadcasters are all right now with the 10+2 except certain segments of the broadcast industry.

I have always maintained in my writings that 10+2 is premature. We should have waited for full digitisation to rule out and then once pay revenues are on par with advertising revenues, then put in the 10+2.

10+2 is a normal in most countries. So there is nothing wrong with 10+2 but this is a wrong time to implement it.

Q: But ad rates will go up in 10+2, won't they?

Khandekar: In any case, the rates are high for the leaders and some of the top channels don't go beyond 14 or 16 minutes.

It is the genres like music or news where it has gone to 24-25 minutes. That is the place where inventory buying happens by the kilo. That is where you might see a lot of shutting down of channels, you might see a lot of consolidation happening there because of the 10+2.

Q: It is good thing, you don't want 500 channels.

Khandekar: But they have the right to compete in a fully-structured market. Let them shut down because consumers don't want them not because advertisers don't want them.

Q: In this brave new world we are talking about where ARPUs will be Rs 300 per day, who will make money? Is it going to be the broadcasters, the content owners or distributors? Is it going to be the local cable operator? How does this pie break down?

Pitale: The entire chain becomes wealthier. The Rs 30,000 crore size of the chain is going to grow in a multiple and not in percentage terms.

Q: Five years from now?

Pitale: I do not think we should be surprised that we are looking at Rs 500 ARPUs. I guess we will have the benefit of hindsight then.

Khandekar: If you think of the market as a pyramid there are clusters which are willing to, able to and wanting to pay Rs 500-1,000. You will be able to capture those clusters.

Q: At Rs 500 ARPU, who makes the money?

Pitale: What has happened is out of the three categories of players, the local cable operators (LCOs) were retaining a large chunk of the subscription revenue. The multiple-system operators (MSOs) were getting 15-20 percent share of the same, which had to be shared with the broadcaster and the broadcaster community is also paying carriage, so it was a very difficult situation.

The LCO as a community was making a lot of money, but it was fragmented, it was shared between some 60,000-80,000 cable operators. There were leakages because the entertainment tax, service tax impact of the same was not necessarily captured over there.

What will happen is that from a fragmented ownership of consumers, we move towards a more consolidated ownership of consumers. It has already happened in DTH: 40-45 million whatever is the number on DTH is really captured between six players.

On the cable side, post phase I and phase II, we are already seeing that the large MSOs at least have a clear presence in subscribers which run into 5 million, 6 million, 7 million and so on.

There is a challenge that they have not yet completed the last issue on KYC, but the moment that happens, we will have consolidated ownership of the cable business. We already have consolidated ownership of the DTH business.

The LCO as a segment is still important because it is required for fulfillment as last mile access in fulfillment. It does not disappear. It gets its share of the space.

Today from Rs 200 that the consumer pays, the MSO plus the broadcaster probably gets about Rs 70-80 out of it and the LCO community retains Rs 120.

From Rs 200 going to Rs 500, you could get into a situation that the LCO could still retain a 40-45 percent and that community also benefits and the balance certainly benefits as a chain -- both the broadcaster and the MSOs.

Khandekar: Maybe three-four-five years later, just the sheer 100 percent transparency will help.

Like with theatres, it is not as if the numbers of screens went up drastically, we have increased by about 2,000 screens or something in the country, but the 100 percent transparency in billing and collection resulted in a couple of billion dollars impact on revenue.

We are talking about Rs 8,000-10,000 crore coming in only because that Rs 200 is coming back into the system, because it was not coming back, it was leaking out.

Q: In this new food chain that you talk about, both the content guys win? Isn't that way you place your bets?

Khandekar: Absolutely. Across the board, if you look at TAM data on what is happening in digital homes, regional content is taking off in North India. Tamil and Telugu content in Delhi, for example, is shooting through the roof, English content is shooting through the roof in metros.

You have day-date release for shows like Castle, Sherlock etc. These shows would not have come to India for a year otherwise.

Q: In a very interesting column, you said billionaires love newspapers. It applies to the West, but explain yourself.

Khandekar: Billionaires have always subsidised newspapers. News is one of the toughest businesses to make money in. It is impossible to make money on news unless you are bundling it with entertainment, advertising. And the dis-aggregation that online has done, you are seeing the impact of that in the west.

Q: But there is a difference between what is happening in the west and what is happening in India. In India, print media is still growing.

Khandekar: It is growing hugely. There are three reasons. One, penetration is humongously low in India.

We are talking about 340-350 million people reading newspapers in a country with 70 percent literacy. So if you have a potential market of 700 million people, even if 500 million can actually read, others can just sign their name, you have an upside of 100-150 million.

Two, aspirationally, newspapers carry huge value in India which we keep forgetting. You go to Kanpur, Lucknow. These are not small towns. They are big towns, but newspaper is the written word, it holds for India. It is completely different to what it holds for completely literate for centuries in the western world.

Thirdly, I think language newspapers is the big story in India frankly as far as growth goes.

Q: Doesn't the smart phone and tablet put those great franchises that we have at risk?

Khandekar: Of course, it puts it at risk, but right now video is driving smartphone and tablet usage, not newspaper readership. If I look at Indian Readership Survey (IRS) and Audit Bureau of Circulation (ABC) numbers, you look at any trend, I would say they should start preparing for it.

English newspapers are already seeing it. Last IRS, we have not seen one 1 percent growth for English newspapers. So you are looking at trouble coming up very quickly and I have been saying this year after year, start putting your blueprints in play. Even Punit Goenka [of Zee, which partly owns DNA] said this recently: in online, you will do 10 things, one might work, not work, but just start the process.

Q: In direct-to-home (DTH) vs cable: who wins in that race?

Pitale: I do not think there is going to be an either-or winner in this. Both the DTH players and the large MSOs will grow. The challenge that the large MSOs face is that getting the KYCs right, getting the gross billings right, getting the billings done by themselves rather than LCOs.

Q: When will that happen? When will the billing start happening from cable operator?

Pitale: Right now, the billings are still being done. The bill is sent by an MSO to the LCO and the LCO supposedly distributes it. Clearly that is not the endgame. People are working towards it with varying degrees of success, but we are in midst of that change.

Q: Is it possible that internet cuts the legs of DTH and cable?

Khandekar: On the point about newspapers, this applies equally. I have been voraciously following online in the last few years, and it is going through the roof. 220-230 million people are online across devices in India right now, and it's a huge number.

But monetisation is pathetic so far because cost-per impressions (CPI) are terrible in India as well as the world over.

For a reader who reads the New York Times online, there is a 1:14 difference in what the advertiser pays. The physical advertiser will pay Rs 14 to reach you, but will pay Rs 1 to reach you if you are online.

A lot of people are moving online, but revenues are not moving online. That is the problem.

Q: Does internet poses the risk to the basic broadcasting model of watching television?

Khandekar: Not at all, you can straddle it. I think Indian broadcasters and foreign broadcasters in India have been very proactive -- far better than newspapers -- on quickly seeing the challenges and moving on.

Everybody is on YouTube. 59 million people in India were watching video in September last year. It is a huge number.

But what will it be a proportion of TV audience? It is less than 10 percent of proportion of people watching TV but the fact is it is a significant number. But you will never get the same revenues that just one show on Star Plus gets.

Pitale: The other point on that is bandwidth. For better and better quality content and more HD channels, you need fat pipes. Which means that you have to put in the investment. With 3G networks still being rolled out and 4G yet to happen, the cost of that, to set up an extensive network to carry such large fat pipes will be very different, and we will need a lot more telecom towers and high density.

So the whole cost economics will come into play and therefore it is not that the traditional DTH-cable is going to get impacted so quickly because it has got a big lead. I think things will change over a period of time, but the traditional DTH cable will have a very long way to go in this space.

Q: You are an investment banker. I know your clients ask you: where do I make money? So if you are going to tell them over the next three-five years one or two bright spots where you think a lot of money would be made, what names would you name?

Pitale: The whole distribution chain is just waiting to unleash big value creation. DTH players as a whole, cable and large players as a whole.

Even within cables, the guys who are implementing it beautifully are the guys who will really make the money.

Most of the names you can see around the place today. All the key MSOs, key DTH guys should do very well and they should really thrive in this particular space.

The DTH guys will keep getting the benefit of ARPU increases in a big way, the cable guys will get the benefit of customer ownership as well as the monetisation through broadband and so on. The ARPU is growing in any case.

Q: So the basic names: DEN, Hathway Cable, Siti Cable?

Pitale: Within all of this, one should look at individual managements and take bets around the same. But I would say that the segment really is waiting to happen.

Q: Who wins in the content race? Is it the general entertainment channels (GECs) or the niche channels?

Khandekar: 70 percent of India's TV audience is shared by five networks. They have got niche channels, GECs, they are in every genre possible and then you have smaller networks.

So you will have a Discovery or a Times Television, which are smaller networks, but you have Star, Zee , Sony, Sun and  Network18 and between them, they have 70 percent of the audience.

Except for Zee and Network 18, nobody is listed. I think there is a lot of value left there waiting to be unlocked. I had also heard about Star and Sony long back that they want to raise money, but I do not think that happened.

These guys played the game right: they launched the news channels two years before digitisation took off.

Q: How about the pathetic news broadcasters?

Khandekar: They are not so pathetic. The problem with news broadcasting is that there may be like 10 serious channels and the rest is all junk.

Q: And advertising price is too small.

Khandekar: You have 135 news channels for a Rs 1,800-2,000 crore business. It is the largest number of news channels anywhere in the world. Today, I saw a poster of some real estate guy launching another news channel and I thought why are they doing this?

They have spoiled the market for the guys who want to make money.

Q: Do you think with the digitisation that might change, because no one pays for it, no one will watch it?

Khandekar: More than digitisation, you had asked me something about trends in 2000, I think media ownership is going to be a big issue, especially on news, not on entertainment.

Q: Corporates will own media houses?

Khandekar: Corporates already own media houses.

Q: It is an acceptable practice in the West. Would it come here too?

Khandekar: It is perfectly fine as long as everything is transparent. The only thing is news media ownership is the one where there are reasons for concern and every time I speak to Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) I suggest norms which insist on transparency.

Who owns you? What is your shareholding? What is your revenue? What are your losses? Where is your money coming from? Where is it going? What happened to Tehelka was the owner was involved in something, but the financial inclusion would have happened one day or the other, because that company had lost Rs 40 crore in three years. Some investor has spent that money.

Look at all these news channels. 40-50 percent of news channels in this country are owned by politicians and real estate owners.

Pitale: Commoditised business as news, but as digitisation happens it is easy to get data points to say who is really doing better. The other benefit is carriage -- which has been a big cost element for news -- starts to come down.

Clearly, they get the benefit of the same and this digital data tells who is better than the other. It will ensure that at least the leaders will get their fair due.

Q: Will the ad rates go up sometime, because they are really at the bottom of the basement for the news channel?

Pitale: Yes, it should. The leaders will get the benefits. The three-four-five brands will get the benefit.

Khandekar: Definitely they should?

Q: Exciting space to be in media, because the stocks are under-owned, under-loved, under-appreciated?

Khandekar: Lot of them have not yet come into the market. I would say the best stocks have not yet come into the market.

Pitale: It is a good time for people to look at this space from all angles. As I said, the whole industry has been playing advertising

Today, you can play advertising-plus-subscription. And subscription is traditionally more than advertising.



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Best bets: 10 stocks to buy during Oct-Dec quarter earnings season

Some companies have reported October-December quarter earnings kick-started by Infosys, while most of them are expected to announce results. Key earnings announcements this week included ITC, HDFC Bank, TCS, IndusInd Bank, Axis Bank and Bajaj Auto. Almost all of them reported numbers broadly in-line with market expectations.

Motilal Oswal expects Sensex Q3FY14 PAT to grow 13% YoY.  "Within Sensex, top 5 PAT growth companies are: Tata Steel (loss to profit), Bharti (+299% YoY), Tata Motors (+89%), TCS (+48%) and Sun Pharma (+44%). Top 5 PAT degrowth companies: BHEL (-56% YoY), State Bank (-33%), Sesa Sterlite (-21%), Tata Power (-10%) and Coal India (-8%)," it adds.

So, as October-December quarter earnings session is in full swing, here are 10 stocks that Motilal Oswal recommends to buy.


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Indian ADRs: ICICI, HDFC Bank, Infosys close lower

Jan 18, 2014, 04.54 PM IST

In the banking space, HDFC Bank was down 1.9 percent to USD 34.15 and ICICI Bank declined 1.28 percent to USD 35.58.

Tags  , Indian ADRs, Infosys, Wipro, ICICI Bank, HDFC Bank, Dr Reddys Lab, Tata Motors

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Indian ADRs: ICICI, HDFC Bank, Infosys close lower

In the banking space, HDFC Bank was down 1.9 percent to USD 34.15 and ICICI Bank declined 1.28 percent to USD 35.58.

Like this story, share it with millions of investors on M3

Indian ADRs: ICICI, HDFC Bank, Infosys close lower

In the banking space, HDFC Bank was down 1.9 percent to USD 34.15 and ICICI Bank declined 1.28 percent to USD 35.58.

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Indian ADRs saw selling pressure on Friday. Among technology stocks, Infosys fell 0.69 percent to USD 60.28 per ADR and Wipro lost 0.74 percent to USD 13.42.

In the banking space, HDFC Bank was down 1.9 percent to USD 34.15 and ICICI Bank declined 1.28 percent to USD 35.58.

Among others, Dr Reddy's Labs dipped 0.53 percent to USD 43.13 while Tata Motors gained 0.73 percent to USD 30.29.



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Buy, sell or hold: How to trade Wipro post Q3 earnings?

Wipro   met street expectations in third quarter (October-December) with the IT services revenues growing 2.6 percent sequentially to Rs 10,327 crore. Consolidated profit after tax of the company climbed 4.27 percent sequentially to Rs 2,014.7 crore and revenues grew 3 percent to Rs 11,327.4 crore for the quarter ended December 2013.

In dollar terms, IT services revenue rose 2.9 percent quarter-on-quarter (6.4 percent on yearly basis) to USD 1,678.4 million that was in-line with company's guidance (USD 1660-1690 million) and analysts' forecast (USD 1677 million).

How to trade it now?

Credit Suisse maintains outperform on the stock with a revised target of Rs 650 from Rs 600.  It says that revenue growth will need to significantly accelerate for major relative outperformance. "Revenue growth is now in the middle of peer range and margin trajectory improve along with tailwinds for the sector will continue to help the stock," it adds.

Goldman Sachs retains sell with a target of Rs 400 implying 28 percent downside. The brokerage expects Wipro to continue to lag peers due to weak Application Development and Maintenance (ADM) business, high competition in Infrastructure management services and lack of traction in other growth verticals despite multi-year restructuring.

Citi has a buy rating on the stock with a target of Rs 650.  It anticipates upgrades on the stock as the street factors in the higher margin levels. "The business is turning around and improving demand should further help – Wipro remains one of our top picks in the sector," Citi says.

CLSA feels that true test of Wipro's revenue turnaround will come in the seasonally strong June quarter where it has faltered over the past 3 years, and  re-rating will likely have to wait till then.

However, Macquarie retains neutral rating on the stock  and thinks any share price gain is capped. "We change our target multiple to 15x (vs 14x earlier) to arrive at our revised target price of Rs 570 (vs Rs 490 earlier)," it says.



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RBI On Call Put Options

Published on Sat, Jan 18,2014 | 18:34, Updated at Sat, Jan 18 at 18:37Source : CNBC-TV18 |   Watch Video :

The RBI has prescribed a new pricing regime applicable to foreign investor exits using Call & Put options. And while it's not our case that equity should get assured returns, a dual pricing regime is confusing and in some cases unfair.

For instance, in the case of listed equity

- A non-resident has to buy from a resident at not less than preferential allotment price, sell to the resident at not more than preferential allotment price and in the case of selling to a resident using an option – sell at market price in the case of unlisted equity

- A non-resident has to buy from a resident at not less than DCF based valuation, sell to a resident at not more than DCF based valuation and in the case of selling to a resident using an option – Sell at not more than price arrived on basis of roe in latest audited balance sheet

Interestingly for investment in preference shares and debentures, the entry pricing is specified but the exit pricing can be as per any internationally accepted pricing methodology

CNBC-TV18's Menaka Doshi spoke to RBI Executive Director G Padmanabhan on RBI's Circular on Call and Put options


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Idea Cellular wins Storyboard Brand Campaign 2013

Jan 18, 2014, 05.41 PM IST

Here is a look at the winners of Storyboard Brand Campaign 2013.

Tags  Storyboard, Storyboard Brand Campaign 2013, Idea Cellular

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Idea Cellular wins Storyboard Brand Campaign 2013

Here is a look at the winners of Storyboard Brand Campaign 2013.

Like this story, share it with millions of investors on M3

Idea Cellular wins Storyboard Brand Campaign 2013

Here is a look at the winners of Storyboard Brand Campaign 2013.

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Here is a look at the winners of Storyboard Brand Campaign 2013.

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Delhi, North and East India reels under cold day conditions

Delhi is under cold day conditions as the weather remained grey and damp on Friday. Intermittent light rain throughout the day did not allow the temperature to rise beyond 12.9°C. Even on Saturday, Delhiites witnessed shallow fog in early morning hours and the day is likely to remain cloudy and gloomy. Cold day conditions will prevail as maximum will not rise above 15°C. The biting cold winter in Delhi effects restaurateurs as the customers' count dwindles. Street Vendors are also severely affected during winters.

Cold day conditions will continue to prevail in parts of Punjab, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar and north Madhya Pradesh in view of rain. Cold and moist north westerly winds sweeping across Northwest India and extending to eastern parts will add to the misery of people.

Shallow fog and rain did not allow temperature to rise in several parts of Uttar Pradesh. Here's a list of places where cold day conditions prevailed and temperatures maintained below 16°C -

Name of State Name of Places Maximum temp. on Friday(in °C) Uttar Pradesh Aligarh 13.4 Uttar Pradesh Jhansi 15.2 Uttar Pradesh Kanpur 15.2 Uttar Pradesh Meerut 15.3 Uttar Pradesh Agra 15.5 Uttar Pradesh Lucknow 15.9 Uttar Pradesh Allahabad 16.1 Weather in Bihar

In Bihar, cold day conditions have been improving since Thursday as the fog dissipated. Day temperature in Patna plunged from 14.8°C on Wednesday to 22.5°C yesterday. Below is a list of temperatures several parts of Bihar.

Name of State Name of Places Maximum temp. on Friday (in °C) Maximum temp. on Thursday (in °C) Maximum temp. on Wednesday (in °C) Maximum temp. on Tuesday (in °C) °C below normal Bihar Patna 22.5 21 14.8 14.5 8 Bihar Purnia 23.8 17 15.9 15.5 8 Bihar Gaya 23.3 21 15.1 15.9 8 Bihar Bhagalpur 17.6 21 15.2 16.2 9 However, this respite in Bihar seems temporary as cold north westerly winds from the northern plains will bring down maximums after 48 hours. The state will once again come under the grip of severe winter in India.

By: Skymetweather.com



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Call/Put Options Pricing: Hazy Future?

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 12 Januari 2014 | 23.55

Show Timings:

Friday: 10.30 pm, Saturday: 11.30 am

Sunday: 9:30am & 11.00pm

Published on Sat, Jan 11,2014 | 17:40, Updated at Sat, Jan 11 at 17:42Source : Moneycontrol.com |   Watch Video :

The year has changed and so has RBI. At least its position on Call & Put options has changed. Well partially! 3 months after SEBI cleared Call & Put options by amending the SCRA, RBI has also made way for their inclusion. The FEMA notification says 'shares or convertible debentures containing an optionality clause but without any option/right to exit at an assured price shall be reckoned as eligible instruments to be issued to a person resident outside India by an Indian company…'.

But hold the celebrations, because RBI being RBI has also imposed conditions. The notification is prospective - that was expected! No assured price exits – that too was expected!! Exit pricing will be de-linked from DCF – that too was expected!!! 'The Firm' broke that story way back in October. But that exit pricing would be linked to return on equity? That was not expected. So now we have two sets of pricing norms when it comes to the sale of shares by a foreign investor to Indian entity. How will this work? To answer that I have with me EY's Amrish Shah and Ashwath Rau of Amarchand Mangaldas.

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Devyani case: US regrets India's move to expel US diplomat

The United States on Friday "deeply regretted" that India felt it necessary to expel an American diplomat after senior diplomat Devyani Khobragade was asked to leave the country following her indictment in a visa fraud case.

"We deeply regret that the Indian government felt it was necessary to expel one of our diplomatic personnel," the State Department spokesman Jen Psaki said.

Also Read: How will Devyani Khobragade's return impact India?

"I can confirm that a US official accredited to the (American) Mission in India will be leaving post at the request of the government of India", Psaki said. The spokesman said "this has clearly been a challenging time in the US-India relationship" and the US expected that "this relationship will not come to a closure and India will take "significant steps" to improve the ties and return to a more "constructive place".

"We expect and hope that this will not come to closure, and the Indians will now take significant steps with us to improve our relationship and return it to a more constructive place," the spokesperson said.

Earlier in the day, India expelled a senior American diplomat within hours of Khobragade being asked to leave the US after her indictment in a visa fraud case for which she was arrested nearly a month ago, triggering strong reaction from the government here.

The unnamed Director-rank American diplomat was given "a little more than 48 hours" to leave India even as Khobragade was on her way home from New York where the US government finally approved her accreditation to the UN which gave her full diplomatic immunity as against partial immunity at the time of her arrest on December 12 when she was Deputy Consul General there.



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Hoardings against AAP leaders in Amethi ahead of rally

Hoardings against AAP leaders, including Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal, have sprouted across Amethi ahead of the party's 'Jan Vishwas' rally on Sunday, prompting it to demand additional security.

Also Read: Raje's austerity measures to give competition to AAP govt

Posters and hoardings have been put up by Rashtriya Rashtravadi Party at several places accusing the top three leaders of Aam Admi Party -- Kejriwal, Manish Sisodia and Kumar Vishwas -- of being "anti-national".

Local district convenor of AAP Hanuman Singh along with 20 others on Saturday met district magistrate Jagatraj Tewari to demand additional security for the rally at the Ramlila Ground which would be addressed byVishwas, expected to contest on the seat against Congress sitting MP, Rahul Gandhi.

In its memorandum, AAP expressed its apprehension that some political parties might try to disrupt the rally and violate peace and order.

On contacting Rashtriya Rashtravadi Party chief Prakash Chandra, he alleged that the body of AAP worker Santosh Koli in Noida was wrapped in the Indian tri-colour on August 7 last year which amounts to showing disrespect to the national flag. He added that a petition against it has also been filed in the Lucknow bench of Allahabad High Court.

Chandra said that his party would oppose all those responsible for such an "anti-national" act and indicated that Sunday's rally would also be opposed.



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Video: Tata Crucible Business Quiz 2013 Kolkata finals

Jan 11, 2014, 05.45 PM IST

The campus edition of Tata Crucible goes to three nations, the corporate edition to 24 cities. Watch the video to find out more.

Tags  Tata Crucible, Kolkata, business quiz

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Video: Tata Crucible Business Quiz 2013 Kolkata finals

The campus edition of Tata Crucible goes to three nations, the corporate edition to 24 cities. Watch the video to find out more.

Like this story, share it with millions of investors on M3

Video: Tata Crucible Business Quiz 2013 Kolkata finals

The campus edition of Tata Crucible goes to three nations, the corporate edition to 24 cities. Watch the video to find out more.

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The campus edition of Tata Crucible goes to three nations, the corporate edition to 24 cities. Watch the video to find out more.


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Video report: Problems the Indian textile industry faces

Jan 11, 2014, 05.43 PM IST

India is the world's largest producer of jute. It ranks second in cotton, cotton yarn, silk and cellulosic fibers. At one level this abundant supply of raw materials gives India the competitive advantage but the fundamental problem is price volatility.

Tags  Textile Conclave, cotton, silk, crude oil

Like this story, share it with millions of investors on M3

Video report: Problems the Indian textile industry faces

India is the world's largest producer of jute. It ranks second in cotton, cotton yarn, silk and cellulosic fibers. At one level this abundant supply of raw materials gives India the competitive advantage but the fundamental problem is price volatility.

Like this story, share it with millions of investors on M3

Video report: Problems the Indian textile industry faces

India is the world's largest producer of jute. It ranks second in cotton, cotton yarn, silk and cellulosic fibers. At one level this abundant supply of raw materials gives India the competitive advantage but the fundamental problem is price volatility.

Share  .  Email  .  Print  .  A+A-

India is the world's largest producer of jute. It ranks second in cotton, cotton yarn, silk and cellulosic fibers. At one level this abundant supply of raw materials gives India the competitive advantage but the fundamental problem is price volatility.


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Video: Tata Crucible Corporate Quiz travels to Lucknow

Jan 11, 2014, 05.46 PM IST

The Tata Crucible Corporate Quiz celebrates a decade of sharing knowledge and bringing together intellectual India on one common platform called Tata Crucible.

Tags  Tata Crucible Corporate Quiz 2013, Quiz, Lucknow, knowledge

Like this story, share it with millions of investors on M3

Video: Tata Crucible Corporate Quiz travels to Lucknow

The Tata Crucible Corporate Quiz celebrates a decade of sharing knowledge and bringing together intellectual India on one common platform called Tata Crucible.

Like this story, share it with millions of investors on M3

Video: Tata Crucible Corporate Quiz travels to Lucknow

The Tata Crucible Corporate Quiz celebrates a decade of sharing knowledge and bringing together intellectual India on one common platform called Tata Crucible.

Share  .  Email  .  Print  .  A+A-

The Tata Crucible Corporate Quiz celebrates a decade of sharing knowledge and bringing together intellectual India on one common platform called Tata Crucible.


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UB’s Unsecured Creditors: Happy Hours!

Published on Sat, Jan 11,2014 | 17:49, Updated at Sat, Jan 11 at 17:54Source : Moneycontrol.com |   Watch Video :

Last month, a Division Bench of the Karnataka High Court dealt an almost fatal blow to the 2.1 billion dollar USL-Diageo deal. The High Court disallowed the sale of USL shares by UB Holding given that winding up petitions had been filed against UB Holdings by some of its unsecured creditors. the company will most likely appeal this order in the supreme court but today, we are not here to weigh UB's chances on appeal or Diageo's legal options instead we are going to focus on  what this order means for asset sales where winding up is underway. Payaswini Upadhyay reports on the top 3 takeaways

First the story so far! In April last year, 10 unsecured creditors of UB Holdings filed a winding up petition against the company. While this petition and 4 similar others were pending, UB Holdings approached the Karnataka HC seeking permission to sell the shares it held in United Spirits to Diageo. The single judge allowed the sale and told the company to pay its secured creditors from the proceeds and also deposit 250 crore rupees with the court. The unsecured creditors of UBHL appealed the single judge order before a division bench. Last month, the division bench overturned the single judge order and held that the sale of USL's shares by UBHL to Diageo is void. 

In doing so, the division bench has laid down 3 important precedents for situations where assets sales are undertaken while a winding up petition is underway. The first precedent – that a court does not have any jurisdiction over such an asset sale, even if it is to offer interim relief, if a winding up petition has been filed but not yet admitted.

Also read: Call/Put Options Pricing: Hazy Future?

Section 536(2) of the Companies Act, 1956 envisages compulsory winding up by the Court and lays down that transfer of shares after the commencement of winding up is void. Case law has understood that to mean – that courts have discretionary power to allow such an asset sale if it's in the ordinary course of business. The Single Judge had used this discretion to permit the sale of shares by UB. On appeal, the division bench deliberated on whether a court can allow sale of shares even before a winding up petition is admitted. It answered the question in the negative saying if the court allows a company to do so, it can adversely affect creditors who may not even be aware of petitions made for alienation of property.

Shishir Mehta
Partner, Khaitan & Co.
"I think what the court has done in this case is it has clearly demarcated and deconstructed Sec 536(2). It has made a distinction between the first preliminary stage where the court is approached to admit a petition into winding up as opposed to actually admitting it. The court has held that there is a clear distinction contemplated under the Section whereby if the court has been approached to admit a company into winding up but the court has still not determined whether there is merit in that preliminary petition to actually admit it, then its clear that the court does not have the right to then interfere into the operation of the company or give consent to a transaction proposed by the company."

In fact the Karnataka High Court division bench went one step further to examine whether a court has any jurisdiction whatsoever, even in offering interim relief, if a winding up petition has been filed but not admitted. Sec 443 of the Companies Act lays down the power of a court on hearing a winding up petition. It allows the court to dismiss the petition, adjourn it, give interim relief etc.
The Division Bench interpreted that to mean the powers of the court to do kick in only after a winding up petition is admitted and duly advertised.

Vyapak Desai
Partner, Nishith Desai
"As in case of Sec 536(2), the jurisprudence as it stands to always talked about passing of interim orders anytime during the pendency of winding up petition. This order goes ahead and also interprets Sec 443 to say that the power to pass any such interim order only comes to the court after the pass an order on admission of winding up petition. The question now arises is till the time you admit a winding up petition, will a court now have the power to pass any interim order or only in relation to Sec 536(2) – I think the way 443 is interpreted in this judgment, it has much wider implications because somebody can use this to say that you cannot pass any interim order till the time the petition is admitted which would lead to circumstances where you want certain urgent relief pending the admission of the petition, you may not be able to do so."
 
Case law suggests that a court may permit an asset sale in the ordinary course of business even if a winding up petition has been filed but not admitted. The second key takeaway from this order is that the Division bench has made it clear that a strategic sale of shares is not equal to ordinary course of business.

When examining UB Holding's request to permit the sale of USL shares - the single judge bench of the Karnataka High Court accepted the company's argument that this sale was in the ordinary course of business. But the division bench disagreed.
H Jayesh
Founding Partner, Juris Corp
"There is a Bombay High Court judgment- way back in 1931- which says what is in the ordinary course of business prior to the winding up petition being filed and what is in the ordinary course of business after a winding up petition has been filed. Once the winding up petition is filed, all the bets are off because the jurisprudence which applies is different. Why I am giving that analogy is therefore what a pledgee should be doing under normal circumstances should be different from what a pledgee should be doing once the winding up petition has been filed. That equally applies to a mortgagee of any property who has self help rights which anyway they can go sell on their own and appropriate."

The third important key takeaway relates to the valuation adopted by UB for the sale of its stake in USL which was then approved by the Single Judge.

The Division Bench observed that Diageo had bought USL's shares from 4 group companies of UB Holding and that the transaction was done to acquire control. It held that the Single Judge order was incorrect in concluding that the price on the Stock Exchange was a reasonable price. It also noted that simply because SEBI, RBI and the CCI had approved the price, it didn't necessarily mean that it was in fact the actual fair value. The Division Bench concluded that the Single Judge should have appointed an approved valuer and heard the creditors affected by the sale before approving the price of the shares. 

Vyapak Desai
Partner, Nishith Desai
"While doing a transaction, one would tend to believe that if one authority has accepted a price to be a fair market price – one can have a different view but that doesn't mean this view is wrong. But here again parties will have to go into the aspects in further detail and look at the circumstances rather than rely upon formulae given in SEBI pricing or RBI pricing to say that if its fair as per SEBI, it is fair as per Companies Act- that may not be true."
 
H Jayesh
Founding Partner, Juris Corp
"Valuation should be such that it done from each entity's perspective. So if you are a promoter trying to sell of a stake held in two or three different entities, don't just do a single valuation of your stake. Here the borrower held 14% - what is the value of that in isolation should also have been considered. That apart, how much transparency can you can you bring in and sale valuation is also a function of that. I think that can make a significant difference."

The Court had no jurisdiction to allow the sale; the transaction was not bonafide and so the sale of shares stands void! Where does that leave Diageo? Well, experts say since Diageo bought the shares while the winding up petition was pending, some of the equitable reliefs may not be able available to it. Diageo's peril's aside, this order by the division bench is right up there on the series of judgments that have upheld the rights of unsecured creditors in the last couple of years! 

In Mumbai, Payaswini Upadhyay


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Innovation made us strong in India; optimistic on '14: Rado

Innovation was the key to Rado's success in India in the past 50 years, believes Matthias Breschan, CEO, Rado. "We have to make sure that we also continue to innovate in order to stay strong for the coming 50 years," he adds.

He says the luxury watch brands that are suffering today were doing rather well quite a few years ago. But they increased their prices without having altered the substance, the value that is inside the product.

Also Read: Luxury brands step up battle for travelling shoppers

He doesn't see the need to move Rado upstairs because it is positioned between Tissot and Omega. "We have a strong brand in each price segment, so our objective is clearly that we always try to bring best value for the price segment that we are strong in," Breschan told CNBC-TV18.

According to him, 2012 was a historic record year. He does not see why 2013 will not be another record year. He is also very optimistic about 2014.

Below is the verbatim transcript of Matthias Breschan's interview on CNBC-TV18

Q: I want to understand from you if you talk about Rado's global expansion plans and global expansion strategy, what are your plans in India going forward in terms of expansion, in terms of growth, what are you looking at right now?

A: What made us very strong in the past 50 years in India was that Rado was permanently innovating. We have to make sure that we also continue to innovate in order to stay strong for the coming 50 years.

Q: In terms of the consumer market as a whole in India, the consumer story has been growing despite challenges that are present in the Indian market, despite the slowdown that we have been seeing. Specifically talking about the luxury watch segment, it takes around 50 percent of the overall luxury product market as a whole. Do you see that segment growing in India?

A: The brands that are suffering today are those that were accelerating several years back when some brands increased prices drastically without having changed the substance, the value of the product and of course you can always reposition your brand back. You need to make sure that if you change the price, you need to change at the same time the substance, the value that is inside the product. If you only change the price and tell people from one day to the other that now you are good because the product is more expensive is somewhat cheating the consumer and those brands that stay disciplined, try to bring in best substance, value for money, even when the market is getting more difficult they turn out to be very successful.

Of course the Swatch Group, we have a big advantage because we have a leading brand in each of the price segment. We have no need to move Rado upstairs because Rado is positioned right between Tissot and Omega. We have a strong brand in each price segment, so our objective is clearly that we always try to bring best value for the price segment that we are strong in.

Q: Last two years have been fairly challenging for the consumer market, as well to an extent people are rethinking there are inflationary pressures, people are rethinking large scale purchases. Why it is still happening? I want to understand from you last two years how did you segment and position your pricing accordingly to meet those challenges?

A: I must say for Rado as well as for the Swatch Group, 2012 was a historic record year and there is no reason that 2013 will not be another record year and we also stay very optimistic for 2014. I think the reason for this success is first of all because the Swatch Group is present in all different price segments. Brands like Rado that were traditionally always very strong in the price segment of 1,000-4,000 Swiss franc always try to improve the substance, offer that we have in this price segment, but never changed or moved out of the segment that Rado was traditionally stronger in.

Q: In 2013-2014 you will continue with the current pricing strategy, but given the fact that there had been some challenges, any major changes or any major repositioning of your strategy that you may look at?

A: Of course. The strong depreciation of rupee hurts us like everybody else, but there is nothing we can change about this.

Q: Any kind of change in your pricing strategy? You will continue to have products across the globe, across price segments; that is what you are looking at?

A: Exactly. No changes.

Q: How different is the Indian consumer from the global consumer?

A: The Indian consumer definitely became very knowledgeable and demanding in the past 10-15 years in terms of watches, because of course not only the perception of watches changed a lot, the watches are not simply a tool anymore to tell the time, but it became an accessory that says something about your personality, your lifestyle, your preferences, your values and the consumer is more and more educated also about technical aspects in terms of materials on one side and movements on the other. That had changed the whole perception at the market in the past 10 years and that helps us to develop Rado so well in India.



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China to speed up yuan convertibility under capital account

China today said it will step up efforts to make its currency, the renminbi or yuan, convertible under the capital account this year. Accelerating yuan convertibility is one of the major tasks for forex authorities, China's forex regulator State Administration of Foreign Exchange said in a statement after a meeting of key officials.

The officials should facilitate international trade and investment denominated and settled in yuan, guard against impacts of cross-border capital movement and prevent systemic and regional risks, state-run Xinhua news agency reported. The yuan is currently only convertible under the current account, while its capital account convertibility is controlled by the state.

The government has on many occasions stressed the need to realise full convertibility to help the currency's internationalisation to reduce dependence on the US dollar. While pushing bilateral trade with many counties to be done in yuan, China has permitted convertibility of the currency under capital account at the new Shanghai Foreign Trade Zone, regarded a test bed for new reforms launched by the government to revitalise the slowing down economy.



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WD moves eastwards, rain expected in East and Northeast India

The Western Disturbance as an upper air cyclonic circulation over Jammu & Kashmir and neighbouring areas continues to bring rain in the foothills of Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhand. As the system is moving away eastwards, there will be significant reduction of precipitation in the form of rain and snow, in the next 24 hours.

Rain in North India

On Friday, rain and snow occurred in few parts of Jammu & Kashmir including Pahalgam which recorded 20.2 mm of precipitation. Qazigund and Batote received 8.4 mm and 3 mm of rain and snow. In Himachal Pradesh, Kullu recorded 15 mm of precipitation, Manali 6.4 mm, Kilong 6 mm, Sunder Nagar 5 mm, Solan 4 mm and Shimla 1.3 mm of rain and snow.

In Uttarakhand, Almora recorded 7 mm of precipitation, Tehri 3 mm, Pithoragarh 5.4 mm and Pantnagar 2.4 mm, in the last 24 hours.

Rain in East India

The weather in East India remained wet as Uttar Pradesh, Bihar and eastern Madhya Pradesh received good amounts of rain yesterday. Refraining from the normal course, even Nagpur in Maharashtra received traces of winter rain. Here's a list of amounts of rain in these regions-

State Name of the place Rain (in millimetres) Uttar Pradesh Allahabad 36.6 Uttar Pradesh Agra 14.5 Uttar Pradesh Kanpur 3.6 Uttar Pradesh Lucknow 2.5 Uttar Pradesh Bahraich 2 Uttar Pradesh Gorakhpur 0.8 Uttar Pradesh Bareilly 0.1 Madhya Pradesh Jabalpur 21.3 Bihar Gaya 32 Bihar Patna 6.2 Bihar Purnia 1.4 Bihar Bhagalpur 0.8  

The rain belt will travel further eastwards and cover rest of Madhya Pradesh and Bihar by tonight. The system will bring good showers in Bihar, Sub-Himalayan West Bengal, Assam, Arunachal Pradesh, Sikkim and other Northeastern states within 24 hours and reduce thereafter.

picture courtesy- firstpost

By: Skymetweather.com



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Watch out these stocks before you start trading next week

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 05 Januari 2014 | 23.56

Benchmark indices fell around 1.5 percent during the week amid low volumes.The Sensex ended the week at 20851, and the Nifty at 6211.15, down 262 points and 102 points respectively over the previous week.

Wall Street ended on Friday mixed after Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke reiterated the fed's commitment to keep interest rates low. The Dow Jones ended marginally in the green. The S&P and the Nasdaq take home minor losses. The dollar gains versus the euro, the yen and the Swiss franc.

Third quarter corporate earnings and macro data will keep investors busy next week. Here are 9 things that you need to keep an eye...


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Why Indian realtors would like to forget 2013 in a hurry

The real estate industry would want to forget 2013. The year saw builders stuck with lifetime high unsold inventories. Developers held back launches, refrained from sharp price cuts and pegged all their hopes on freebies and promotions.

Also Read: Realtors body flays hike in ready reckoner rate

Call it a vicious cycle, but cash-strapped builders say they cannot cut prices given the high trajectory of inflation and borrowing costs, whereas buyers say they will stay away until there is a sharp price correction. CNBC-TV18's special show Prime Property bring a recap of 2013.

A surest bang for the buck for Indians has been the real estate market, but the year that went by was an unusual one. 2013 closed with several key events changing the property game, starting with the tumbling rupee against the dollar that led some foreign funds either hold their investment plans while others exited Indian projects with lower returns.

According to Cushman & Wakefield, in the first half of 2013, real estate private equity investments were recorded at Rs 100,638 crore as against Rs 300,050 crore in 2012. That is a sharp 46 percent decline in investments. This severely impacted all real estate segments -- retail, commercial and residential in that order.Starting with the worst hit retail business.

Poor revenue models, exorbitant rentals, a lack of speciality outlets, low brand pull and last but not the least sheer mismanagement, all of this have to be blamed for India's glitzy malls losing their sheen.

Vacancy levels are alarming high at 14.51 percent prompting developers to defer mall openings.

Cushman & Wakefield said opening of 18 malls were deferred in 2013, 10 of which were housed in the National Capital Region (NCR). That doesn't come as a surprise considering NCR's mall vacancy is the highest in the country at a staggering 55 percent. Mumbai is a close second with 52 percent vacancy, followed by Ahmedabad and Chennai.

Sanjay Dutt, Executive MD, Cushman & Wakefield, said: "Blackstone has built up a portfolio of 25-30 million square feet of office, why not shopping centre? They would love to build a shopping centre, but there is just no quality shopping centre and it's not a FDI-compliant investment product from their point of view, IT parks are."

While some maybe getting big on India's commercial story, others initiated the process of office consolidation, resulting to shrinking office spaces. Rental values showed no signs of correction leading to sky-high vacancy levels pan-India.

Vacancy rate for 2013 signed off at around 18.2 percent, rising from 17.4 percent as of end of 2012. Hyderabad and Delhi NCR were the biggest contributors in terms of vacancy levels. This was largely due to the increased new supply as against the fall in absorption. Mumbai and Bangalore, on the other hand, witnessed marginal fall in vacancy.

Poor macroeconomic conditions and skyrocketing inflation make consumers wary of spending leading to a stark decline in residential units from 196,000 square feet to about 172,000 square feet. Overall 2013 witnessed a decline of 12 percent in new launches as against 2012.

Luxury segment saw a fall of 72 percent this year followed by a 25 percent and 13 percent decline in mid and affordable housing segments respectively. All this was due to the oversupply of units from the last three years builders were sitting on, say experts.

Boman Irani, CMD, Rustomjee Builders, said: "All charges that we pay, whether it be towards taker's premium, whether it be towards development charges, all are pegged against the ready reckoner rate. This means all those prices have gone up by 15-20 percent, and then add to that the funding cost, the profit added on, this would mean another 15-20 percent have gone up for the consumers."

Despite this, residential property prices continue to exhibit upward moment eroding consumers' purchasing power.

According to 99acres.com on a year-on-year basis, the NCR saw an 8 percent increase in property prices while Mumbai and Pune rose by 3 percent and Bangalore, Chennai and Hyderabad by 5 percent.Even the festive season did not bring any cheer for developers where the sales were lower by 90 percent compared to last year.

The question now is will 2014 bring in some good news with developers chopping rates for home buyers waiting at the fence.



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China 'major' uncertainty facing global economy: Soros

The future direction of China is the "major" source of uncertainty facing the global economy at the moment, according to billionaire investor George Soros.

"The major uncertainty facing the world today is not the euro but the future direction of China. The growth model responsible for its rapid rise has run out of steam," Soros, chairman of the Soros Fund Management, wrote in an opinion piece on the Project Syndicate website on Thursday.

Soros says there are "unresolved contradictions" in the leadership's current policies, which would have profound consequences for China and the world if they are not addressed.

"The Chinese leadership was right to give precedence to economic growth over structural reforms, because structural reforms, when combined with fiscal austerity, push economies into a deflationary tailspin," he said.

(Read more: Contrarian call: China to see double-digit growth in 2014)

"But there is an unresolved self-contradiction in China's current policies: restarting the furnaces also reignites exponential debt growth, which cannot be sustained for much longer than a couple of years," he said.

While the People's Bank of China began taking steps to curb the growth of debt in 2012, the government asserted its authority when the slowdown started to cause distress in the economy, he said. In July 2013, the leadership ordered the steel industry to restart the furnaces and the central bank to ease credit, enabling the economy to turn on a dime, he noted.

The economy's reliance on credit was illustrated in a recent report published by the country's state auditor, the National Audit Office, which showed local government debt had increased 67 percent from the end of 2010 to reach 17.9 trillion renminbi ($2.95 trillion) by the end of June 2013.

(Read more: China debt: The biggest 'known, unknown' in 2014?)

"A successful transition in China will most likely entail political as well as economic reforms, while failure would undermine still-widespread trust in the country's political leadership, resulting in repression at home and military confrontation abroad," he said.

According to Soros, there are some "eerie resemblances" with financial conditions in the mainland and those that prevailed in the US in the years preceding the crash of 2008.
However, he acknowledges that the Chinese government's control over the economy is a key, underlying difference between the two countries.

(Read more: China will not overtake US economy until 2028: CEBR)

"In the US, financial markets tend to dominate politics; in China, the state owns the banks and the bulk of the economy, and the Communist Party controls the state-owned enterprises," he added.

—By CNBC's Ansuya Harjani; Follow her on Twitter: @Ansuya_H


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Investors to closely watch Infosys results, Nov IIP data

Jan 04, 2014, 04.51 PM IST

The advance tax numbers indicate further slowing down in Q3FY14, contrary to number of reports that the revenue growth cumulatively across the sectors has bottomed out.

Tags  Infosys, Q3FY14 earnings, Nifty, Emerging Markets, AAP, Congress, BJP, IIP

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Investors to closely watch Infosys results, Nov IIP data

The advance tax numbers indicate further slowing down in Q3FY14, contrary to number of reports that the revenue growth cumulatively across the sectors has bottomed out.

Like this story, share it with millions of investors on M3

Investors to closely watch Infosys results, Nov IIP data

The advance tax numbers indicate further slowing down in Q3FY14, contrary to number of reports that the revenue growth cumulatively across the sectors has bottomed out.

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Aviral Gupta

The Q3FY14 earnings season will kick off with  Infosys declaring its results on Friday, January 10. Having a substantial weight in the Nifty Index – Infosys results will be keenly watched. Investors are disappointed with the kind of exits which have taken place from Infosys last quarter and its never-ending restructuring. Investors would be thoroughly scrutinising the results and would be keenly looking forward to the management commentary.

As far as earnings are concerned, the advance tax numbers indicate further slowing down in Q3FY14, contrary to number of reports that the revenue growth cumulatively across the sectors has bottomed out.

Investors would also be looking at FII inflows moreso as the global fund managers would be returning to their desk after the New Year holiday season and would be setting up the new asset allocation strategy for the year.

Also Read: Fed's bitter medicine may help heal emerging markets

The consensus emerging is that the developed markets are overvalued, whereas the emerging markets, including India and China, are cheaper as far as the valuation parameters are concerned. Hence, the expectations are that the flows into the emerging economies will continue despite the tapering. However, investors are cautioned to keep an eye on US bond yields which have spiked up sharply after the announcement of tapering.

Politics will continue to be in the limelight as we approach general elections in May 2014. Investors are fearing that the emergence of third front in the likes of AAP may not only take away sizeable chunks of votes from Congress but also from the BJP. In that case there is a strong likelihood of extremely hung and fragmented Parliament and the emergence of distribution of freebies against the progressive reform-oriented policies – in effect rolling back of reforms done till now, especially in key sectors like power.

As far as data is concerned – we have HSBC Services PMI on Monday, January 6. The last reading was 47.2. The external trade data and IIP for November will be declared on Friday, January 10. The growth of eight core sector industries slowed to 1.7 percent in November against 5.8 percent in the same month last year.

 The writer is investment strategist, Mynte Advisors.


Also Read

Sudarshan Sukhani

s2analytics.com

Markets remain subdued, may be starting a correction; close below 6200 will be a sign of weakness

Failure to cross 6415 and inability to sustain higher levels is not bullish. While the long term trend remains up, markets have become choppy, suggesting they may be fragile in the short term.

Bank Nifty find support at its lower level of the range and prices closed above to this support. We should wait for a breakout. CNX IT has seen a breakout on Friday. This breakout suggest a long trade in IT Stocks. We have SILVER in METALS. Prices are forming a base at its bottom. A breakout will give us a trading opportunity in SILVER. Then we have POWER Sector. The sector is consolidating at the top and suggests a correction in power stocks. Stocks in focus include MARUTI & LT. For each of these stocks, we analyze their technical picture; identify trades with stop loss and targets. At the end we have EUR-INR currency pair. Read full report »


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Overdrive: Mercedes Benz S-Class Vs Range Rover

Jan 04, 2014, 04.48 PM IST

Mercedes Benz S-Class is the ultimate expression of on-road motoring. It is definitely the best car there is in the world on-road. Everywhere off it Range Rover is still king.

Tags  overdrive, Mercedes Benz, Mercedes Benz S-Class, Range Rover

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Overdrive: Mercedes Benz S-Class Vs Range Rover

Mercedes Benz S-Class is the ultimate expression of on-road motoring. It is definitely the best car there is in the world on-road. Everywhere off it Range Rover is still king.

Like this story, share it with millions of investors on M3

Overdrive: Mercedes Benz S-Class Vs Range Rover

Mercedes Benz S-Class is the ultimate expression of on-road motoring. It is definitely the best car there is in the world on-road. Everywhere off it Range Rover is still king.

Share  .  Email  .  Print  .  A+A-

Mercedes Benz S-Class is the ultimate expression of on-road motoring. It is definitely the best car there is in the world on-road. Everywhere off it Range Rover is still king.


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AAP to release 1st list of Lok Sabha candidates in 2 weeks

With an eye on the 2014 Lok Sabha elections, the Aam Aadmi Party will declare the first list of its candidates who will contest the elections within 2 weeks. The decision comes as the party's national executive committee is currently meeting to formulate a plan of action for the upcoming general elections.

Also read: Two Arvind Kejriwals so far: Analysis

After its recent victory in Delhi, there have been indications that it is keen on enhancing its presence nationally. The party's national executive meeting comes as the party finishes one week in governance in Delhi on Saturday and has already won the confidence motion.

"We have always said that Rahul Gandhi vs Narendra Modi for the PM post is not a good signal. We should have a better alternative. If Arvind Kejriwal would become PM that is my dream but it all depends on lot of things including the party strength in numbers. So it is too early to say anything," party ideologue Yogendra Yadav had said before the meeting.

"We will discuss our strategy for Lok Sabha polls. We will discuss the process to select candidates and see how we can channelise the enthusiasm which is present in our cadres after the win in Delhi polls," added AAP leader Gopal Rai.

Party leaders have already said that they plan to expand their presence outside Delhi. Buoyed by its spectacular victory in the Delhi Assembly elections in which it managed to secure 28 seats in the 70-member Assembly, the party now aims to fight Lok Sabha polls in many states including Gujarat, Haryana and Uttar Pradesh.

The party has seen a considerable increase in its membership throughout the country in the last few months especially after the Delhi results. A number of top corporate executives including former Infosys board member V Balakrishnan, banker Meera Sanyal and Air Deccan founder Captain Gopinath have joined the party.

AAP passed its first test in the Delhi Assembly on Thursday with the Congress party extending its support during the trust vote. Apart from winning the trust vote and winning the election for Delhi Assembly Speaker, the party has put an end to red beacons in cars in the Delhi Secretariat.

The party has so far successfully delivered on its poll promises of providing free water and cutting electricity rates in the national capital.



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Total Recall: Here's what rocked the ad world in 2013

Jan 04, 2014, 04.53 PM IST

Today we are going to rewind 2013 and look at the year that was – all the big announcements, the controversies, the awards and much more.

Tags  Storyboard, Bobby Pawar, Ford Figo, JWT

Like this story, share it with millions of investors on M3

Total Recall: Here's what rocked the ad world in 2013

Today we are going to rewind 2013 and look at the year that was – all the big announcements, the controversies, the awards and much more.

Like this story, share it with millions of investors on M3

Total Recall: Here's what rocked the ad world in 2013

Today we are going to rewind 2013 and look at the year that was – all the big announcements, the controversies, the awards and much more.

Share  .  Email  .  Print  .  A+A-

Today we are going to rewind 2013 and look at the year that was – all the big announcements, the controversies, the awards and much more.


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Trend Spotting 2014: Here's what deals can be expected

Jan 04, 2014, 04.57 PM IST

As part of our Young Turks tradition we welcome the New Year with a panel discussion to spot the big ideas for 2014.

Tags  Young Turks, India, Anand Lunia, Google India, Seedfund, PayPal, Target, Angel Network, IndiaQuotient, Gaurav Kachru, Padmaja Ruparel, Gautam Gandhi, 500 Startups, TLabs, Kyron, VentureNursery, Indian Angel Network, 5ideas

Like this story, share it with millions of investors on M3

Trend Spotting 2014: Here's what deals can be expected

As part of our Young Turks tradition we welcome the New Year with a panel discussion to spot the big ideas for 2014.

Like this story, share it with millions of investors on M3

Trend Spotting 2014: Here's what deals can be expected

As part of our Young Turks tradition we welcome the New Year with a panel discussion to spot the big ideas for 2014.

Share  .  Email  .  Print  .  A+A-

As part of our Young Turks tradition we welcome the New Year with a panel discussion to spot the big ideas for 2014.


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Not giving up on India; media long-term pick: Akash Prakash

Despite the economic gloom of the last few years, Akash Prakash believes it would be "wrong to give up" on India.

"Whatever we have gone through in the last three-four years, the pain, policy paralysis, scandals is ultimately par for the course for democracy maturing and trying to improve and do things in a better way," CEO of Amansa Capital, told Ramesh Damani in a freewheeling conversation.

A general complacency emanating from the mid 2000s' global economic boom, coupled with a complete lack of governance by UPA II, was the script that became the Indian economy's undoing, he said.

Prakash said that whichever government comes to power, "it has to recognize the way we govern, the way our bureaucracy, systems of approvals and processes are, it doesn't work for a USD 2 trillion economy trying to grow at 9-10 percent a year. We have to redesign the way we govern and approach economic growth and large projects."

Also read: China 'major' uncertainty facing global economy: Soros

Among his long-term bets in the Indian stock market, the veteran hedge fund manager said media remains a robust play on consumption. "Digitisation is a huge discontinuity. It is a huge disruption in the media space. It is not very clear who will benefit but it is going to fundamentally change the media."

Below is the transcript of the interview.

Q: You published an article in July, which was headlined 'India's darkest hour'. [They were] prophetic words: markets collapsed after that but isn't it true in markets that in the depths of depression a new bull market begins?

A: I ended the article by saying that when things seem so grim and bleak, that is normally a time you should be working the hardest to find investment opportunities.

The idea of the article was just to say that at that time people had become little over optimistic because there was a new finance minister. People thought that economy was on the verge of recovering immediately.

My point was that things are going to take longer than people expected and things were going to get worse first before they get better.

Q: Would you say the low we saw during those grim days of August are the lows of the market and the market is now discounting a better future?

A: I think so.

Q: What leads you to believe that?

A: Two, three things. One is, the government genuinely has started functioning economically in the sense that some of the stuff that Chidambaram is doing, some of the steps to clear bottlenecks in projects, some of the decisions being taken in terms of natural gas pricing and trying to move to coal block allocations, trying to get things resolved, I think there is a sense that the Indian government is once again functioning and some decisions are getting taken.

Also the sentiment was incredibly negative at that point in time. Sentiment is also starting to stabilize a little bit. People are starting to believe that for India, 5 percent gross domestic product (GDP) growth is probably the bottom of the cycle and that growth will tick up from here.

I do believe that is the bottom. I think that was the time of maximum pain partly because of the over enthusiasm on India on a short-term basis. Plus also the fact that you had this whole crisis of tapering and there was perceived extreme vulnerability of India to external capital flows, which I think also is far reduced today with the USD 35 billion it has got with the FCNR deposits.

Also the current account itself on a sustainable basis has pretty much halved. So, India is far less vulnerable today.

Q: 2008 India was the BRICS poster boy. 2013 we are world's basket case again. What went wrong first?

A: In hindsight, we being considered a part of BRICS probably laid the seeds of our own doom. We became incredibly complacent, the politicians became incredibly complacent. We started believing that we are destined to grow.

I said to you earlier that there is no God-given right for any country to grow 8-9 percent if you look at economic history.

Instead of saying BRICS is a pathway which we should aspire to and if we take the right steps we can get to, we started believing that this has already happened. There was tremendous complacency on the part of policymakers and politicians and even business men that India has arrived. Our moment in the sun is here, nothing more needs to be done and we will just grow. That complacency is what has been our undoing.

Q: You are saying it seeped into the government and industry. In the government are you referring to the tax cases that the government launched against Vodafone, IBM? Are you saying that a country dependent on foreign investment should be more welcoming of it?

A: There are two things. One, the government, UPA-II, in the last five years has been almost zero economic reform. It has been so embroiled in one scam after the other that they just haven't been -- I don't think there is any sense of a long term vision of what they want India to deliver on the economic front. There is no sense of a coherent master plan of what they want to do for India economically.

There is a sense that ministers are doing their things on their own, there is no cohesive binding force or vision behind everything.

The tax case is just a manifestation of that. At USD 90 billion, India has the absolute largest of the current account deficit after the US. With the deficit at 4.8 percent, with that type of dependence on foreign capital, you can't go out and start shooting yourself in the foot by putting case after case on foreign multi-nationals. It will totally vitiate the investment environment.

I don't know right or wrong, I am not a tax lawyer. So, I am not sure who is in the right and who is in the wrong.

But the reality is whenever you talk to any investor in the US they constantly ask you these questions because they read the same headlines.

Q: You said India corporates have been complacent also. Where would you fault Indian corporates in the last five years? They have been pleading policy paralysis.

A: They have been pleading but if you look at the infrastructure developers – Credit Suisse, Barclays and CLSA have written all these have interesting research notes on the extent of over leverage among a part of corporate India.

The developers who built 65 percent of India's infrastructure in the last five years in the private sector are all massively over-leveraged. They can't meet debt payments, corporate governance, bust balance sheets, no cash flows. So, there was a feeling in a huge part of corporate India that the gravy train in terms of access to capital is unending.

That they can constantly access capital at any point in time they want which obviously was true in 2005-06-07 and before the crisis but it stopped. When the music stops, we will see who is left standing.

Q: Someone who follows British elections told me that in America when they vote it is like choosing between Tweedledum and Tweedledee because the right and the far right are fairly close in terms of economic policy. Is there any difference that you see looking ahead between Manmohanomics and Modinomics as far as India is concerned?

A: Manmohan Singh is an outstanding economist. Look at his credentials, his background and track record. The difference is just in terms of decision making. The impression being created today to the external world is in Manmohanomics, there is no decision being taken, either good or bad.

A lot of the good economics are being held hostage to a Congress high command, which seems to believe entirely in populism.

The Congress view of the world seems to be that we just need to constantly dole out more money and freebies.

Q: The other party has also supported the massive food bill, NREGA. So, what are we fighting for?

A: I have never met Modi personally but I have spoken to many people, industrialists and businessmen who have met him extensively, who have extensive dealings in Gujarat. There is a sense that he is a very decisive individual and he is willing to take decisions yes or no, so, one is that.

Second is, it is undoubted that the BJP's economic gameplan is more pro-business than the Congress. If you can say both are centrists, BJP is right-of-center and the Congress is left-of-center.

Q: This is the same government that opposed FDI in retail. So, where is it right-of-center?

A: There are sound bytes that everyone makes and does to cater to their respective electoral constituencies.

Q: You think they would have a more aggressive economic reform programme?

A: You look at history. If you look at 1998 to 2004, a lot of building blocks of the growth acceleration that India got were laid in that time. They that time had the same issues, they had the RSS, they had the pro-Swadeshi movement, a lot of stuff was done then which this current government for 10 years has not been able to do.

I don't think any of us are against social transfers or against more money being pumped into rural India. How can you be against that? You see how poor India is. The dispute we have with Congress is they don't seem to understand that if you don't have economic growth where will the money come to redistribute?

Q: Let me make a simple hypothesis to you about India: a burgeoning middle class that might become as much as 400-500 million is that the romance? Is that the promise of India that you still bet on?

A: India is still a market which attracts stock-pickers because you can find the individual companies, which you think have outstanding long-term prospects, have good governance and the market values them and you get rewarded for that.

Q: Tell me where do you stand? You are still bullish on India, you believe a new bull market may have started?

A: I think it is possible.

Q: New bull market creates new leaders, new opportunities, new money. Where do you sense the opportunity?

A: We are still very optimistic on media. We think digitization is a huge discontinuity. It is a huge disruption in the media space. It is not very clear who will benefit but it is going to fundamentally change the media.

Ad spend to GDP is very low in India, at less than 0.3 percent. It is far lower than any global averages. The ticker price for ad spots is very low. Media is a derived play on consumption.

The whole economics of the media business are going to undergo a significant change.

Q: Content or distribution where would you bet?

A: I think both. As of right now, we bet on content because that is an easier to play on. Distribution between DTH and cable it is still not clear. How much time it will take for the cable players to cut the local cable operator layer out and make it a proper B2C model is not very clear. So, we are still doing some more work but undoubtedly in my mind huge value will be created here.

Q: Would you be more pro-active towards the electronic media or the electronic and print media?

A: More [towards] electronic. We own one company in print:  DB Corp that owns Dainik Bhaskar. We think they are an outstanding management team, vernacular media in six-seven states. Readership in India is still growing as you know.

The electronic media in Indian language is not yet that much of a competition. You don't have the Google, Yahoos of the world like you have in English, which is already hurting the English print. So, vernacular print is a very interesting area to be in and electronic of course.

Q: But in India, a lot of government control is exercised on the media.

A: Much less than other markets. If you talk to any multi-national, Comcast, Disney or Viacom, they will say India is the single most exciting media opportunity in the world today because it is the only market in the world where they can come in and take 75, 100 percent stakes in the distribution part. Even in the channel part they can take 51 percent. They can take more.

Q: What other sectors? You mentioned media and the great management teams that is the perfect combination of a bull market -- unloved sector, great management team and great opportunity, media is one example. Any other way to express your hypothesis?

A: Others are very stock specific, it is not a broad theme. For example we own a NBFC called Cholamandalam Investment and Finance . We think they are a great management. The CEO of Cholamandalam is an outstanding individual, very aggressive, he talks a lot of sense, a young guy.

Others are more stock-specific stuff like we own something in IT services, we own 2-3 medium size IT services companies.

Q: How about pharma?

A: We own two pharma stocks. We own  Lupin and we own Cadila . We owned Lupin for seven years.

Q: Still a good prospect for a bull market?

A: I think so.

Q: Cadila because of the new molecule, new drug?

A: Because of the molecule and partly because Cadila has really done very poorly in the last year. If you look at Cadila's absolute EBITDA, it has been flat for three years.

It has put a lot of money upfront in terms of new facilities for vaccines, for biologicals and there is no revenue coming. 35-40 percent of the current gross block is into assets which are earning not even Rs 1 today.

So, the bet we are making is Pankaj Patel -- who owns 75 percent of the company -- is a good capital allocator and operating leverage will kick in.

Q: If you were to go by your gut and tell me this is the sector that will lead this whole market higher, which one would you say?

A: It can't be FMCG or pharma and unlikely to be IT. Pharma has done reasonably well, but it is also well valued.

So, media could be one. It will probably have to be some banks or may be PSU banks. I am not a fan of PSU banks, I don't like to buy them but it could be a cyclical trade. So, they may lead a rally or something in a cyclical sector, may be cap goods.

There are two big valuation disparities in the market, one is between defensives and cyclical sectors. The rally will be led by something which is a cyclical sector. I am not sure whether it is natural resources or infrastructure or it is petroleum, if the government totally decontrols stuff. It has to be something cyclical.

Q: In the 20 years that you have been following India who are heroes and who are the villains of the India story over the last 20 years period? Who would you say has done an outstanding job recognized or unrecognized?

A: There are many corporates. They have got the valuations, they are well recognized. They have put the India story on the map. It is universally acknowledged that we have some very good companies with some very good management teams.

The villain has been the whole system. We have shot ourselves in the foot. It is complacency, it is our system and everything else, the way our governance systems work, the inability to execute large projects, inability to get clearances in time.

We had an outstanding opportunity in 2007-08 where we were the toast of the world. We were seen as a country which will emulate what China has done – grow for 20 years at 8-9-10 percent and will do it in a democratic way which would create huge shareholder value.

The Chinese economy has been a home run but the Chinese stock market has done very poorly in the last 10-15 years. It has not been a great investment to be in China for the last decade.

India was seen as a place where you could make very good financial returns because there is capital discipline, there is a focus on RoE, there is democracy, it is a well functioning stock market and we were being seen as the next big thing.

Through our own complacency and partly some bad decisions, partly the economic environment turning, we have totally taken the air out of our own balloon effectively.

Q: A bull market needs various things, I am going to give you three or four things. Tell me which are the important ones for the bull market to continue. Continuing of quantitative easing, FII inflows into India, a stable government at the centre and fiscal discipline. Out of these 3-4 things what is important that the market has in order to get a new leg up?

A: A new leg-up in my view has to be a government that comes to power -- either Congress or BJP -- which is willing to break the mould and recognize that we have some serious flaws in our governance model that's holding us back from getting to 8-9-10 percent economic growth.

If we get a government – it could be BJP or Congress, I am no fan of either and don't care which comes -- they have to come and recognize the way we govern, the way our bureaucracy, systems of approvals and processes are, it doesn't work for a USD 2 trillion economy trying to grow at 9-10 percent a year. It has to be broken. We have to redesign the way we govern and approach economic growth, large projects.

Q: But it doesn't happen with a coalition government, right?

A: That is an excuse. What is the coalition government being voted into power for? To govern and to get economic growth. That cannot be an excuse. Is there anybody in India today who doubts that we can grow at 10 percent if we are unshackled? I don't doubt, I don't think anybody doubts that. So, what holds us back? It is our own system of governance, our own mindset and lack of decision making.

You just have to reexamine the way we do a lot of things.

Q: Does it help that you are in Singapore and away from Dalal Street?

A: I think so.

Q: How so?

A: Less noise. India is a very noisy place in the sense that six business newspapers, four business news channels, you can get obsessed all the time just trying to find the next data point on something.

Being outside you get a better sense of what's going on globally. What are the major trends globally, what are people thinking and talking.

If you ask me more than anything else, it is ultimately improvement in governance because in my view the next stage of the Indian bull market will come when local investors come in back. This market has been entirely propped up by foreigners. The entire mutual fund industry in equities is less than USD 25 billion. It is a joke.

Q: 20 years. Lots of ups and downs, do you still have a romance for Indian equities?

A: Of course. I always had the choice to do something else. When I started the fund I had the option to do a pan-Asian fund instead of an India-only fund. I am an Indian, I am an Indian passport holder, I have tremendous belief and faith in India even today.

I have great passion for the country. I do believe that our best years are still very much ahead of us and I believe that we have the building blocks in place. All the stuff we have gone through the last three-four years, the pain, the policy paralysis, all the scandals is ultimately par for the course for democracy maturing and trying to improve and do things in a better way. I still believe that India is a huge story waiting to unfold. It will be wrong to give up on India.



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