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Buy Competent Automobiles; target of Rs 100: Firstcall

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 21 Desember 2014 | 23.56

Brokerage house Firstcall Research is bullish on Competent Automobiles Company and has recommended buy rating on the stock with a target price of Rs 100 in its research report dated December 18, 2014.

Firstcall Research report on Competent Automobiles Company

"Competent Automobiles Company was incorporated in 1985 and is engaged in trading and servicing Maruti Suzuki vehicles in India has reported its financial results for the quarter ended 30 September, 2014. The company's net profit jumps to Rs. 20.93 million against Rs. 16.58 million in the corresponding quarter ending of previous year, an increase of 26.24%. Revenue for the quarter rose by 5.01% to Rs. 1958.70 million from Rs. 1865.32 million, when compared with the prior year period. Reported earnings per share of the company stood at Rs. 3.41 a share during the quarter as against Rs. 2.70 over previous year period. Profit before interest, depreciation and tax is Rs. 53.40 million as against Rs. 47.03 million in the corresponding period of the previous year."

OUTLOOK AND CONCLUSION

At the current market price of Rs. 87.20, the stock P/E ratio is at 5.19 x FY15E and 4.69 x FY16E respectively.

Earnings per share (EPS) of the company for the earnings for FY15E and FY16E are seen at Rs. 16.80 and Rs. 18.60 respectively.

Net Sales and PAT of the company are expected to grow at a CAGR of 6% and 14% over 2013 to 2016E respectively.

On the basis of EV/EBITDA, the stock trades at 0.93 x for FY15E and 3.40 x for FY16E.

Price to Book Value of the stock is expected to be at 0.59 x and 0.52 x respectively for FY15E and FY16E.

"We recommend 'BUY' in this particular scrip with a target price of Rs 100 for Medium to Long term investment", says Firstcall Research Report.

For all recommendations, click here

Disclaimer: The views and investment tips expressed by investment experts/broking houses/rating agencies on moneycontrol.com are their own, and not that of the website or its management. Moneycontrol.com advises users to check with certified experts before taking any investment decisions.

To read the full report click here


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What's next after a wild week in the market

After a week of high-octane turbulence, stocks have a good chance of drifting higher in the week ahead, giving the year a bullish finale.

Stocks most often gain in the month of December, so many analysts expect the year to end on a high note, barring external jolts, like the one from Russia in the past week.

In the last 10 years, the S&P 500 has been higher 80 percent of the time in December, with the final two weeks particularly strong, providing an average gain of 1.6 percent.Catch-up buying by fund managers and other year-end buyers is expected to provide support for a market that has pivoted around the price of oil for the past several weeks. Pressure from falling oil prices eased in the last few sessions, as traders appeared to believe the worst was over for crude prices for now.

Another positive boost for stocks came from the Fed after its meeting Wednesday, when Fed Chair Janet Yellen boosted confidence that the economy is improving, while reassuring markets the central bank is not planning to move quickly to raise rates.

"There's so much pain in the energy trade already, it may not be (a hurdle) anymore," said Tobias Levkovich, chief US equities strategist at Citigroup.

Levkovich said the market's surge in the past week was in part due to a massive short squeeze. "We think some of the rally stuff we're getting is borrowing from next year," he said.

In the coming week, trading will be compressed into 3 ½ days because of Thursday's Christmas holiday and an early close Christmas Eve.

Read More: Blackrock's Rosenberg: Stocks will beat bonds in 2015

The S&P 500 and Dow were more than 3 percent higher in the past week, after wild seesaw trading drove the Dow down a little more than 200 points in the first two days of the week , before soaring 735 points in the last three days of the week. Friday's gain was muted with the Dow up 26 at 17,804, and the S&P 500 9 points higher at 2,070, five points below its all-time closing high.

Read More: Oil seeks bottom

Buffeted by the expirations of options and futures, stocks and oil traded violently in both directions. West Texas Intermediate oil futures for January closed at $57.81 per barrel, a decline of 2.2 percent for the week.

Crude's January contract was taken off the board Friday afternoon, and February's WTI contract traded higher, above $58 in late trading. While stock traders made bets based on oil bottoming, energy analysts say crude may have more selling ahead of it, particularly in late winter when demand drops.

Read More: US oil soars on short-covering

What to Watch

There is a batch of important data in the coming week, starting with existing home sales Monday, then the third look at third-quarter GDP, durable goods and personal consumption Tuesday, and weekly jobless claims on Wednesday.

"The consensus is GDP is up a few tenths, 4.2 percent with another upward revision," said Chris Rupkey, chief financial economist at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi. "It's really more important to see what's going on with the fourth quarter. It almost feels like Fed officials need to see 3 percent GDP to inch closer to rate liftoff."

For that reason, he is focused on Tuesday's personal consumption and spending and the inflation gauge within that indicator. "Yellen said actual inflation isn't that important. It's the outlook. I don't think the market buys that. The market is thinking there's some kind of deflation out there. We want to see what the PCE/deflator, the core is going to do on Tuesday," said Rupkey.

The Treasury curve continued its flattening move in the past week. The two-year note was yielding 0.638 late Friday, and the 10-year was at 2.16, up from the 2.10 it was at the week earlier.

"The best economy in the world has the highest yields. It's bringing in some buying," Rupkey said. "The yield curve runs mostly off of the expectations for Fed policy. It is still flattening since the Fed meeting Wednesday. The market seems to have the message that the Fed is going" (to hike rates).

The market generally expects the Fed to raise rates from zero for the first time after the first half of 2015.

Levkovich said the stock market should not run into problems when the Fed makes its initial hike next year, and he expects the S&P 500 to reach 2,200 by the end of 2015.

The decline in oil should be a net positive, he said. "My concern about energy is not about (lost) jobs," he said. "My focus is mainly around the idea that if credit markets get disrupted enough by it, does it raise the cost of capital for everybody. … We don't want a leaching out of higher capital costs to the rest of the community."

"It's a net positive in terms of the consumer and the public is getting a massive improvement," he said. High-yield energy corporate debt continued to get hit hard this past week.

As for companies in the sector, they will feel the pinch from lower prices but other companies could as well, he said. Traders sought bargains in energy stocks this past week, pushing the S&P energy sector 9.2 percent higher.

"There will be ripple effects into other industrial companies that have greater energy exposure than even the managements know," he said. "If we pulled back on rig activity globally then you'll have fewer helicopter rides, fewer aerospace parts for those helicopters. … The industrial companies are not necessarily aware of how big their energy exposure is."


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Govt strips Devyani Khobragade off her duties

MEA Spokesperson Syed Akbaruddin said the action taken against Khobragade is related to an ongoing inquiry against her in a vigilance case. Vigilance case against Khobragade is underway on charges that she had failed to disclose that her husband is a US citizen and that she has got US passports for her two children.

The government stripped diplomat Devyani Khobragade off her duties in the Ministry of External Affairs, days after she spoke to media without seeking permission.

Reportedly, Khobragade was stripped of her duties as director in the Development Partnership Division and has further been placed on "compulsory wait"

MEA Spokesperson Syed Akbaruddin said the action taken against Khobragade is related to an ongoing inquiry against her in a vigilance case.  Vigilance case against Khobragade is underway on charges that she had failed to disclose that her husband is a US citizen and that she has got US passports for her two children.

 A 1999-batch IFS officer, Khobragade, was arrested on December 12 on charges of making false declarations in a visa application for her maid. She was released on a USD 250,000 bond.

 The diplomat was strip searched and held with criminals, triggering a row between the two sides with India retaliating by downgrading privileges of certain category of US diplomats. After the row broke out, Khobragade was transferred to India's permanent mission to the UN. Following her arrest, her passport was kept in court's custody..


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Financial planning tips for self-employed professionals

Manikaran Singal
Certified Financial Planner

Few weeks back I met a couple in one investor awareness program. Both husband and wife were self-employed. Husband was a practicing doctor and wife was an interior designer. Both of them earned well but were apprehensive about getting into a financial planning process. Their main concern was that they were not sure what their true income was. As they were not getting a fixed monthly salary their thinking was that a fixed process may not work well for variable cash flows. So they felt it could be quite difficult for them to get into financial planning, even though they understand its importance.

In the name of financial planning they had invested to save taxes as recommended by their accountant. They had bought some insurance policies in the name of children and pension plans for themselves, as advised by their banker. And of course they held number of properties which can easily be expected from a person of their income and work profile. There was no clear guidance on future. Even after having so much of assets they were not sure where their life is heading to.  

Their worry was very easy for me to understand as I myself am a self-employed professional, and face the same issues of uneven cash flows, but still I am managing the things well as required for my personal wellbeing.

Financial planning is not about tax saving only. It definitely does not mean tax evasions, which most of the self-employed professionals do by hiding their actual income and then deploying that money into assets like real estate and gold. Neither does it mean having insurance policies in the name of every family member. It is all about organizing your financial life, so you can enjoy, use and distribute your wealth comfortably.
 
But it is also true that you need to follow a structured approach to achieve your goals. So how do you form that structure in the case of the self-employed, let us figure that out.

In the case of self-employed professionals the main challenge lies in separating the business and personal expenses. Personal expenses get funded on "as and when" basis out of business income and personal investments gets withdrawn to support business needs. This is because from an accounting and taxation perspective there is not much difference between using your personal or business proprietorship account, so you find it easy to pay everything from one business account. But this way you dilute your hold on personal expenses.

Understanding of personal cash flow is very important for a proper financial plan, so first things first list down the details of your personal spending. Make a list of items you spend on like rent, EMIs, grocery, clothes, petrol, vacations etc. It's not that difficult once you start working on it. To make your cash inflow clear, start paying yourself a fixed salary every month. Yes, start imagining yourself as employee of your firm and pay yourself whatever you feel like you deserve, or may be enough to fund your personal expenses. Create a decent emergency fund at business level so that your salary payment should not get stopped in case of any slowdown period.

Creating emergency funding at personal level is also very important to manage personal expenses in case you stop getting regular salary from your own business.

Once you get hold of your cash flows and create separate emergency fund at personal and business level, look for insurance cover. Having adequate insurance coverage gains more importance when you are self-employed. As you are your own employer so your absence from work will definitely cost a lot at your business as well as personal level.   Insure yourself and your family for health and accidents, so the hospitalization cost should not be a burden to your business. Take adequate life insurance cover, so your personal goals and expenses, and even your business liabilities gets comfortably paid off from insurance proceeds in case of untimely demise. If your business involves taking heavy loans and which includes your personal liability too then better to buy life insurance under Married Women's Property Act.

After completing your risk management by keeping and maintaining emergency funding and having adequate insurance coverage it's the time to start saving for your goals. Many times self-employed people feel that there's no retirement age for them and they will keep on working as long as they can. But what they ignore is that they will not be as effective at work when they are 65 as they are today. And moreover who knows what's the future has in store. So it's better to stay planned always. Fix your financial goals like children education, marriage, own retirement etc. or whatever you want to save for and start allocating your money into suitable investment options. Take note of all options available, be in touch with professionals and invest as per your financial plan and risk tolerance.

You should understand the difference between accountant and adviser. Every profession is specialized in a specific area. Some may be expert in your business accounting and some are expert in managing your personal finances. Now being into a business, you should know whom you should approach for what questions. Engaging with a financial planner for your personal finances is as important as engaging with a Chartered Accountant for business needs.


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Bharti Infra on strong footing, going forward: ICICIdirect

Bharti Infratel (BIL), with strong free cash flow generation, a low risk annuity business model and expected high tenancy growth, owing to the already commenced data revolution, we believe Bharti Infratel is on a strong footing, going forward, says ICICIdirect.

ICICIdirect.com's report on  Bharti Infratel (BIL)

"Bharti Infratel (BIL) is the market leader in the tower sharing space with a portfolio of about 84,303 towers (36381 towers at the standalone level and 47922 towers via 42% stake in Indus). Though the tower growth has been in the range of 1-4% in the past years, revenues, EBITDA and PAT have grown at 11.5%, 16.6% and 59.0% CAGR respectively, in FY10-14. The growth has been aided by the increase in tenancies from 1.90x in FY12 to about 2.01x in FY14, which lends high operating leverage. The company also has the top three telecom service providers as its anchor tenants. With the impending launch of Reliance Jio's services and a ramp up in data offerings by existing operators, demand for additional tenancy is bound to increase. BIL generates about Rs 1767.7 crore free cash flow each year and has stated a dividend policy of distributing 60-80% of its standalone profits or 100% of interest dividend, whichever is higher. The company is also open to growing by inorganic expansion an when there is a suitable opportunity. With strong free cash flow generation, a low risk annuity business model and expected high tenancy growth, owing to the already commenced data revolution, we believe Bharti Infratel is on a strong footing, going forward."

"The company has now adopted a strong dividend policy by committing to distribute as much as 60-80% of its standalone profit or 100% of interest dividend, whichever is higher. The distribution of Rs 4.4/share as dividend in FY14 and an announcement of Rs 4.5/share (represents the Indus dividend received by BIL) gives credence to its stated policy and also suggests an improvement in the return ratios, going ahead", says ICICIdirect.com research report.

For all recommendations, click here   

Disclaimer: The views and investment tips expressed by investment experts/broking houses/rating agencies on moneycontrol.com are their own, and not that of the website or its management. Moneycontrol.com advises users to check with certified experts before taking any investment decisions.

To read the full report click here


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Buy Escorts; target of Rs 163: Kotak Securities

Kotak Securities is bullish on Escorts and has recommended buy rating on the stock with a target price of Rs 163, in its research report dated December 05, 2014.

Kotak Securities' report on Escorts

"Escorts, delayed onset and patchy South-West monsoon had adverse impact on kharif crop, area coverage and yields impacting farmer's income and tractor demand. We expect the tractor demand to stay subdued in the near term. Given near term weakness in tractor demand, turning around of loss making divisions will be important for Escorts over the next 2-3 quarters. Turnaround of loss making business coupled with expected better tractor demand in the medium to long term will drive earnings growth for the company in FY16. Post results, the stock has corrected by 27%. In view of adequate upside from current levels, we upgrade the stock to BUY (ACCUMULATE earlier) with price target of Rs 163 (earlier Rs 169)", says Kotak Securities research report.

For all recommendations, click here

Disclaimer: The views and investment tips expressed by investment experts/broking houses/rating agencies on moneycontrol.com are their own, and not that of the website or its management. Moneycontrol.com advises users to check with certified experts before taking any investment decisions.

To read the full report click here


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Time to buy HFCs as wholesale rates dip? UBS says go for it

UBS expects HDFC's earnings (standalone) to improve from 15 percent CAGR over FY12-14 to 20 percent CAGR in FY16-FY17E. It has upgraded ratings on the stock with a revised target price of Rs 1300.

Moneycontrol Bureau

UBS believes housing finance companies (HFCs) will be the biggest beneficiaries among non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) as cost of funds may fall faster than lending rates. The firm expects wholesale rates to further decline, with 10-year G-Sec rates touching 6.5 percent by March 16 (versus 7.9 percent now) which may translate into 100-150 basis points (bps) decline in banks' lending and deposit rates.

With easing liquidity and lower inflation, wholesale rates have fallen faster than retail term deposit rates with 3 year AAA rates declining by 130 basis points year-to-date (YTD). This, according to UBS, will benefit HFCs the most.

"Mortgage growth has remained resilient for leading HFCs and we expect growth to remain strong at 19-20 percent over FY16-17E. Loan growth in non-mortgage segment has been subdued but this should pick up in H2FY15/FY16. This coupled with improvement in margins would boost earnings growth of HFCs," it says in a report.

UBS expects HDFC 's earnings (standalone) to improve from 15 percent CAGR over FY12-14 to 20 percent CAGR in FY16-FY17E. It has upgraded ratings on the stock with a revised target price of Rs 1300.

Among others,  LIC Housing Finance is its preferred pick with a new target price of Rs 550 per share. Falling interest rate cycle and likely improvement in mortgage spread favour the stock.

UBS has also upgraded ratings on  Indiabulls Housing Finance  to 'BUY' with revised target price Rs 575 respectively on favourable business cycle.


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Big boosters: 12 largecaps to buy before 2014 ends

SLIDESHOW

Sat, Dec 20, 2014 at 16:39

| Source: Moneycontrol.com

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


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Richard Verma sworn in as US Ambassador to India

Richard Rahul Verma, who quietly played a key role in the Congressional passage of the civil nuclear deal and a strong advocate of deepening Indo-US ties, has been sworn in as the US Ambassador to New Delhi, becoming the first ever Indian-American to hold the post. The 46-year-old was sworn in by Secretary of State John Kerry at the State department.

Verma is scheduled to arrive in India ahead of Kerry's visit to Delhi next month. US President Barack Obama will arrive in late January to attend the Republic Day Parade on January 26 as the Chief Guest.

He was confirmed by the Senate by a voice vote last week.

Verma, who quietly played an important role in the Congressional passage of civil nuclear deal with India, had advocated for strong Indo-US ties when in the administration and recently started 'India 2020' project at the Centre for American Progress — a top American-think tank.

He will replace Nancy Powell, who resigned in March after a damaging row over the treatment of diplomat Devyani Khobragade over visa fraud charges.

The US Embassy in New Delhi is currently headed by a charge d'affaires, Kathleen Stephens. Verma's association with Obama goes back to 2008 when he worked on presidential debate preparations for the then Illinois senator.

He served as Assistant Secretary of State for Legislative Affairs under Hillary Clinton from 2009 to 2011, and was a senior counsellor at law firm Steptoe & Johnson as well as the Albright Stonebridge Group.

"Known as a talented leader and manager, he is recognised for his many years of experience working on high-level policy in the federal government, in the private sector and with non-governmental organisations, especially on matters relating to the affairs of South Asia and India, including political-military relations," according to his profile on the State Department Web site.

His knowledge and ability to set the agenda will enable him to strengthen bilateral relations with India, a pivotal nation of critical global importance to the US, it said. His parents went  to the US in the early 1960s.

"It is a day of celebration for Indian-Americans," said Dr Sampat Shivangi, national president of Indian American Forum for Political Education.

"Verma deserves this worthy appointment due to his dedication and well deserved respect he commands from President Obama and entire US Congress and the nation," said Shivangi, one of the few Indian-Americans invited to attend the swearing-in ceremony at the State Department yesterday.


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Do you invest to save tax?

Arnav Pandya

Sometimes an investment that cannot be bought due to unattractive returns and benefits it offers, is actually bought just for the purpose of saving tax. There is a clear way in which every individual has to approach this situation and here are some of the main points that can be considered in this analysis.


Nature of tax benefit

There can be two types of tax benefits that an individual can get when they make a certain investment. The first one involves the benefit at the time of making the investment. It is a deduction that is available when the money is invested. A deduction means that the amount is reduced from the taxable income of the individual so this would end up lowering the tax that has to be paid. This is the kind of benefit that one sees when there is an investment that is covered under Section 80C of the Income Tax Act in instruments like insurance premium, National Savings Certificates, PPF, EPF etc.

The other tax benefit is that the income that is earned on the investment has a beneficial tax treatment. This could either be a part of the income that is tax free or it could be that the entire income is tax free. There is also a chance that the income earned from a specific investment route has a tax rate applicable that is lower than what would be witnessed for similar earnings from other areas. All this would make the route slightly attractive for the investor. Both these types of tax benefits by themselves might not shift the decision to one of investing but it can sometimes help in the overall process.

Usage of limits

There is also a situation wherein there are limits that present for a specific benefit like the deduction under Section 80C where there is an overall limit of Rs 1.5 lakh. It could be that there are other elements or other routes wherein this limit is being used up and in such a position the additional tax benefit actually could be working out to be nothing for a specific investment because it is already being used up. Many times people do not realise this point and they keep making investments under the belief that there is a tax benefit coming to them when this might not be the case. Also it could be that there is a position where the savings in income tax due to the benefit on the income side is also not significant which can turn around the entire working. In such cases it would be better to stay away from the investment and use other options that are more suitable for achieving a specific goal.

Single or multiple investments

Various types of investments have different implications and one aspect that needs to be considered is the kind of money that would have to be invested by the individual over a period of time. Most people look at the present and what they see as the cost in terms of making the investment only immediately. But this need not be the whole story because it could be that there are several investments where there are regular payments that come in year after year. For example, buying a regular premium life insurance policy that expects buyer to pay for certain minimum number of years. In such a situation there is a longer and a larger investment commitment that the individual is making and this also needs to be factored in the calculations. It might not be prudent or suitable for everyone to make long term investment commitments and hence this should be brought into the investment decision making process.


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MyCFO: Expert to navigate your financial operations

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 14 Desember 2014 | 23.56

If you are looking for a chief financial officer for your venture, meet S Venkatarman and Deepak Narayanan of MyCFO.

If you are looking for a chief financial officer for your venture, meet S Venkatarman and Deepak Narayanan of MyCFO.

For entire interview watch accompanying video.


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The Ashok Chawla Interview!

Show Timings:

Friday: 10.30 pm, Saturday: 11.30 am

Sunday: 9:30am & 11.00pm

Published on Sat, Dec 13,2014 | 20:41, Updated at Sat, Dec 13 at 20:41Source : CNBC-TV18 |   Watch Video :

Constitutional challenge to Competition Act, a word of caution for the Private Equity Industry, possible solution for the Thomas Cook problem, explanation to the Tesco surprise and the upset created by COMPAT's DLF order- CCI Chairman Ashok Chawla spoke to CNBC-TV18's Payaswini Upadhyay on all this and more.

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


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Overdrive: First drive report of Tata Bolt

Overdrive's Bertrand D'Souza test drives the Tata Motors' Bolt. For more watch accompanying video.

Overdrive's Bertrand D'Souza test drives the Tata Motors ' Bolt. For more watch accompanying video.


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Storyboard Special: 15 years of building brands

If 1991 was about opening up the economy, the years that followed saw companies scrambling to catch the attention of India's new emerging consumer class.

As part of CNBC-TV18's 15th anniversary, let us rewind to 1999 and take a look at the big categories that emerged, how advertising has evolved and reflected changing society and how brands have tackled the digital frontier. Santosh Desai, CEO of Future Brands and expert analyst talks more about it on this special episode.


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Overdrive: Trace 15 yrs of Indian automobile industry

Overdrive's Bertrand D'Souza traces 15 years of the Indian automobile industry as part of CNBC-TV18's 15 year celebration. For more watch accompanying video.

Overdrive's Bertrand D'Souza traces 15 years of the Indian automobile industry as part of CNBC-TV18's 15 year celebration. For more watch accompanying video.


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Only Much Louder: Artiste management booking agency

Catch Vijay Nair, Founder & CEO of Only Much Louder, an artiste management and booking agency that manages some of the biggest acts in the country including the Bacardi NH7 Weekender!

Catch Vijay Nair, Founder & CEO of Only Much Louder, an artiste management and booking agency that manages some of the biggest acts in the country including the Bacardi NH7 Weekender!

Watch video for more.


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Watch: Overdrive India's Superbike Festival

Overdrive brings you all the action from the 4th edition of the Overdrive India Superbike Festival. For more watch accompanying video.

Overdrive brings you all the action from the 4th edition of the Overdrive India Superbike Festival. For more watch accompanying video.


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USD strength, deflation take charm off low oil prices: IEA

Crude prices have been crashing and the International Energy Agency (IEA) has added fuel to fire by cutting its oil demand forecast for 2015 by a hefty 2.3 lakh barrels per day to 9 lakh barrels a day. Antonie Hallf, head-oil industry at IEA says the Russia accounted for most of the cut, followed by nations such as Venezuela, which depended on local oil production to meet most of their foreign income, .

Normally, low oil prices are a boon to the economy and it may lead to tax cut for consumers, etc. But there are a few upsetting factors this time around, he adds. "The strength of the dollar for instance. In many currencies oil price has not declined as much as in dollar terms because of foreign exchange issues. You have many countries cutting subsidies including India, which is a great move, but that means consumers do not see the full impact of the low oil price. And finally deflation; which is something that most of us have not known except in Japan," he told CNBC-TV18.

Below is the transcript of Antonie Hallf's interview with Latha Venkatesh on CNBC-TV18.

Q: You have cut demand growth estimate for 2015 by 230,000 barrels per day, which regions are going to consume less?

A: The country that accounted for most of this cut is Russia. The concern that we have about Russia is that with low oil price, their export revenue is down and this is compounded by the international sanctions that have been slap on Russia after the Ukraine conflict. So, we have reduced our demand growth forecast from Russia and also from neighbouring countries that demand on Russia for their own economic growth. We have also trimmed little bit in other countries which like Russia depend on their own revenue for most of their foreign income for instance Venezuela. So that's been the concern.

Q: What about the bigger economies China, euro zone. Is there any tweaking, lowering or increase in their estimated demand?

A: It's a different issue. Normally with low oil price there is a stimulus to the economy and this may happen to some extent, the low oil price is a tax cut for consumers, it's normally a boon to the economy but there is probably some upsetting factors this time because the general economic context is very weak and also because of number of other issues. The strength of the dollar for instance, in many currencies oil price has not decline as much as in dollar terms because of these foreign exchange issues. You have many countries cutting subsidies including India, which is a great move and we completely agree with but that means is that consumers do not see the full impact of the low oil price. And finally deflation; deflation is something that most of us have not known except in Japan. So it is difficult to access exactly how it is going to play out but in a deflationary environment the concern is that lower prices will feed into expectations of deflation and we will hold back business spending and consumer spending as well.

Q: What about supply estimates for 2015 from Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and from non OPEC sources?

A: We do not do forecast for OPEC. We do forecast of capacity for the medium-term and we are going to do a new forecast of OPEC capacity in February when we release our next medium-term on market report in 2015.

For non-OPEC we have a supply growth forecast of 1.3 million barrels per day for 2015 which is significant but it's down a lot from the estimate for 2014 which is 1.9 million barrels per day. 1.9 is a record. We do not see a record year next year but we are not just as yet seeing a big impact of low prices on production from non-OPEC countries.

Q: At what prices do you think supplies will start to go out of production since you have estimated something lower?

A: It is a difficult question and I am not going to try to answer it precisely because there are too many moving parts in this. First of all it is not just the price; it's how long the price stays at those levels, it's how much more it has room to go down, it's only about expectations of prices. So it's not just about the prices what companies think the price will do. Second, you can compare these prices with costs; costs are moving down as much as oil prices. The cost of things you need for development, production, steel or services everything is going down and efficiency, savings, productivity, everything is going up. So it's a complicated equation.

Latha: I take your point that it is a moving target, still there must be some threshold level at which some high cost projects have to stop producing?

A: We have looked at this issue for some project and we have found that to these prices some high cost projects, mega projects become challenging but you have to distinguish between projects that have already been funded, those will go through and projects that are yet to be funded and those may be postponed or delayed but it may not affect production now. It will affect the production in few years.

Latha: Still I am groping for some ballpark number – USD 60-65 per bbl?

A: At USD 60 per bbl it is safe to say that some companies will be taking a very hard look at some of their projects and perhaps postponing or canceling some projects.


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Is inflation finally conquered? Experts analyse

In a disappoinment to the market which was hoping for growth to crawl back, industrial growth number for October showed a contraction of 4.2 percent.
The detailed data was even more discouraging, as manufacturing contracted by 7.6 perceny; capital goods by 2.3 percent; consumer goods by 19 percent and consumer durables by 35 percent.

This seminal fall in consumer goods is corroborated by companeis like Havells  and TTK Prestige  lowering their sales guidance sharply for the second half of this fiscal.

On the flip side, inflation seems to be finally coming udner control. CPI rose by just 4.38 percent in November from year ago level and price levels were almost flat in October ; food inflation fell even more to 3.14 percent from year ago levels, while non-food and non-fuel prices rose by just 5.5 percent, which was down from 8 percent levels for a better part of 2013.

In an interview to CNBC-TV18, Dr. Pronab Sen, country director at IGC and former chief statistician of India along with Sajjid Chinoy, India economist at JP Morgan discuss if inflation is finally conquered and must the RBI governor hasten his promised rate cut.

Below is the verbatim transcript of Sajjid Chinoy and Dr. Pronab Sen's interview:

Q: Is Index of Industrial Production (IIP) as bad as it looks? After all October was a month when we had a lot of holidays, I mean the Dussehra holidays came in and then there were some election holidays in Maharashtra and the Diwali holidays?

Chinoy: Ironically, what worried me yesterday a little bit more was the consumer price index (CPI) numbers not the IIP number. The IIP had lots of one offs. For starters IIP is notoriously volatile don't be surprised if two months later this number is revised up substantially. However, there were two specific one offs that should not be a concerned one is just a working days issue. This is what happened when US weather was very adverse a year ago. The number of working days is almost 15 percent less than the month before and therefore you will have lower production.

There was another on off which is a large factory in the consumer durable sector actually close shop and there would be some sequential decrease because of that. So, I would not worry too much about the October number; if you look at the high frequency data in November you see auto production has increased ten percent sequentially on a seasonally adjusted basis. The November purchasing managers index (PMI) was at the 21 month high the manufacturing PMI, the services PMI was at a 6 month high so I think October was aberration you will see the November numbers bounce back.

For me the concern was that the headline CPI number was very good. There is good news in lower food prices and lower oil prices but if you look at the month-on-month a seasonally adjusted momentum of core this is the second consecutive month that the number has gone up a lot. It went up 0.7 percent in October, it went 0.5 percent in November and it will strip out the impact of petrol and diesel which is part of core given the way it is defined. The numbers get even more soberry it is o.7 for last month and 0.8 this month. I guess it adds up to that fact there is something up in demand.

Q: Which elements in the core are rising?

Chinoy: It is essentially across the board. If you look at housing for example, if you look at personal requisite; so only transport and communication saw the biggest contraction but that happened for four months because diesel and gasoline petrol up are included part of that. So to get the true measure of core you want to strip it out.

So, it was a pretty broad based increase for two months which ties up in what the November PMI told you that output prices are going up. So, the story that I draw from all of this is that there is actually a modest cyclical recovery underway in November and unfortunately that is meant that pricing power is perhaps increasing.

Q: Let me come to you first on the growth data, I will come to the inflation data in just a minute because I did not notice so much concern on a core from other economist but I will come to inflation in a minute. What did you make of the growth data? Are you convinced that things are at least troughing out and this 4.2 is quite clearly a one off? Let me tell u that corroborating evidence is there from industry from the corporate honchos who come on our channel that growth is not as good as they thought. They are not saying that they are in recession but Havells like they told us that they were expecting 17 percent growth and now they are adjusting to 12-14 percent. TTK Prestige, the cookers maker, the kitchen appliances makers said he was expecting 25 percent growth in the second half that is his normal rate of growth and he is now scaled it down to 12-14 percent?

Sen: There is something which has been happening for a while which we need to take note of. There are one offs events that Sajjid talked about but there is a larger trend. Rural demand which has been propping up the sector for last three years has started to taper and that it is been a trend for a while. We are at a cusp now, my sense is rural demand will continue to taper and the million dollar question is when does urban demand start picking up more than making up for the loss of the rural side.

We need to keep pretty close watch. Sajjid is right if you take of the one off factors what you are getting is not a minus 4 point something IIP's but it is probably not very different from around zero or perhaps a mild plus so that is at the heart of it. What we are seeing is features that were driving the Indian economy for the last several years are going off and we know what the reasons for that are the decline in food price inflation is again one of the indicators which seem to substantiate that.

Q: Before I come to whatever policy actions one can think off. How concerned are you about the core inflation? The numbers on face of it did not look so scary tome as Sajjid puts it but clearly he has put its math on stripping off the impact of petrol and looking at the month-on-month increases in medical, education. There is an increase in everything by about a few basis points. Would you worry that we have not yet got inflation under control?

Sen: Well, we have the fact is a lot of what you have seen in terms of the core really reflects the wage increases that have taken place in the past and so they will come out. The other point that Sajjid made which was about pricing power shifting there probably is a small element of that. Don not forget we have been through two years where corporate investments have been extremely low. So, additions to capacity have simply not happened which means that as the economy starts turning around if it does turn around then you will see pricing power shifting for may be a seven to eight month period.

Q: This long period of slowdown is also being accompanied at a time when commodity prices are crashing and export markets are not yielding any demand either. Given these two scenarios is that pricing power pushing up prices in the core CPI?

Sen: Core CPI is to break it up into two components. One is the part which is being driven by services and as far as services is concerned; a lot of it is a reflection of the delayed pass through of previous price increases through the wages. The second is what is happening in the manufacturing sector and there the real issue is that what has happened to capacity over the last two years, are we in a situation where because of rural demand there is insufficient capacity to meet the current needs.

Q: Therefore let us come to what policy can do. Do you think therefore the Governor should relent and advance? Your argument seems to be that if anything he should stay pat on interest rates?

Chinoy: That is clear from the RBI guidance which has been quite consistent over the last six months. They saw this coming a year ago; everyone knew November would be the trough of CPI inflation. If you just look at where food prices have gone over the first 10-12 days in December and take into account relatively modest increases in core inflation for December, the December CPI just because of the base normalising should be back up around 5.4-5.5 percent. So what the RBI first wants to do is understand where all of these base effects normalise, where inflation is averaging in the first quarter. My guess is it is going to be somewhere between 5.5-6 percent. I think that's the first hurdle that needs to be passed.

Undoubtedly are the risks abating by the day? Absolutely, with oil tumbling on daily basis that reduces inflation but my sense is (a) they want to wait to see where the numbers stabilise (b) they will want to see what the budget has to offer and (c) they will want to see in light of what has happened over the last two months whether this core dynamics are just data noise and they will normalise in the next month or two because input costs have collapsed and firms can normalise margins even without raising output prices or are these dynamics slightly more ominous and as there is some cyclical recovery on consumption and demand that firms who have taken large compressions will want to raise prices. There are all these uncertainties. So I firmly believe after yesterday number the RBI will wait it out probably wait post the Budget and if these core dynamics continue perhaps push any rate cut out, not prepone it

Q: Two questions - should the Governor cut rates and is he likely to lose political space, must he?

Sen: I agree with Sajjid. I do not think the Governor will cut rates as things stand although my sense is that what we have seen in terms of the reduction in the headline CPI is much larger than anybody had expected including the Governor and Sajjid is again right, once the base effect goes everything else staying on the current trend, you are probably looking at about 5 and a bit CPI number in January and February, which is well within the comfort zone but nevertheless the real question is that what happens if - two things (1) petroleum prices stabilise and start inching upwards. The second much more importantly what we do know is that the rabi sowing is significantly below par. So the danger of food inflation resurfacing towards the latter part of the first quarter of next calendar year is something that he is going to have to keep his eyes open for.

Q: Your trajectory of growth because domestically it is not picking up and globally countries like Russia is now down to half their projected purchasing power, so 0.7 percent growth for Russia. What is your sense of India's growth trajectory, IIP and GDP for the next year?

Chinoy: We have been maintaining that the first half growth in India is little bit exaggerated because all of it is driven by government spending and agriculture, which Dr. Sen pointed out that cannot sustain. Therefore, 5.3 for this year with slight downside risk after the IIP debacle and the best case scenario inching up towards 6 percent in the next fiscal year.

Q: Inflation?

Chinoy: I think it will stabilise between 5.5-6 percent in March and what will drive the trajectory next year is what happens to food prices, where is oil and will growth pick up result in high core inflation. Those are the three uncertainties for me. I am looking at 6 percent trajectory through most of 2015 close to that number throughout the year.

Q: Your view on both those numbers for the next year?

Sen: Roughly correct. On the GDP, I would take it a little higher. I would probably be talking about close to 5.5 but in my case with a slight positive bias on that.

Inflation, roughly what Sajjid said. My take is that as far as non food inflation is concerned it would be in the region of 4.5 or thereabouts with food inflation closer to 6-6.5.


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SUN-RANBAXY @ CCI: 1st Structural Remedy!

Published on Sat, Dec 13,2014 | 20:41, Updated at Sat, Dec 13 at 20:41Source : CNBC-TV18 |   Watch Video :

It's the first time that India's competition regulator has ordered the sale of certain assets before approving a merger. CCI gave the 4 billion dollar Sun-Ranbaxy deal conditional approval. The 2 companies must sell certain select products identified by the CCI, before the merger can take place. This CCI order will set precedent for other such deals in India and hence today we are going to examine what it says and what means. First. here's a brief look at the highlights of the order.

Sun and Ranbaxy are both leading generic pharmaceutical players with most of their revenue from international sales. The CCI examined how a merger between the 2 would impact the Indian pharma market. To do so, it first defined relevant product market based on the molecule. Thereafter CCI examined 51 molecules or relevant markets where the combination would have a more than 15% market share. it found that in 7, the combined entity will have an adverse impact on competition. This determination was made not just on the basis of the market share of the merged entity but also taking into account the market share of competitors and number of significant players in the relevant market. For instance, in one of the 7 molecules, the merged entity's share adds up to just 40—45%, less than half the market. But there are only 2 other significant competitors and one of them has seen market share decline over the last 4 years. Based on this analysis, Ranbaxy has been asked to sell its product based on this molecule, before the merger is consummated. In total, Ranbaxy is to sell 5 products and Sun 2.

How will this CCI order impact future deals? To discuss that, CNBC-TV18's Menaka Doshi spoke to Amitabh Kumar of JSA and Samir Gandhi of AZB.


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Overdrive gets you the glimpse of Aston Martin's garage

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 07 Desember 2014 | 23.55

Overdrive gets into the garage of the Aston Martin racing team in Baharain during a race weekend of the World Endurance Championship.

Overdrive gets into the garage of the Aston Martin racing team in Baharain during a race weekend of the World Endurance Championship.


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'Govt favours auction route for mines allocation'

The Centre appears to be in favour of auction route for allocation of mines as has been earlier proposed in the draft MMDR Bill, which it intends to bring in the ongoing session of Parliament for passage.

"Based on discussions, I think that Mines Ministry has decided to take the auction route for allocation of mines even as some industry representatives voiced their reservations," a source present in a deliberation with Mines Minister Narendra Singh Tomar said today.

The minister held deliberations with representatives of miners, end-users and other stakeholders on the draft Mines and Minerals (Development and Regulation) (Amendment) Bill, 2014, seeking inputs, feedback and suggestions on omission and commission in the proposed Bill.

Apart from industry bodies such as Ficci and Assocham, captains of steel industry like T V Narendran of Tata Steel , C S Verma of SAIL , Sajjan Jindal of JSW Steel  and Naveen Jindal of JSPL  took part in the deliberation.

An official release, following the discussions, said Tomar stated that the auction route suggested in the proposed Bill had been included after active discussions and inputs from the state governments.

The proposed auction route has already had its share of criticism from Federation of Indian Mineral Industries (FIMI). It said auctioning of mines as proposed in the draft Bill will sound the death knell of the industry. It has also written to the Prime Minister Narendra Modi airing its apprehension. 

Contending that the auction route was not pursued in any resource-rich country, FIMI said, they follow the time-tested principle of 'first-cum-first-served'.

Tomar also emphasised that the objective of the Bill was to kick-start the mining sector by removing bottlenecks that are preventing the industry from becoming a growth-multiplier in the country. Government was working towards bringing in transparency in the systems, ensuring fair share of value for government and creating an investor-friendly environment in the mining industry, he added.

"Government's intention is to bring the Bill in the ongoing session of Parliament," the statement said. 


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India forex reserves up USD 1.432 bn to USD 316.311 bn

The foreign currency assets, a major constituent of overall reserves, increased by USD 1.424 billion to USD 290.822 billion, RBI said.

The country's reserves surged by USD 1.432 billion to USD 316.311 billion in the week to November 28 due to rise in foreign currency assets, RBI data showed Friday.

In the previous week, reserves had declined by USD 672.4 million to USD 314.878 billion.

The foreign currency assets, a major constituent of overall reserves, increased by USD 1.424 billion to USD 290.822 billion, RBI said.

Foreign currency assets, expressed in dollar terms, include the effect of appreciation and depreciation of non-US currencies such as the euro, pound and yen held in reserves.

The country's gold reserves remained unchanged at USD 19.738 billion.

Special Drawing Rights (SDRs) increased by USD 6.4 million to USD 4.229 billion, while the country's reserve position with the IMF also rose by USD 2.5 million to USD 1.521 billion during the week, the RBI data showed.


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Bertrand D'Souza answers queries on Overdrive Auto Selector

Overdrive Editor Bertrand D'Souza answers all viewer queries on Auto Selector and the latest on motoring news.

Overdrive Editor Bertrand D'Souza answers all viewer queries on Auto Selector and the latest on motoring news.


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Overdrive road test: Kawasaki ER-6n Vs Kawasaki Z250

Overdrive bring you a road test of the Kawasaki motorcycles – ER-6n and Z250.

Overdrive bring you a road test of the Kawasaki motorcycles – ER-6n and Z250.


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LIME: Absolutdata's challenge for SP Jain Institute

The case study for SP Jain Institute of Management and Research comes from Absolutdata, a pioneer in the analytics space in India. The challenge for the two teams is to help Absolutdata strengthen its marketing position in the changed global marketplace.

The case study for SP Jain Institute of Management and Research comes from Absolutdata, a pioneer in the analytics space in India. The challenge for the two teams is to help Absolutdata strengthen its marketing position in the changed global marketplace, help strategise on brand building activities to increase its recall value, and enable new age social media tools.

Watch videos for more...


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See moderate growth in 2015: Martin Sorrell

In the year end special with Sir Martin Sorrell on Storyboard this week, the WPP CEO sheds light on 2014 – the year that was and also shares his expectations from 2015. He also talks about Uber mess and why sporting bodies – from FIFA to BCCI need to clean up their mess.

In the year end special with Sir Martin Sorrell on Storyboard this week, the WPP CEO sheds light on 2014 – the year that was and also shares his expectations from 2015. He also talks about Uber mess and why sporting bodies – from FIFA to BCCI need to clean up their mess.

Watch videos for more...


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Tycoon's share success stories on Young Turks Book launch

In the last episode of the three part series of the Young Turks Book Launch watch Raman Roy, Chairman and MD of Quattro Global Services in a candid conversation with the trio at Vizury – Gourav Chindlur, Vikram Nayak and Chetan Kulkarni.

In the last episode of the three part series of the Young Turks Book Launch watch Raman Roy, Chairman and MD of Quattro Global Services in a candid conversation with the trio at Vizury – Gourav Chindlur, Vikram Nayak and Chetan Kulkarni. Also watch Rajeev Goel of PubMatic and Murugavel Janakiaraman of Bharat Matrimony had to say about their entrepreneurial journey.

Watch videos for more...


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More steps to rationalise subsidies on anvil: Jaitley

Assuring India Inc of NDA's commitment to carry forward economic reforms, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley today said the government will come out with more steps to rationalise subsidies.

Assuring India Inc of NDA's commitment to carry forward economic reforms, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley today said the government will come out with more steps to rationalise subsidies.

"I had a series of meeting with the Expenditure Management Commission. They are effectively working on some very valuable suggestions with regard to rationalisation of subsidies... In the next few, even months...may be earlier than that they will be able to come out with some interim recommendations to us so that we can proceed with rationalisation in that direction", Jaitley said.

Recalling the government's decision to link the diesel prices with market price, the Minister told the India Economic Conclave said that it would help in reducing the subsidy burden of the government.

Besides, the government has recently decided to give direct cash subsidy on pilot basis to LPG customers in select cities.

The Centre had set up a Commission under former RBI Governor Bimal Jalan to suggest steps to rationalise subsidy and help the government in effectively bringing down the fiscal deficit.

The government currently provides various kinds of subsidies which run into lakhs of crores of rupees. It was pegged at Rs 2.51 lakh crore for 2014-15.

Speaking at the Conclave organised by television channel ET Now, Jaitley expressed confidence that the government would be able to push the Insurance and the GST bills in the current session of Parliament.

On the government's views on a joint session of Parliament to push the bills as it does not have a majority in the Rajya Sabha, he said: "We don't want to use the last resort of a joint session for legislations. But if it becomes inevitable that's a constitutional remedy."


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Consumers to soon get choice to select power discom: Goyal

Consumers to soon get choice to select power diIn a significant power sector reform measure, the government today said it will soon make necessary amendments to the Electricity Act to allow consumers to choose their distribution company.scom: Goyal

In a significant power sector reform measure, the government today said it will soon make necessary amendments to the Electricity Act to allow consumers to choose their distribution company.

"Electricity Act has been in discussion for quite some time. The act was put up for stakeholders' consultation. We have received various suggestions," Power and Coal Minister Piyush Goyal told reporters here at a CII event.

"What we are looking at is allowing competition at last mile delivery so that consumers have a choice of supplier of electricity... it will also help states serve the people better," the Minister said.

Goyal assured that wherever there are existing power purchase agreements, the interests of stakeholders will be protected in consultation with certain benchmarks set by the regulator.

The Minister said competition will be encouraged at the last mile in the interest of keeping tariff low, competitive and for better customer service.

On being asked about allowing end users of electricity to select their own power distribution firm, Goyal said it will be done gradually, adding that it was tried in Maharashtra but due to some court decisions it couldn't go further.

There were some hurdles under the Electricity Act of 2003, he said when asked why the proposed model did not work in that state.

"We are trying to resolve those hurdles under the current amendment to the Electricity Act," he added.


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