Thursday, October 24, 2013

$15bn rollover of subsidy costs

meet the government's budget promises and may sweep as much as $15 billion in subsidy costs into next year's accounts to ensure he hits fiscal targets ahead of the Lok Sabha, ministry officials say.
Finance minister, P Chidambaram, insists that the fiscal deficit target of 4.8% of GDP for the year to March 31, 2014, is a red line that will not be breached. The worst economic downturn since 1991 and a fall in the rupee to a record low have undermined budget assumptions for some months.
But finance ministry officials said the window to raise domestic fuel prices sharply, which would cut subsidies, is closing with state and national elections drawing closer, so shifting some costs into the 2014/15 budget is inevitable. "It's a given," said one official, who declined to be identified.
The worst-case scenario as of now is that $15 billion in costs will have to be rolled over into next year's budget, the ministry officials said. This assumes that there will be no substantial increase in domestic fuel prices to offset the ballooning subsidies.
By rolling over some costs, Chidambaram can tell voters in the run up to the elections, which must be held by May, that the government met its deficit target. But equally, he will be shackling the next government with costs that could blunt its ability to stimulate an economic recovery.
"Whatever we need to do, we will do. But the fiscal deficit target will be met," said a finance ministry official. "No one should be in doubt about that."
Meeting the target is important also to stave off the ire of ratings agencies as India's credit status sits just one notch above junk. A loss of its investment grade rating would probably increase the government's borrowing costs.
Last year, Chidambaram narrowed the budget deficit by 1 percentage point to 4.9% of GDP by pushing nearly $15 billion in subsidy costs into this year's budget and cutting more than $16 billion in planned spending, two ministry officials said.
This year, he could rollover a similar amount in subsidies, the officials said. This will be in addition to spending cuts of $3.2 billion or more that officials are already predicting for the year.
The amount will be partly determined by the success of an auction of telecom spectrum, expected in January. The budget had pencilled in $2 billion for the sale.
But the most critical factor will be whether Chidambaram can gather government support to raise domestic fuel prices to offset ballooning subsidy costs. Some policymakers see that as politically unpalatable ahead of state elections in December, leaving a small window after those votes before the country moves into national elections.
A finance ministry spokesman, DS Malik, said it was "too early to say anything at this stage" on how much the rollover would be.
Chidambaram had planned to cap the subsidies for the likes of fuel and food at 2% of GDP, or about $38 billion. But finance ministry officials said it could cost as much as 2.9%of GDP, or $55 billion, this fiscal year.
Chidambaram had said earlier this month that the jump in subsidy spending must be tackled sooner rather than later to help stabilise an economy shaken this year by the rupee's slump and a record current account deficit. India imports nearly 80 percent of its oil needs and the rupee drop made government fuel subsidies more costly.
Soaring subsidy billFinance ministry officials in September called for an increase in diesel prices of close to 10% to offset the pressure on the subsidy bill. But Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has shied away from raising fuel prices for fear it could upset voters and cost his Congress party the elections.
At the same time, international oil prices have remained stubbornly high and although the rupee has climbed up from its record low, it remains historically weak.
A new law to provide cheap grains to millions of people has increased procurement and storage costs, inflating food subsidies by around 10%. Adding to Chidambaram's headache, the fertiliser ministry has asked for a 50% hike in its budgeted subsidy.
"The budget will simply collapse, if we continue to provide subsidies on this scale," said a finance ministry official. "There is no alternative to a 3-5 rupees increase in diesel prices."
AssumptionsIt is not unusual for the government to rollover some costs into the following year's budget, although they are not publicly revealed. However, subsidy spending has massively overshot budgeted estimates for the last three fiscal years forcing up the amount of cost that the government rolls over.
If the economy was booming, Chidambaram would have easily absorbed higher subsidy costs. But GDP rose 5% in 2012/13, the weakest pace in a decade. Most analysts expect growth to weaken further this fiscal year, although the budget assumed a rebound to around 6.5%.
Ministry officials say the rollover is the result of India's cash-basis accounting, in which income is recorded when cash is received and expenses are recorded when cash is paid out. Many advanced economies follow accrual accounting, in which income and expenses are recorded as they occur regardless of whether cash has actually changed hands.
India's accounting method "never gives you the real picture of your finances," said Devendra Kumar Pant, chief economist at India Ratings & Research. "You start the year on the back foot as you have so much backlog to clear."
raj kishore sharma
pgdm 1st sem

Wal-Mart, Bharti divorce highlights pitfalls of business in India


Citing restrictive foreign investment rules, Wal-Mart scrapped a partnership with Bharti Enterprises and suspended plans to open supermarkets which could have tapped a potential market of 1.2 billion shoppers. Photo: AFP
Citing restrictive foreign investment rules, Wal-Mart scrapped a partnership with Bharti Enterprises and suspended plans to open supermarkets which could have tapped a potential market of 1.2 billion shoppers. Photo: AFP
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Updated: Sun, Oct 13 2013. 07 35 PM IST
New Delhi: The divorce between the US giant Wal-Mart and its Indian partner, the latest in a string of foreign corporate alliances to founder, will have a further “chill effect” on vitally needed foreign investment, analysts say.
Citing restrictive foreign investment rules, the world’s biggest retailer scrapped a partnership last week with Indian telecom heavyweight Bharti Enterprises and suspended plans to open supermarkets which could have tapped a potential market of 1.2 billion shoppers.
Foreign investors are already spooked by worries over a number of issues: pervasive corruption, red tape, stop-start efforts to open up Asia’s third-largest economy, tax battles, decade-low growth and a weak currency, analysts say.
Strict regulations for outside firms include a requirement to source 30% of goods from small industry—a deal-breaker for Wal-Mart, which said the goal was impossible to meet.
“This will have more of a chill effect,” Saloni Nangia, president of management consultancy firm Technopak, told AFP.
“From a destination perspective, foreign firms want to be in India. But from a policy and doing-business perspective, it’s different,” she said.
“The government needs to make this country investment-friendly. So far it’s been pure posturing.”
The Wal-Mart-Bharti break up is one of a long saga of unhappy endings to marriages between foreign and Indian partners, Nangia noted.
“It can be mismatched expectations to blame, disappointing returns, government vacillation on implementing policies, legal and regulatory concerns, ambiguities about what can be achieved—sometimes a mix of elements,” she said.
Wal-Mart president Scott Price said the company would “continue to advocate for investment conditions” that would allow it to invest in multi-brand retail while it focused on its wholesale operations in India.
Many foreign firms had high hopes of India’s liberalisation drive and voiced strong interest in entering the country.
But those plans have soured in the face of failure to improve infrastructure, long approval delays, bureaucratic hurdles and graft—which has its tentacles in all sectors of the economy.
“No company can operate without greasing a palm here or shelling out unaccounted amounts there,” said The Economic Times in an editorial.
That issue has become increasingly crucial, especially in the US, where laws like the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act are making it tougher for India to absorb foreign direct investment (FDI).
“Corruption is one of the most significant challenges adversely affecting the Indian economy,” Toby Latta, head of Control Risks in Asia-Pacific, told AFP.
Wal-Mart’s woes in India go beyond sourcing troubles, with Indian authorities probing whether a loan by the retailer to Bharti broke foreign investment rules. Both firms deny wrongdoing.
Wal-Mart is also under US scrutiny over its overseas operations amid bribery allegations—which it rejects—in Mexico, Brazil, China and India.
“This scrutiny by their home countries is a big deal for foreign companies,” Alina Arora, a partner at Luthra and Luthra Law Offices, told AFP.
Alleged corruption led to Norway’s phone giant Telenor snapping ties last year with Indian partner Unitech after the Supreme Court revoked 122 mobile licences following charges they were illegally issued.
UAE mobile operator Etisalat closed its India business and split from local ally, DB Group in a decision also stemming from the ruling, and accused its ex-partner of “fraud”—a charge DB rejects.
While Telenor, which took a $720-million writedown, has pursued its operations in India, Etisalat said it would only reconsider re-entry when there is “greater legal and regulatory certainty”.
Also last year Italian carmaker Fiat ended a distribution pact with Indian vehicle giant Tata Motors Ltd. which said the joint venture was not generating expected sales.
Automotive major Mahindra & Mahindra Ltd. has seen three global vehicle partnerships go sour—with Ford, Renault and most recently in January with the US engine maker Navistar International.
“The Indian market has not expanded as we originally expected,” Navistar president Troy Clarke said at the time.
Now, with elections to be held by May 2014, analysts say there is scant hope the scam-tainted and unpopular Congress-led government will take significant steps to make India more appealing to foreign investors.
The government says it has no plans to relax its sourcing rule on foreign supermarkets.
Even though India aims to attract $1 trillion in FDI by 2017 to upgrade shabby infrastructure in order to boost growth, foreign investment faces hostility from many politicians who say it threatens jobs, especially in the retail sphere, which is dominated by small family-run stores.
“We’re going to be in wait-and-watch mode at least until after the elections” in the first half of next year, said Technopak’s Nangia. “It’s only India which is losing out in the meantime.” AFP
shailendar kumar 
pgdm  1st year 

Rupee snaps 2-day fall as dollar beaten broadly after US debt deal

Reuters  Mumbai, October 17, 2013
An investigation by Indian authorities into whether Walmart Stores Inc violated local investment rules in 2010 has been referred to the country's central bank, officials familiar with the matter said.
Last year, the Reserve Bank of India asked the enforcement directorate of the finance ministry to look into whether the world's largest retailer broke foreign exchange rules when it invested $100 million in an Indian consultancy that also runs supermarkets, sources told Reuters last year.
Walmart, which recently broke up its joint venture in India and said it will independently own and operate its business in the country, has said it has complied with Indian regulations. The investment was made before the government opened the supermarket sector to foreign companies.
Officials said the enforcement directorate has passed along its findings to the central bank.
"The ED (enforcement directorate) has investigated the Walmart case and has forwarded its report to the RBI for a decision by the RBI in the matter," said an enforcement directorate official who is not authorised to speak to the media and declined to be identified.
Another official said: "They have completed their investigation and sent the RBI papers, and now the RBI will do its own examination on whether Walmart violated foreign exchange rules."
A Walmart spokeswoman said the enforcement directorate has not yet released its findings, and "so we have not seen the result of its review and cannot comment."
India allowed foreign companies to set up majority-owned supermarkets in the country in September 2012, but no company has so far applied to enter due to lack of clarity around the entry rules.
The RBI has declined to comment

TANU UJJANIYA
PGDM -1

Ads Set To Appear On Instagram Next Week

instagram-logo-200px

Earlier this month Instagram told users that it was going to introduce advertising on the app in the coming weeks. That time has come and the Facebook unit just revealed some additional details about its strategy and the ad units we’ll be seeing.

Starting with a very small, select group of advertisers Instagram will begin introducing high quality brand-oriented ads into the news feed, these will include still imagery and video.
The list of Instagram advertisers at launch include the following:

These advertisers were chosen in part because of their elegant or innovative use of the app to promote their products and services. Instagram hopes to set a high standard for quality with its ads.
Indeed, the company has some lofty aspirations for advertising and doesn’t see the app as just another place to put more Facebook display ad units:
Our aim is to make any advertisements you see feel as natural to Instagram as the photos and videos many of you already enjoy from your favorite brands. After all, our team doesn’t just build Instagram, we use it each and every day. We want these ads to be enjoyable and creative in much the same way you see engaging, high-quality ads when you flip through your favorite magazine.
There’s a real opportunity to set a higher standard for ad creative. Digital creative is often (usually) the weak link in online and mobile ad campaigns.  We’ll see if Instagram’s vision can be maintained over time.
Another reason to take this approach is self interested. It’s not just about aesthetics and beautiful ads. Instagram users would rebel against crappy and too many ad units. However the executives at Instagram are very mindful of all this.
I was told that ad targeting would not be as elaborate as on Facebook, though there would be some of the same audience targeting capabilities. However, as indicated, ads will be more brand-centric than direct-response based (e.g., “buy this now”) with billing accordingly.
New advertisers will be gradually allowed into the program as Instagram evaluates user reactions and feedback.
Instagram has a great opportunity to make good on the cliche that argues online ads can be content. It can also, if successful, have a very positive impact on agencies, online publishers and the broader industry by raising the bar for ads and ad creative.
Postscript: One thing that I neglected to mention earlier today: the initial “ads” that users will see will actually not be ads. They will be spots educating people about the fact that ads are coming, demonstrate how they will be presented, as well as the idea that users can hide them if they so choose. This is another interesting and perhaps unique approach being taking by Instagram to prepare its audience for advertising on the app
PRAVEEN SAHRMA 
PGDM IST.
.

PREPARE FOR FED TAPERING, FM TELLS REGULATORS

From page 19 NEW DELHI: Finance minister P Chidambaram on Thursday urged all regulators to take appropriate measures to ensure that the impact of US tapering of quantitative easing (QE) is minimal on the Indian economy.
Speaking at the Financial Stability and Development Council meeting in New Delhi, Chidambaram said that the opportunity available due to the postponement of the reversal of the monetary policies in advanced economies should be utilised to further address the macroeconomic imbalances.
Reserve Bank of India governor Raghuram Rajan, finance secretary RS Gujral, secretary of economic affairs Arvind Mayaram, Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) chairman UK Sinha and Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority (Irda) chair man TS Vijayan were among those who were present in the meeting.
Quantitative easing undertaken since the global financial crisis has mitigated some of the adverse effects of the crisis.
On September 18, the US Federal Reserve decided to hold off on scaling back its bond-buying programme.
                                                                                                                  NAME MITHILESH CHAUBEY
                                                                                                                    PGDM 1 SEM

Samsung says profit up 26%, but warns of slower smartphone growth

Samsung says profit up 26%, but warns of slower smartphone growth

Samsung has posted a record profit in six of the past seven quarters but may find it hard to extend its winning streak without a new hit gadget. Photo: AFP

 
Seoul: Samsung Electronics ltd quarterly operating profit surged 26% to a new record, matching estimates and powered by a strong recovery in its memory chip business as smartphone sales growth eases sharply.
 
The smartphone leader has posted a record profit in six of the past seven quarters but may find it hard to extend its winning streak without a new hit gadget, after less-than-spectacular launches of its Galaxy Gear smartwatch and Galaxy Round curved phone in recent months.
 
Samsung forecast on Friday that strength in its bread-and-butter chip business would continue in the current quarter, while growth in smartphones would slow due to intensifying competition during the year-end holiday season.
 
“Samsung has done well, having rapidly caught up with Apple in the smartphone market. But I’m concerned whether Samsung would be able to do better,” said Kim Sung-soo, a fund manager at LS Asset Management.
 

 
“Like Nokia, Samsung may hit a limit in increasing market share. Apple is also fighting back, signaling an uphill battle for Samsung. Samsung needs to show its new growth engines to revive momentum in its stock price.”
 
Shares in Samsung traded unchanged after the earnings announcement versus a 0.3% decline in the wider market.
 
The South Korean firm expected smartphone shipments would grow at around 1-5% in the current quarter from the previous quarter, while selling prices would remain unchanged or increase slightly.
Samsung on Friday said July-September operating profit rose to 10.2 trillion won, in line with its estimate.
 
Profits at its chip business doubled to 2.06 trillion won, the highest in three years, reflecting stronger chip prices this year and tighter supply since a fire last month at a Chinese plant owned by SK Hynix.
“Mobile DRAM shipments will stay strong with the release of various low- to high-end smartphones as the holiday season nears. With the rise in demand for specialty DRAM and NAND, the market will experience tighter supply,” Samsung said in a statement.
 
The mobile division, Samsung’s biggest earnings generator, reported a record 6.7 trillion won profit as a greater variety of cheaper Galaxy smartphones boosted shipment
 
 volumes and helped counter weakening growth in the lucrative high-end segment.
 
Samsung, which competes with Apple.in in the mobile market, faces margin pressure in the current quarter as it splashes out on marketing its high-end Galaxy S4 and Note 3 smartphones during the year-end holiday season.
 
Shares in Samsung, worth $222 billion, rose 10% over the past three months, outperforming a 7% gain in the wider market.
RAHUL KUMAR GUPTA,
PGDM 1st YEAR

TCS, Infy, Wipro, HCL profits confirm IT sector turnaround 

 

NEW DELHI: If first quarter of 2013-14 had set the pace, the second quarter results from July t0 September brought back confidence for Indian IT majors as the big four — Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), Infosys, Wipro and HCL Tech exceeded market expectations with their quarterly incomes.
Analysts tracking the sector believe that the revenue stream will remain healthy as discretionary IT spends is back for US-based companies in the banking, financial services and insurance sectors. The discretionary IT spends offer a good barometre for a client firm’s IT spends pattern such that it ultimately translates into more number of outsourcing deals. This is important as US-based banking, financial services and insurance firms still account for more than half of revenues for Indian IT firms.
“Apart from the US, the demand environment (for IT outsourcing deals) is looking positive in Europe as well,” said Ankita Somani, IT analyst at brokerage firm Angel Broking. An increase in discretionary IT spends augurs well for Indian IT firms, Somani added.
Wipro chairman Azim Premji said there are positive indicators on the global economy that coupled with the client confidence is reflecting on the company’s performance.
“We see the discretionary spend getting better every day. The market looks good and demand is robust and we feel that we have good opportunity,” said N. Chandrasekaran, CEO, TCS.
Anant Gupta, chief executive officer, HCL Tech, said deals from both the US and Europe are very strong and well balanced. “We see good momentum across financial and manufacturing sectors in the US and Europe... and this continues to reflect in our portfolio,”
Even Wipro and Infosys that had been struggling offlate managed to beat market expectations, wherein Wirpo reported its best profit growth in the last seven quarters and India’s largest software exporter, TCS, proved once again that fast growth is possible with a huge base as well. At ` 4,702 crore, the company’s net income rose 34% during the July-September quarter.
And this high growth is expected to reflect on the hiring front as well. TCS has already announced that it would hire 5,000 more than its original plan. Infosys, Wipro and HCL Tech did not give specific numbers but said that hiring will be in sync with the demand environment.
However, analysts cautioned that the October-December quarter might be relatively subdued due to the seasonality effect of furloughs and holidays .
NAME- RAJ GAURAV
               PGDM 1 SEM

Idea profit rises 87% to Rs 448 crore

MUMBAI: Idea Cellular on Thursday reported 86.5% rise in consolidated net profit at Rs 448 crore for the quarter to September, driven by robust data and voice revenues.

Total income increased to Rs 6,323 crore in second quarter (Q2) from Rs 5,314 crore in the year ago period.

"Despite weak rural access market, the company has performed well. Net profit improved by nearly 86 % and revenue jumped nearly Rs 1,000 crore on year- on-year basis," Idea MD Himanshu Kapania said. Higher voice and data businesses helped the company to reach a standalone net profit of Rs 399 crore in the quarter, up 13% from Rs 352 crore. With increasing proportion of rural subscribers, the seasonal slowdown in the second quarter has become more pronounced resulting in sharp contraction in the voice minutes of use by 5.8%, Kapania said.
                                                                                          
                                                                                                                NAME- 
                                                                                            SARVESH KUMAR SINGH
                                                                                                    PGDM 1st SEMESTER

market news silver naresh kr.....


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SENSEX 20717.90 -7.53 B H E L 137.50 -2.65 Bajaj Auto 2070.90 -11.7 Bharti Airtel 346.20 -3.65 Cipla 416.00 -3.65 Coal India 277.80 -1.85 GAIL (India) 346.55 -4.85 H D F C 808.60 -3.1 HDFC Bank 669.00 0.1 Hero Motocorp 2055.65 -23.7 Hind. Unilever 599.85 -8.55 Hindalco Inds. 110.80 -3.75 ICICI Bank 1030.75 9.1 Infosys 3340.00 30.15 ITC 344.60 2.05 Jindal Steel 237.25 -3.65 Larsen & Toubro 943.90 -20.7 M & M 869.40 -20.4 Maruti Suzuki 1518.55 3.1 NTPC 144.65 1.4 O N G C 285.30 1.2 Reliance Inds. 888.35 3.75 Sesa Goa 199.95 1.4 St Bk of India 1717.50 -0.75 Sun Pharma.Inds. 606.10 -14.65 Tata Motors 376.30 -3.1 Tata Power Co. 80.85 -0.1 Tata Steel 325.65 -6.45 TCS 2044.00 35.4 Wipro 476.35 5.05 SENSEX 20717.90 -7.53 BSE IT 8405.02 89.77 BSEFMC 6936.52 12.23 BSE CG 8889.90 -142.22 BSE HC 9549.26 -101.52 BANKEX 12479.62 18.81 AUTO 11831.74 -104.06 METAL 8983.16 -103.14 OILGAS 8724.56 -10.9 MIDCAP 5994.23 -1.6 SMLCAP 5843.25 -9.85 REALTY 1340.13 -14.56

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      Silver erases early losses

      MoM Reporter / Mumbai, Oct 25, 11:14 AM
        Silver erases early losses
        The MCX Silver December futures also started the day in the negative territory with a gap of Rs 177 to Rs 49,930.

        The Indian Silver extended its losses in morning trade and dropped to a low of Rs 49,755.

        Further, the Silver futures trimmed most of its losses and touched a day's high of Rs 49,963.

        The Silver price is now down 0.3 per cent (down Rs 157) at Rs 49,950.

        The counter has seen trades of around 1,245 contracts, and the open interest has risen by 163-odd lots so far.

        Whereas, the Indian Silver has also rallied Rs 3,216 in last nine trading session.

        In the International markets, the Silver December futures has dropped 0.8 per cent at 22,648.

        Meanwhile, the spot rupee also extended its losses and touched a low of 61.78 in mid-morning trade.

        Further, the Indian rupee has recovered from its day's low and is now quoted at 61.65, down 18 paise.


        NARESH KR PG !st