Current draft of Personal Data Protection Bill tougher than 2018: Cyber law expert

user data protection bill

NS Nappinai, an advocate of cyber law on Tuesday said that the current draft of Personal Data Protection Bill is tougher than the 2018 draft.

The draft Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019, which is likely to be introduced in the Lok Sabha in the next couple of days, bars storing and processing of personal data by entities without the explicit consent of an individual.

Nappinai said, “The move from the autonomy of individuals to privacy and recognition explicitly which is already there from the old draft of privacy as a fundamental right. I feel it is a much stronger position rather than merely talking about the autonomy of individuals.”

She further added, “There is a lot of change in terms of the data localisation provisions. One, there is no data localisation limitation for personal data. With respect to sensitive personal data as well as critical data where there was an absolute restriction with respect to critical data saying it cannot be transferred at all outside India.”

“There is sufficient leeway for transfer of both sensitive personal data as well as critical data. I feel the real issue here is that when we come to critical data, the provision seems to be much more loosely worded than for sensitive personal data. That is surprising as I would believe that critical data is a much tighter and a smaller category of sensitive personal data,” she said.

“The difference is for sensitive personal data as they say it will apply to the processing and storing, whereas for critical data, it is only referring to processing and not to storing. The issue that may arise then is that people may claim that the limitation is only with respect to processing and not for storing which will then defeat the very purpose of creating a separate category of critical data. I believe this is one provision which should definitely be relooked and relooked very closely,” she added.

 5 Minutes Read

New study sheds light on lack of research in snake antivenoms

KV Prasad Jun 13, 2022, 06:35 AM IST (Published)

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Summary

Much like snakes themselves, India’s focus on research on snake antivenoms seems to have slithered past policymakers and scientific bodies.

Much like snakes themselves, India’s focus on research on snake antivenoms seems to have slithered past policymakers and scientific bodies.

At least 46,000 people die of snake bites every year in India, report independent studies. This accounts for half of all the snake-related deaths in the world. This is the biggest human-animal conflict in the country, and yet, both research and the treatment of victims is shockingly dated and on the verge of becoming irrelevant.

“The essence of the technology to treat snakebite victims hasn’t changed for a century,” said Kartik Sunagar, assistant professor at Evolutionary Venomics Lab, which is part of the Centre for Ecological Sciences at the Indian Institute of Science (IISc).

Scientists have now published a new study that exposes the lack of research in snake antivenoms (also known as anti-snake venoms or ASVs), emphasising and scientifically quantifying the need to develop region-specific snake antivenoms to make them more effective.

For a country that is as varied as India – both in geography and biodiversity – there is only one type of snake antivenom used for treatment: polyvalent snake antivenom. This antivenom is a mixture made from venom extracted from the ‘big four’ snakes: the spectacled cobra, the common krait, Russell’s viper, and the saw-scaled viper. The country has some 270 species of snakes, of which 60 are considered venomous and medically relevant and with various levels of toxicity.

Not only are the current antivenoms ineffective to those patients bitten by snakes outside of the big four, but their efficacy is also severely limited between two populations of the big 4 of the same species but from different regions of the country, say experts.

This polyvalent antivenom or ASV is used to treat patients across the country – even in states that don’t have the big 4 snakes. “For example, north-eastern states like Arunachal Pradesh and even the Andaman and Nicobar islands don’t have any of these four snakes. Yet, polyvalent ASV is used for treatment,” said Sunagar, one of the authors of the research paper, which is now published by the Public Library of Science (PLoS).

Along with Romulus Whitaker, who won the Padma Shri award in 2018 for his work in herpetology (the study of reptiles and amphibians), the paper was co-authored by scientists from the IISc and the Gerry Martin Project.

The new research paper studied the composition of venoms from snakes like Sochurek’s viper, the Sind krait, the banded krait, and two populations of monocled cobras, as well as their closest ‘big four’ relatives (saw-scaled viper, common krait and spectacled cobra).

It found out that the venom composition of these snakes is vastly different, not just between snake populations from the same species, but from varied regions too. “For instance, a stark variation was observed in the venom of two populations of the same monocled cobra species from West Bengal and Arunachal Pradesh. The former was found to be highly neurotoxic (targeting the nervous system) while the latter was rich in cytotoxins (targeting cells and tissues),” said Sunagar.

Decentralising antivenoms

Experts say snake antivenom production needs to be decentralised and developed by using venoms from the same region where it is to be used for treatment. Antivenoms or ASVs are produced by injecting safe levels of venom taken from the ‘big four’ into horses. These animals have a higher tolerance to snake venom than humans and produce antibodies, which are then extracted and made into serums for the ASV.

A majority of the venom collected to make ASV comes from Chennai and its outskirts. People from the Irula tribe, who specialise in catching snakes, have therefore played a significant role in saving lives of snake-bite victims. However, their work is not enough to address a problem at the current scale.

The toxicity of snakes depends on their geography, diet, season and various other factors. To make antivenoms that are effective in treating local population, the venom needs to be extracted from the same region. Antivenoms made from venom of snakes found in Chennai will only be effective in the southern region, and its efficacy reduces with distance.

Here’s hoping

Sunagar hopes that this research will push the government and private companies to produce better ASVs. “We are in talks with a couple of private players in an attempt to make better ASVs. We are also approaching the government to ensure this research translates into better treatment on-ground,” he said.

An Irula Cooperative Society member shows how venom is extracted. Photo by Karthikeyan Hemalatha.

The Haffkine Institute, a biomedical research institute in Mumbai has also initiated a study. “The nation-wide venom mapping study was taken up to understand the efficacy of ASVs better. So far, we have got permission to test 22 snakes from eight different states,” says Nishigandha Naik, director incharge at the institute, adding, “We are seeking permissions from the forest departments of more states to ensure the study is comprehensive.”

(This story was first published on Mongabay)

Elon Musk forms several ‘X Holdings’ companies to fund potential Twitter buyout

3 Mins Read

Thursday’s filing dispelled some doubts, though Musk still has work to do. He and his advisers will spend the coming days vetting potential investors for the equity portion of his offer, according to people familiar with the matter

 Daily Newsletter

KV Prasad Journo follow politics, process in Parliament and US Congress. Former Congressional APSA-Fulbright Fellow

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today's market

index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95

Currency

Company Price Chng %Chng
Dollar-Rupee 73.3500 0.0000 0.00
Euro-Rupee 89.0980 0.0100 0.01
Pound-Rupee 103.6360 -0.0750 -0.07
Rupee-100 Yen 0.6734 -0.0003 -0.05
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Money Money Money: Bollywood actress Vidya Balan speaks on importance of health insurance

In an exclusive interview with CNBC-TV18’s Sonia Shenoy, Bollywood actress, and Padmashree Award winner Vidya Balan shared her views on changing roles of Indian women and how they manage their personal and professional life.

“I feel the attitude to insurance per se is very conservative still. People feel that if there is a need, a medical emergency, then there are savings or we will borrow, but what is the need to block that money. There is a lack of awareness about insurance,” Balan said.

 5 Minutes Read

Restoring Chennai’s water bodies

KV Prasad Jun 13, 2022, 06:35 AM IST (Published)

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Summary

Twenty-seven-year-old Chandra, a house help in Chennai, does not know much about deficient rainfall, rainwater harvesting or the city’s degraded water bodies. All she knows is that once in two days, a lorry supplies the 20 pots of water that her household requires, and that she has to carry those pots to the first floor of her small flat in Vardapuram, a locality in Kotturpuram, Chennai.  A vast majority of the people in the city are like Chandra, ignorant of the harsh reality of water supply and its management as a resource.

Twenty-seven-year-old Chandra, a house help in Chennai, does not know much about deficient rainfall, rainwater harvesting or the city’s degraded water bodies. All she knows is that once in two days, a lorry supplies the 20 pots of water that her household requires, and that she has to carry those pots to the first floor of her small flat in Vardapuram, a locality in Kotturpuram, Chennai.  A vast majority of the people in the city are like Chandra, ignorant of the harsh reality of water supply and its management as a resource.

Arun Krishnamurthy of the Environment Foundation of India (EFI), an environmental NGO which has carried out extensive work in restoring water bodies, says that water literacy is the biggest challenge they face today. The EFI along with many other non-governmental organisations (NGOs) have participated in an initiative by the Greater Chennai Corporation (GCC) to restore some of the city’s water bodies.

The stormwater department of the GCC along with Chennai Smart City Ltd. has taken up the challenge to restore 210 of the 3,000-odd water bodies in the Chennai Metropolitan Area (CMA). The GCC, Revenue Department, Metro Water, Public Works Department, Department of Fisheries and Hindu Religious and Charitable Endowment Department are some of the prominent organisations that oversee the water bodies in the CMA.

The water bodies come in all sizes and shapes, so the strategy to restore them differs from one to the other.

According to a GCC official, 72 water bodies are in the process of being restored by the Greater Chennai Corporation utilising the Smart City fund. Of these, restoration work on 39 has been completed while work on 33 is in progress. Simultaneously, some NGOs have taken up the restoration work of 64 water bodies using Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) funds. Of this, work on 32 has been completed, and restoration work on the remaining 32 is progressing. In addition, restoration of another 47 water bodies will soon be taken up using funds from the Chennai Mega City Development Mission. The estimated cost of this project is around Rs. 48 crore (almost half a billion rupees). A tender has already been called and work order will soon be issued to the contractor, the official said.

For the remaining 27 water bodies, funding agencies have yet to be identified.

According to the GCC official, the work entails desilting the water bodies as well as removing water hyacinth and garbage. Encroachments around most of the water bodies have been removed. The silt from the ponds that have been cleaned was used to strengthen the bunds and create walkways to raise public awareness about preserving public spaces.

Before restoration: Water body in Karumanchavadikulam Zone 15.
After restoration: Water body in Karumanchavadikulam Zone 15.

Restoration and maintenance

According to Krishnamurthy of EFI, the biggest challenge to water conservation is the mindset of the people. The factor that unifies the people of India is not caste or religion, but the common urge to abuse and exploit water bodies, he says in a lighter vein. People throw garbage into ponds and lakes; sewage drains empty out into rivers; at night, lorries laden with sledge come and discharge it into water bodies, and in addition to this are the innumerable encroachments that come up around water bodies, he elaborates.

In June this year, Chennai’s water woes caught international attention and many people around the world wondered as to how the city of 10.6 million would survive the summer heat of 50 degrees Celsius without water.

Water lorries brought water from far off ponds and lakes to quench the thirst of the people in Chennai city. Those who could afford to buy water did so on a regular basis. There was no decrease in the consumption of water though the four reservoirs (Poondi, Cholavaram, Puzhal and Chemarambakam), which serve the city, had run dry.

Krishnamurthy says that many people continued to water their compounds (not just the plants), wash their cars and carry on as if there was no drought situation. The lack of water, impacted the poor the most and they had to wait in the hot sun for hours on end for the Metro Water lorries to bring them succor.

Popular opinion is that lakes and ponds should be restored in such a way that their surroundings look like recreation spots, Krishnamurthy says. He however is opposed to the idea. According to him, water bodies should become protected spaces.

Master Plan 2026

The Chennai Metropolitan Development Authority started work on the second Master Plan for guiding Chennai’s development and land use in 2008. The Master Plan 2026 has taken cognizance of this fact and one of the “principal targets of Millennium Development Goal is to ensure environmental sustainability. In the past few years, under pressure from development, environmental sustainability in CMA has taken a heavy beating.”

Before restoration: Water body at Rettaikuttai zone 14.
After restoration: Water body at Rettaikuttai zone 14.

According to the findings of the Master Plan 2026, “the most visible manifestation is the severe pollution in the six major waterways and drains, viz. Cooum, Adyar, Buckingham Canal, Captain Cotton Canal, Otteri Nallah and Mambalam Drain. The sewage carried by these water bodies is to the tune of 532 million liters per day (MLD), which is more than the quantity of sewage collected from Chennai city for treatment by the Metro Water treatment plants. The waterways of Chennai are not perennial in nature and receive flood discharge only during the monsoon. During the rest of the year, they carry wastewater from sewage treatment plants and from defective stormwater outlets.”

The cleaning and restoring of water bodies has shown results in recharging groundwater in many areas. In some areas there has been an increase of 3 meters in groundwater level while in other areas such as Shollinganallur the increase has been as much as 6 meters.

Water woes

Chennai, south India’s major port city, wears many hats. It is a manufacturing and IT hub as well as a centre for education, health care and entertainment. But the city’s water woes dent these economic activities in a big way.

Chennai city has grown exponentially in the past 20 years, but even now rains remain the main source of water supply. According to a report in Business Standard in June this year, the “demand for water in the city has gone up by 47 percent in the last decade, from 750 MLD in 2008 to 1,100 MLD in 2018.”

Daniel Robinson, City Advisor for C40 Cities, an organisation committed to addressing and communicating the implications of climate change, says that Chennai’s issues are inherent.

It starts with the city being just 2 meters above mean sea level (msl) which directly impacts the freshwater aquifer along Chennai’s premier East Coast Road. There has been indiscriminate drawing of water from the aquifer during the summer months, which has resulted in seawater incursion.

Chennai residents wait for hours to collect water from public taps. Photo by Dharani Thangavelu.

Another issue is the city’s soil which mainly comprises soft clay and loose sand layers, which results in slow absorption of rainwater. In addition, the water table is just 1.5 m to 1.6 m below the ground level. So, rainwater harvesting techniques have to be adapted to solve this issue.

Lack of planning, rapid urbanisation and indiscriminate sinking of borewells have resulted in the incursion of saltwater in many seaside localities. Many lakes and ponds have given way to housing projects; only worn-out street signs carrying legendary names such as Lake Bund Road reminds one that there was once a lake in that area.

While the restoration has recharged the groundwater to a great degree, for women like Chandra the wait for water lorry continues.

(This story first appeared on india.mongabay.com)

Elon Musk forms several ‘X Holdings’ companies to fund potential Twitter buyout

3 Mins Read

Thursday’s filing dispelled some doubts, though Musk still has work to do. He and his advisers will spend the coming days vetting potential investors for the equity portion of his offer, according to people familiar with the matter

 Daily Newsletter

KV Prasad Journo follow politics, process in Parliament and US Congress. Former Congressional APSA-Fulbright Fellow

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Oil Fluctuates as Traders Assess China’s Vow, Unrest in Libya

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today's market

index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95

Currency

Company Price Chng %Chng
Dollar-Rupee 73.3500 0.0000 0.00
Euro-Rupee 89.0980 0.0100 0.01
Pound-Rupee 103.6360 -0.0750 -0.07
Rupee-100 Yen 0.6734 -0.0003 -0.05
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Lucky 3! These Nifty50 stocks outperformed in 2019; time to book profits?

KV Prasad Jun 13, 2022, 06:35 AM IST (Published)

 Listen to the Article (6 Minutes)

Summary

Experts remain constructive on all the three names, but do not rule out consolidation in the near-term which could be used as an opportunity to buy

Love them or hate them! Well, you will probably love these three stocks if you had invested in them say in January 2019, and probably hate them if you missed out on the opportunity.

These three stocks have been among the top return generators across three-month, six- month and YTD basis as well. Three stocks which top the charts include names like Bharti Airtel, Bajaj Finserv, and from the private banking space, ICICI Bank.

They have delivered more than 40 percent return each to investors so far in 2019, and if commentary from experts is something to go by then there is still more upside left.

Data suggests that markets are favouring “turnaround” performers such as Bharti Airtel, and Reliance Industries. However, the past month’s trend is showing the market move towards companies with lower sales growth, higher capital intensity, and higher leverage, Elara Capital said in a report.

After rallying by over 40 percent each – does it make sense to put money in ICICI Bank, Bajaj Finserv, and Bharti Airtel? Well, experts remain constructive on all the three names, but do not rule out consolidation in the near-term which could be used as an opportunity to buy.

“The momentum may continue in the stocks as it’s about buying winners and you sell the losers and these stocks are the leaders in their own space that are seeing liquidity coming and hence the premium that is attached to them reflects the same,” Lovelesh Sharma, Head of Research, Epic Research told Moneycontrol.

“The momentum in these stocks may continue as long as investors are less willing to take a risk with profit,” he said.

Ajit Mishra, VP Research, Religare Broking told Moneycontrol that Bajaj Finserv and ICICI Bank are leaders and consistent performers in their respective sectors. Further, both companies have sound management and bright future growth prospects, which can deliver healthy returns to investors.

“Nonetheless, some consolidation can be expected in the near term given the stretched valuation however future outlook looks stable. Conversely, we remain cautious on Bharti Airtel due to on-going issues in the telecom sector,” he said.

Stocks which were outperformers from YTD, six-month, and three-month perspective include names like BPCL which rose 49 percent so far in 2019, Reliance Industries which had rallied 39 percent on a year-to-date basis, and Bajaj Finance which was the top Nifty50 gainer, up 54 percent in the same period.

Elara Capital in its report mentioned that they read these signs as the beginning of market broadening from the narrow set of “high quality” performers and expect the trend to continue among Nifty 50 stocks and more broadly across broader markets as well.

(Source: Moneycontrol.com)

Disclaimer: Network18, the parent company of CNBCTV18.com, is controlled by Independent Media Trust, of which Reliance Industries is the sole beneficiary.

Elon Musk forms several ‘X Holdings’ companies to fund potential Twitter buyout

3 Mins Read

Thursday’s filing dispelled some doubts, though Musk still has work to do. He and his advisers will spend the coming days vetting potential investors for the equity portion of his offer, according to people familiar with the matter

 Daily Newsletter

KV Prasad Journo follow politics, process in Parliament and US Congress. Former Congressional APSA-Fulbright Fellow

Previous Article

Oil Fluctuates as Traders Assess China’s Vow, Unrest in Libya

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today's market

index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95

Currency

Company Price Chng %Chng
Dollar-Rupee 73.3500 0.0000 0.00
Euro-Rupee 89.0980 0.0100 0.01
Pound-Rupee 103.6360 -0.0750 -0.07
Rupee-100 Yen 0.6734 -0.0003 -0.05
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‘This sugar stock could see a double-digit swing in next 3-4 weeks’

KV Prasad Jun 13, 2022, 06:35 AM IST (Published)

 Listen to the Article (6 Minutes)

Summary

A list of top three stocks that could give 8-19 percent return in the next three-four weeks:

The Nifty has entered in a narrow sideways trading band with a negative bias after making a new all-time high in November. It formed a bearish dark cloud cover pattern the previous week, suggesting that the bears have started creating shorts as the Index approaches stiff resistance zone of 12,100-12,200.

On the downside, however, bulls are protecting the cluster of recent lows placed between 11,800 and 11,880, but a breakdown from this cluster of supports can lead to further selling pressure dragging the index lower to 11,680-11,590.

On the flip side, if the index continues to take support at 11,880-11,800, a short-covering rally may take the index back towards 12,100-12,200.

There is an interesting observation with respect to the Ichimoku Cloud, which suggests that every time the Nifty moves away from the cloud in the range of 8.5 percent-9.5 percent, it leads to a correction.

The index had already moved away by 8.8 percent from the cloud, which suggests a correction may be on the cards.

A list of top three stocks that could give 8-19 percent return in the next three-four weeks:

Navin Fluorine International Ltd: Buy| Target: Rs 1,000| Stop Loss: Rs 850| Upside 11 percent

The stock has turned northwards after taking support at the neckline of the Ascending Triangle pattern in its throwback, suggesting a resumption of the bull trend.

It continues to form higher highs and higher lows, confirming strong bullishness. The momentum indicator Relative Strength Index (RSI) has formed a positive reversal with respect to the price, which confirms the positive trend.

The stock may be bought in the range of Rs 900-905 for targets of Rs 965-1,000 and investors could keep a stop loss below Rs 850.

Balrampur Chini Mills Ltd: Buy| Target: Rs 196| Stop Loss: Rs 150| Upside 19 percent

The stock is approaching the neckline of an Ascending Triangle pattern placed at Rs 170-171, and a breakout from on healthy volumes will lead to a resumption of the bull trend.

On the daily chart, the recent bull candles have been backed by extremely healthy volumes, authenticating the strength in the upmove.

Technical indicators also favour the bulls, indicating extended bullishness. The stock can be bought in the range of Rs 163-166 for targets of Rs 185-196, and keep a stop loss below Rs 150.

Apollo Hospitals Enterprise Ltd: Sell| Target: Rs 1,300| Stop Loss: Rs 1,480| Upside 8 percent

The stock is on the verge of a breakdown from the triangle pattern support line placed at Rs 1,400. Further, the recent pullback rally halted at the critical resistance of 78.6 percent Fibonacci retracement level, which also happened to be the resistance line of the triangle.

Moreover, on higher time-frame charts multiple negative divergences have started building, suggesting that the bulls are losing momentum and a correction is coming.

Further, RSI has turned lower without testing the 60-level in pull back, which suggests weakness, and is also making lower highs.

The stock may be sold in the range of Rs 1,420-1,410 for targets of Rs 1,330-1300, keeping a stop loss above Rs 1,480.

(The author is Senior Technical Analyst – Institutional Equities, YES Securities Ltd)

(Source: Moneycontrol.com)

Elon Musk forms several ‘X Holdings’ companies to fund potential Twitter buyout

3 Mins Read

Thursday’s filing dispelled some doubts, though Musk still has work to do. He and his advisers will spend the coming days vetting potential investors for the equity portion of his offer, according to people familiar with the matter

 Daily Newsletter

KV Prasad Journo follow politics, process in Parliament and US Congress. Former Congressional APSA-Fulbright Fellow

Previous Article

Oil Fluctuates as Traders Assess China’s Vow, Unrest in Libya

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Shanghai residents turn to NFTs to record COVID lockdown, combat censorship

LIVE TV

today's market

index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95

Currency

Company Price Chng %Chng
Dollar-Rupee 73.3500 0.0000 0.00
Euro-Rupee 89.0980 0.0100 0.01
Pound-Rupee 103.6360 -0.0750 -0.07
Rupee-100 Yen 0.6734 -0.0003 -0.05
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Merriam-Webster declares ‘they’ its 2019 word of the year

KV Prasad Jun 13, 2022, 06:35 AM IST (Published)

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A common but increasingly mighty and very busy little word, “they,” has an accolade all its own.

A common but increasingly mighty and very busy little word, “they,” has an accolade all its own.

The language mavens at Merriam-Webster have declared the personal pronoun their word of the year based on a 313 percent increase in look ups on the company’s search site, Merriam-Webster.com, this year when compared with 2018.

“I have to say it’s surprising to me,” said Peter Sokolowski, a lexicographer and Merriam-Webster’s editor at large, ahead of Tuesday’s announcement. “It’s a word we all know and love. So many people were talking about this word.”

Sokolowski and his team monitor spikes in searches and “they” got an early start last January with the rise of model Oslo Grace on top fashion runways. The Northern Californian identifies as transgender nonbinary, walking in both men’s and women’s shows around the world.

Another look-up spike occurred in April, when US Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Washington, got emotional while talking of her gender-nonconforming child during a House committee hearing as she advocated for LGBTQ rights legislation.

Merriam-Webster recently added a new definition to its online dictionary to reflect use of “they” as relating to a person whose gender identity is nonbinary. In October, the American Psychological Association endorsed “they” as a singular third-person pronoun in its latest style guide for scholarly writing.

“We believe writers should try to use a person’s self-identified pronoun whenever feasible,” said Jasper Simons, chief publishing officer for the APA. “The singular ‘they’ is a way for writers to avoid making assumptions about gender when it is not known.”

The American Dialect Society, which is dedicated to the study of the English language in North America, named “they” its word of the year for 2015, in recognition of its emergence among people who reject “he” and “she.”

In September, Merriam-Webster experienced another big increase in look-ups for “they” when pop star Sam Smith wrote on social media that their preferred pronouns were “they” and “them.” Smith said the decision came after a “lifetime of being at war with my gender.”

Sokolowski told The Associated Press that “they,” one of a handful of nonbinary pronouns to emerge in recent years, is “here to stay.” Nick Adams, director of transgender representation for the LGBTQ advocacy group GLAAD, said Merriam-Webster’s choice is a positive step in acknowledging nonbinary people.

“There is a long road ahead before language, policy and culture are completely affirming and inclusive,” Adams said.

And the Merriam-Webster runners-up?

They include “quid pro quo,” “impeach” and “crawdad,” the latter a word in the title of Delia Evans best-selling novel, “Where the Crawdads Sing.” The Top 10 also included “egregious,” “clemency” and “the,” a shocker of a look-up spike when The Ohio State University attempted to patent the word to protect its turf. It failed.

Also in the mix: “snitty,” which emerged on the lips of Attorney General William Barr in reference to a letter by Robert Mueller about a summary Barr wrote of the Mueller report.

We have Washington Post columnist George Will to thank for “tergiversation.” The word, meaning an evasion or desertion, was Merriam-Webster’s top look-up on Jan. 24 after Will used it in a column in reference to Lindsey Graham.

The words “camp” and “exculcate” rounded out the Top 10 list.

Elon Musk forms several ‘X Holdings’ companies to fund potential Twitter buyout

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Thursday’s filing dispelled some doubts, though Musk still has work to do. He and his advisers will spend the coming days vetting potential investors for the equity portion of his offer, according to people familiar with the matter

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KV Prasad Journo follow politics, process in Parliament and US Congress. Former Congressional APSA-Fulbright Fellow

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index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95

Currency

Company Price Chng %Chng
Dollar-Rupee 73.3500 0.0000 0.00
Euro-Rupee 89.0980 0.0100 0.01
Pound-Rupee 103.6360 -0.0750 -0.07
Rupee-100 Yen 0.6734 -0.0003 -0.05
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Morgan Stanley bearish on this private lender, expects 28% downside

KV Prasad Jun 13, 2022, 06:35 AM IST (Published)

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Summary

Shares of RBL Bank fell 2.8 percent intraday on December 10 as global brokerage house Morgan Stanley remained bearish on the stock citing asset quality concerns.

Shares of RBL Bank fell 2.8 percent intraday on December 10 as global brokerage house Morgan Stanley remained bearish on the stock citing asset quality concerns.

The brokerage has an underweight rating on the stock with a target price of Rs 240 per share, implying 28.4 percent potential downside from current levels. Valuations at 1.5x FY21 appear unattractive, it feels.

The stock has already lost 50 percent of its value in the last six months, especially due to volatility over asset quality of the bank and weak guidance for the second half of FY20.

At the time of publishing this copy, RBL was quoting at Rs 330, down Rs 4.95, or 1.48 percent on the BSE.

Morgan Stanley believes RBL Bank has strong long term growth potential.

“The bank is in the early stages of growth; it remains one of the smallest in India, with a loan book of just around Rs 58,500 crore. It has an experienced team and a motivated workforce. It has lower impaired loans against state-owned banks. Competition is weak. Its lending portfolio is diversified. It has an expanding distribution network,” it reasoned.

However, the brokerage expects RBL to see muted earnings trends in the near term given continued weakness in asset quality. Also, the bank is taking higher risk (with increased lending to unsecured segments), which needs to be monitored, it said.

“Valuations have corrected (1.5xF21 book), but we stay underweight due to lack of visibility on asset quality and muted profitability, although recent capital raising is a positive,” it added.

The research house feels India’s macro outlook remains difficult given muted economic growth and continued risk aversion amongst lenders. This, amid RBL’s high exposure to BBB and below rated corporates (around 55 percent of corporate loan book), implies a high risk of continued elevated slippages, it said.

Hence it increased slippage and credit cost estimates over FY20-21 and is now building Rs 2,500 crore of slippages over and above normal slippage run-rate, compared to the bank’s guided watchlist of Rs 1,800 crore as of Q2FY20.

It cut its F20/21/22 EPS estimates by 10 percent/15 percent/9 percent due to higher credit costs and dilution,, but expects good core pre-provision operating profit (PPoP) growth of 25 percent CAGR during FY19-22.

“Although the bank should reduce risk and see higher non-performing loans (NPLs) in corporate banking, we expect a continuing increase in the unsecured retail loans mix (credit cards, MFI). However, even after this, we expect return on equity (RoE) to remain at low teens over the next few years (around 11 percent during FY21-22) given elevated credit costs,” Morgan Stanley said.

Recently the bank raised $380 million of capital via QIP and preferential allotment last week (dilution of around 18 percent), which helped it improve the CET 1 ratio from 11.3 percent to 15.3 percent (F2Q20 proforma basis).

“The key risk to our call is a sharp recovery in macro that would imply lower slippages and faster resolutions. A downside catalyst would be further upward revision to corporate watch list and/or higher retail NPLs,” Morgan Stanley said.

The private sector lender in the July-September quarter had reported a 73.4 percent fall YoY in profit due to a sharp spike in provisions, and asset quality also deteriorated sequentially.

The lender had highlighted a few months ago, given the difficult corporate credit environment it had faced challenges in a few corporate accounts.

“As a matter of prudence, we have taken higher than required provisions on these accounts which have impacted our bottomline,” Vishwavir Ahuja, MD & CEO, RBL Bank had said in a statement.

Asset quality deteriorated sharply during the quarter with gross non-performing assets (NPA) as a percentage of gross advances rising 122bps sequentially to 2.6 percent and net NPA climbing 91bps QoQ to 1.56 percent in Q2.

Disclaimer: The above report is compiled from information available on public platforms. Moneycontrol.com advises users to check with certified experts before taking any investment decisions.

(This story was first published on moneycontrol.com)

Elon Musk forms several ‘X Holdings’ companies to fund potential Twitter buyout

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Thursday’s filing dispelled some doubts, though Musk still has work to do. He and his advisers will spend the coming days vetting potential investors for the equity portion of his offer, according to people familiar with the matter

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KV Prasad Journo follow politics, process in Parliament and US Congress. Former Congressional APSA-Fulbright Fellow

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index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95

Currency

Company Price Chng %Chng
Dollar-Rupee 73.3500 0.0000 0.00
Euro-Rupee 89.0980 0.0100 0.01
Pound-Rupee 103.6360 -0.0750 -0.07
Rupee-100 Yen 0.6734 -0.0003 -0.05
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Amazon India Country Head Amit Agarwal speaks on profitability, efforts to enable Indian SMEs digitally, and more

KV Prasad Jun 13, 2022, 06:35 AM IST (Published)

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Summary

E-commerce will be one of the biggest needle movers of the Indian economy and employment creation, and as a long-term-oriented company, Amazon will focus on enabling millions of Indian SMEs digitally, says Amit Agarwal, Senior VP and Country Head of Amazon India in an interview with CNBC-V18.

E-commerce will be one of the biggest needle movers of the Indian economy and for employment creation, and as a long-term-oriented company, Amazon will focus on enabling millions of Indian SMEs digitally, says Amit Agarwal, Senior VP and Country Head of Amazon India.

“There is no reason why the Indian SME will not go digital, there is no reason why Indians would not again want selection value and convenience. So when you have that comfort in your mind, you don’t calibrate your investments on a year-on-year basis based on what is happening around,” Agarwal told CNBC-TV18 in an exclusive interview.

Speaking about the e-retail major’s seven-year journey in India, Agarwal said the company remains focused on things that matter the most for the customers.

“We have more than 200 million items on our website now. We started with a few million, there were only books, there were about hundred sellers on our website. Today, we have more than 600,000 selling partners who are part of the Amazon family. In some sense, we serve to 100 percent of India’s pin codes,” he pointed out.

Edited excerpts from the interview:

Amazon India has been operating here for almost seven years now. Take me through the journey so far and more importantly, what is the bet as you move forward?

It has been seven years, you don’t realise working every day that it has been that long. It seems like day one all the time for us.

We launched in 2013. For the sake of context, Amazon has always been obsessed with trying to figure out how to focus on the things that matter the most for customers. Three things that we have always believed globally customers care about are selection, value and convenience. So our approach in India over the last seven years has been nothing different. We have been very focused on enabling the SMEs digitally because, with tens of millions of SMEs in India that are entrepreneurs, it is a huge opportunity to unlock selection.

The second bit we have been focused on is how we use technology to remove defects. So that is the beauty of technology, it is sort of make value generation easier for SMEs because their costs go down, their defects go down and they can sell more and that value can be passed on to customers, and in the end, create more and more infrastructure so that we can deliver fast and offer more convenience to our customers.

So the last seven years have been great. We have more than 200 million items on our website now. We started with a few million, there were only books, there were about hundred sellers on our website. Today we have more than 600,000 selling partners and ecosystem partners who are part of the Amazon family. In some sense, we serve to 100 percent of India’s pin codes. When we launched, we used to deliver in about 10 cities and we used to get all the emails all the time — ‘when are you going to launch in my city?’ — and today when I look at just last October for example, we looked at a sample of data for five days and we found that customers from 99.4 percent of India’s pin codes have placed an order on Amazon which is huge accomplishment from where we were and then finally we have millions of items that are now delivered next-day guaranteed and tens and thousands are delivered in two-hours guaranteed.

Prime has become a huge phenomenon for Amazon. Just to give you sense of how quickly Prime has grown, it is our unique loyalty programme that brings digital benefits and physical benefits together so you can add free unlimited videos, add free music and unlimited one-day delivery. Today we have prime members in 97 percent of India’s pin code, which is practically every corner of the country and Prime has doubled in the last 18 months. So all-in-all it has been just humbling to see this journey happen.

What is even more exciting is what we are seeing what is good for customers is actually also very much aligned with what are the top priorities when we look at the next decade for India. Just to give you a sense when we look at the number of sellers, we have over half a million sellers on Amazon. Just this October we had about 80,000 sellers from 520 cities that received orders. Similarly, we have thousands of local shops either delivering packages for us or acting as a customer access point, pick-point, return points, and so on. So the ecosystem has become very inclusive and very broad which is helping digitise the sort of the SME base, the customer base. It is helping skilling, when I kind of look at each of these success stories they are creating jobs around there. All-in-all it is very exciting to see that what started as serving customers has evolved into not just serving customers but also serving some of the inputs that India cares about.

Let me also ask you what it means as far as the road to profitability is concerned and I will link this back to the seven years because it was the inflection point at the Amazon globally in its seventh year. Given the experience that you have had in India so far, the fact that you have been able to get more sellers on board, customer acquisition is looking strong, revenue growth has been strong, but losses continue to mount. Rs 7,000 crore cumulative across your various businesses for 2018-2019, has declined year-on-year, but nevertheless it is a sizeable number. What is the trajectory as far as to reduce losses and turn to black?

We are not running a non-profit organisation, we are a business and we have responsibility against our shareholders. I think you need to evaluate this in a broader context. If you just think about the next decade, what is going to happen in the next decade? India is at a tremendous inflection point, we probably have these numerous tailwinds that are coming together like a perfect stock, we had the largest democracy, we have the youngest population and then you combine with it probably the largest base of small and medium base that is ready to be digitised and then you have the technology-advancements that have happened, especially machine learning that can really transform at scale.

So when you think about India you cannot really find the unique selection from every customer without using AI and machine learning and then finally mobile internet is in my opinion probably the perfect leveller across culture, social and economic boundaries, and so on. So when you have this perfect stock, the opportunity in India is to transform consumption. So when you think about a seven-year journey, we are planting a lot of seeds while our earlier seeds are sprouting, growing, becoming plants and yielding fruits. So let us take Prime video, a large part of the investment that you talked about is going into content creation, bringing producers, content creators, actors, directors together to create the next generation of content that customers would love.

Payment systems, we are building and investing a lot of energy and enthusiasm beyond Amazon Payments while this is going to help probably financial inclusion when you look forward. But more importantly, it is also allowing customers in the remotest part of the country to shop with us without having a digital payment method.

All of these investments, grocery is a big area of investments for us where we have opened up numerous formats in the last year or so. These are where our investments are going. When you look at our core business, that business is already showing the characteristics that we have seen globally, that we start seeing leverage in our fixed costs and our revenues covered the variable cost. So all-in-all we are very excited about the enthusiasm, but we also realise that this is so early. We would continue to invest for that long term and we are very excited about it.

Take me through what kind of investments will be required for the opportunity that you foresee here in India. Jeff Bezos announced $5 billion in 2016; since then another $600 million across your various businesses. How much are you going to need by way of investments to further the ambitions and the aspirations that you have in India?

I think we have a lot of different businesses. We do not disaggregate our businesses, so it is a little hard to get that picture. We do not also separate our countries out but as I said if you look at Prime Video, it is a business where you need fixed costs to create a content library, then over a period of time you can monetise it. So, it is in the very early stages of investment. In fact Inside Edge had its Season 2, it is kind of the anniversary for us in some sense. Inside Edge Season 1 was our first release and now we have Season 2, so you can realise that we are barely getting into Season 2 of our investments, same with Prime, whether it is Prime Music, building a fast delivery network in this country.

When you look at payments, grocery it is very early, we basically launched four-city, two-hour delivery just in the recent months. These are new emerging seeds, so it is very hard for me to separate these seeds.

When I look at the core business, our core marketplace business, we are very excited by what we are seeing. One of the unique things about the Amazon model is we simultaneously optimise for selection, value and convenience. Customers do not have to trade off one for the other. So, they can find great value, they can find great convenience. However, for us, a big metric of success is to just look at how Prime is growing.

Prime, as I said, is doubling every 18 months. We are the fastest-growing Prime geography in the world, we have the highest engagement of Prime members in the world across our benefits and we have Prime penetration in 97 percent of the country. So, our core business is showing the right financial characteristics that we like very much.

Replicating the kind of trends that you have seen globally?

Absolutely. We are kind of seeing that positive characteristic in our core business. You should think of all the other spends — technology, infrastructure, new emerging seeds which we would continue doing for the next several decades.

One of the bets that you have made here in India which is also reflective of the blurring of boundaries between e-commerce and traditional retail is the investments that you have made in the offline players whether it is future or it is more of the Aditya Birla Group or it is Shoppers Stop, how much more appetite do you have for deals like that and how do you see the synergies playing out? What is the kind of timeline that you believe that you will be able to see this play out for you within the ecosystem?

I think it goes back again to that question — the obsession with customers, ask how would you give them the things that they value? They value selection, they value convenience. There is no reason to wait for grocery for a day or two when you expect to just walk into a grocery store and do your daily grocery. At the same time if you are stocking up for your month you would be willing to wait for a day or two. So, we have both formats, when you look at core Amazon.in we have Amazon Pantry that allows you to stock up for the week or for the month and we give two-day guarantee delivery and get it. However, when we thought about doing fresh groceries, it was very simple in our brains that you have to give it in 2 hours or less. So, a lot of these partnerships and investments allow us to service customers in that way.

Where do you still see the gaps that you believe such partnerships or investments can address?

Shoppers Stop is an example where we did it because we wanted to offer more selection. Shoppers Stop is probably one of the most admired and matured fashion retailer brands in the country and they have access to a lot of brands that are not available online. So, our focus single-mindedly there was how do we make that selection accessible to our customers?

In the case of More, it is very much about how do we get our customers to enjoy our grocery. In case of the Future Group, they have a multi-category selection assortment and it would be great for customers to get the things that they care about most on a daily basis to get it in 2 hours and they are on Prime now which is a 2-hour service and they are seeing great traction and we would continue growing it with them. So, it is hard for me to predict what those kinds of interventions would be.

Do you see more such investments and partnerships on the horizon?

I can give you a couple of examples or another example that has nothing to do with partnership but is an investment, it is our Amazon Easy product. It is again an offline venture if you will but with a different twist to it. So, when you go to the lower demand clusters of the country, one of the key enablers of trust is being able to converse with somebody that you have interacted with for a long time. So, Amazon Easy allows a local entrepreneur whether it is a shop owner or a new entrepreneur to essentially open up an Amazon store and offer the Amazon selection to the customers around and offer additional services whether it is home services, recharges and other services that they offer. So, the customer is walking into that point, it is called the Amazon Easy Point, they are looking at a screen and choosing what they want to buy, they are paying the shopkeeper and the item gets delivered to their house. So, this model is neither an online nor an offline model but it is an investment for us and we do partner with such local financial networks and social networks that are there that allow us to create these points throughout the country. So, we are very opportunistic about it, very open minded that if there are such synergies where we find our customers can be served better, we are very open to such investments.

You have talked about the opportunities, but let us also focus a little bit on the challenges and I think the regulatory headwinds have been quite significant especially in the past year. It has forced you also to restructure your business and the uncertainty continues. How difficult is it for you to negotiate the environment? I know that you are spending a lot more time in Delhi than you are in Bangalore, I do not know how much you would like to spend more time in Delhi, but tell me how difficult is it for you to navigate the current environment or how challenging is it?

We try to approach our problems by setting in place first the principles behind what we would use to find a solution. To me the regulation part is the simplest of all the problems, amongst all the problems that you deal with in some ways because the principle is very simple, we have a very high bar of compliance. We will comply with the law of the land in letter and spirit.

Except that there is criticism every day from the association of traders, Confederation of All India Traders, to be specific, which says that you are not in compliance with the FDI regulations, that you are in violation of the FDI norms, sending complaints to the Prime Minister’s Office and to the ministry practically every other day. So, how do you deal with that because it does cause uncertainty, doesn’t it?

So whenever there is disruption, there is going to be confusion, and there is an opportunity to educate, there is an opportunity to be open minded and learn. So we do not distract ourselves from opinions out there because as I said, our principle is very simple. Number one, we have a very high bar of compliance and we are always compliant with no matter what the laws of any country are. Two, we are obsessed with customers. We do not care about the noise around us, we do not care about how competitive landscape or the opinion landscape around us changes. The second thing I would point out is the reality of what we are seeing does not align with those opinions. We are seeing a very different transformation.

At the customer end, you mean?

No, at the seller end. Let me give you some examples that would highlight this. One of the things one has to realise is the internet brings itself with certain disruption. If I just go back to the mobile phone, growing up we were very used to seeing an STD booth. When I was in IIT, that was my way of going and calling my parents. There used to be a line, it was a great moment for all of us to just talk about what happened during the day. We do not see PCO booths today, but we see the same entrepreneurs — India’s advantage lies in how optimistic, how boundless in energy, and how entrepreneurial our business base is. So, the right kind of people during that disruption transform themselves as cornerstones. We are seeing the same happen right now.

So, the right kind of businesses is embracing technology and realising a few things. We are realising that if I am able to embrace this disruption, my cost structure will go down because I can source products directly than I could before. So, we actually have an Amazon distribution service that allows ‘kirana’ stores to buy their grocery at a great value because we could source them from brands and deliver it to them.

Two, the internet and technology reduce inefficiencies in the value chain and they reduce defects. Wherever defects go down, customers have a better experience and your sales go up and your cost goes down and sellers are realising that.

Three, you have to understand that now suddenly your landscape that you can serve is the whole country and the whole world. So, smart sellers realised it is not about optimising the profit margin, it is optimising profit rupees. So, you pass on the value to your customers to provide them great value and you get larger orders to get a greater revenue stream than you could get before.

So, now to give you an example, as I said, this a kind of basic example — I receive a seller story — I receive emails all the time, in fact, it is very hard to go travel without people coming and saying ‘thank you’. This seller is a weaver in Varanasi and he sells 1-2 ‘dupattas’ every day. He is selling it to merchants who are putting it in their store shelves and he is basically allowing them to price it up and sell it to customers. Since launching a ‘karigar’ programme that allows weavers to sell to customers directly, his daily orders have gone up 10x. He has been earning more money every week than he could earn in several months and he employs more than 25 weavers working for him now having a legitimate business.

So, if essentially a basic weaver is able to understand the principles of disruption and take advantage of it, then the right kind of businesses are doing that and we have 600,000 of these that are doing that on a daily basis.

As I said, I get the point you are making but there is this environment of uncertainty. Just today, for instance, the CAIT had sent out an email virtually to the ministry saying that why is the MSME ministry tying up with Flipkart and Amazon and it is not the right thing to do. But that apart, you said that this is the least of your problems, this is a distraction.

I wanted to say it is the least complex because it is a very simple principle of compliance. It is not easy because you have to invent despite that compliance. You kind of train yourself saying that these are the laws that I have to live by but I also have to provide a customer experience. So, what I was trying to say is, when you have compliance and customer obsession as your two fundamental principles, then the hard job is to innovate to comply with both of them. However, the problem is simple because your principles are set, is what I was trying to say.

I get the point that you are making, but continuing with the uncertainties and there are a few of them on the horizon. One of course is this whole business of the data protection legislation. We are expecting it to go through in Parliament. We do not know what the eventual bill will say, but there is likely to be some watering as far as the localisation norms are concerned especially when it comes to general data. How much of a distraction is that currently for somebody like you for instance?

I really get super-energised by the purpose of what we are doing here. When you are here with an ambition to transform daily lives of 100,000 people, that job comes with a lot of responsibility to deal with this day-to-day variations which is very legitimate. For a country like India, it is a very legitimate question that how should we ensure that this disruption is responsible, how is this disruption going to ensure security of the country, it is going to protect the rights of Indian citizens and at the same time enable innovation. So, it is a tough problem, and our job is to be a partner, be in a consultative approach to offer our point of views and at the end of the day whatever the laws are, we would comply with that.

So, I do not think of it as distraction, it is a natural outcome of the disruption that is happening. If you set your eyes on the larger purpose of hundreds of millions of customers, we already have 100 million plus customers shopping with us, that job has to come with a responsibility. We cannot not expect to be questioned, people not asking us can you please help us understand better.

How many times in a day are you being asked questions of whether you are in compliance or not in compliance and is the atmosphere one that is accommodative of your point of view?

Absolutely. A great example is for a country to open up FDI in food retail, which probably would be one of the more controversial sectors, is a tremendous affirmation that at the end of the day common sense prevails. So, while you might have a lot of these noises, I think if you keep your mind focused, as a company we have always focused on the things that do not change. I have always said that since we have launched, customers 10 years later would say I need more selection, greater value and faster speed and that is what our strategy is indexed on. We do not really worry about day-to-day variations, day-to-day competitive challenges, and so on. So, when you think about that, that kind of dialogue and that kind of relentlessness in your purpose and objective, at the end of the day I feel the right kind of officials and discussions and industry associations come together and common sense does prevail, there would be variations in the short term but we are very long-term focused.

Speaking of the long-term and Jeff Bezos is going to be in India at the start of 2020.

I don’t know of that news yet.

You are not confirming that news to us?

I have nothing to confirm at this point in time.

We are given to understand that Jeff Bezos is going to be in India at the start of 2020. Give me a sense now what the focus is going to be and what the priorities will be for Amazon over the next few years, you have given us a glimpse of food, for instance, is clearly going to be a big bet, new categories?

I would say the priorities would be as boring as they have been last seven years. We everyday get up and ask ourselves.

If you think about it, as I said the beauty of our strategy is something that is not going to change for the next few decades or forever. How many businesses are built on things of stability? So while you keep asking me about distraction and instability, I keep going back to the stability that we have.

I know customers will want more selection, greater value and greater convenience and that is a very stabilising factor in how we think about things. So yes, the next few years would be the same things. Add more selection, keep removing more and more defects from the ecosystem so that our SMEs, partners reduce their cost of operations and they are able to pass that as value to our customers, keep making deliveries faster, more and more pin codes, more and more cities, eligible for 2-hour, one-day, two-day deliveries and so on, keep making Prime better every day. Today when I look at an Amazon customer, you can go to Amazon to send money, book bus tickets, book train tickets or book movie tickets.

So Amazon for everything.

For everything, you can buy a grocery, you can pay other people, you can pay shops. It has essentially become a utility for my everyday life. So it is our responsibility to improve the lives of hundreds of millions of customers who are going to use this on a daily basis.

Prime is a great way for us to bring the best of Amazon together. So get more content out there, have more and more places where they can use Amazon, more and more cases where they can use Amazon — keep making Prime better. Within that, of course payments is an area we are investing in, groceries are where we are investing, Prime Video is in an area.

Even on payments, for instance, while you are making big investments there, your losses have also gone up quite significantly. So what is the kind of threshold that you see for each of these businesses, by when you believe that you will be able to at least, the bloodletting will probably start?

As I said, you have to look at a period of time to evaluate the financials. So if you look at a given year, let us say you have decided that you suddenly want to build a spurt of infrastructure to serve the next seven years, you cannot look at losses within a year.

What would be across each of your businesses and for Amazon India as a whole what would be a fair estimate in terms of being able to say that the investment period or phase may have started to taper off, when we could probably see you start?

We are already seeing that. If you look at the seeds that we planted seven years ago, they are already showing the financial health that we expect when we map it to other geographies that we have seen. It is just that we are planting so many more seeds that you are looking at the summation of all of that. So if you look at the number of new seeds that we are planting now they are going to go through their own lifecycle. So we are very excited by the leverage that we are seeing in our investments, by the financial health of the investments that we made seven years ago. It is just that we believe that when we are given the responsibility to improve the lives of hundreds of millions of people, there are so many different areas that we can improve the lives, Prime Video is very early in this lifecycle, grocery is very early. Amazon Payments is very early. We have started last year. So they will grow.

Practically, every day there is a new research report that talks about where this market is headed, how large this market is going to be, what the opportunity is going to look like, 5-10 years down the line. It is still what online – all together still under 3 percent. So give me a sense on the back of what you are seeing of how you see this building out and what the opportunity could really mean? What is the number you are working with?

None, to prepare a business plan and say that you need to launch a business and make money in 90 days or 9 months or 9 years or 90 years, they would have a very different business plan. I find ourselves very blessed that Amazon is a very long-term-oriented company. So trying to base your strategies on things that change, you just said that estimates change every year, they are bound to change because macro conditions change, environment change, but the things that don’t change is the fundamental premise that the e-commerce will be one of the biggest needle movers of the Indian economy and for job creation. I don’t have a shred of doubt because there is no reason why Indians will not go digital. There is no reason why the Indian SME will not go digital, there is no reason why Indians would not again want selection value and convenience.

So when you have that comfort in your mind, you don’t calibrate your investments on a year-on-year basis based on what is happening around. You ask yourself where you want to be in the next few decades and what investments do you need today, fixed investments mostly and people confuse that. Most of our investments are fixed, infrastructure, technology, content, things that would leverage over a period of time. Our Variable expenses are minimal because we have already achieved that scale where we can start seeing that kind of financial health.

I think where that number should be, even if you look at matured geographies like the United States, online is less than 10 percent, so I feel in some ways online being so small receives disproportionate attention that it really deserves. So even after 25 years of evolution, it hasn’t crossed 10 percent in the United States. So I think in the case of India I am certain it will continue to grow. I am certain it will continue to be one of the biggest levers for us to connect people together.

I am getting these great stories like there is a company called Jack in the Box, it is run by women, it is a women-led, women-vision company and she wanted to make creative toys for kids, and they essentially decided they are going to launch in the US and they went through Amazon and they have launched in the US. It is one of the top 10 products in their categories. Now she employees 30 other underprivileged women – that is the new India I am excited about and I am subscribed to and that is barely scratching the surface.

I think the opportunity is tremendous, it is massive. If I look ahead I think it is India’s moment in the world. I feel blessed, I think Amazon is very fortunate to be a catalyst in helping India grow.

What are the numbers looking like, direct employment and indirect employment, courtesy you?

We have created more than half a million jobs, five lakh jobs since we have launched. These are both direct and indirect. When we look at exports that are enabled through Amazon, we have 600,000 sellers selling on Amazon right now, almost 50,000 of them sell in 12 international markets and exports through Amazon has already exceeded billion dollars cumulatively. We are on track to exceed $5 billion by 2023. Just to give you a perspective that is almost 3 percent of India’s total exports, so the opportunity is massive.

Elon Musk forms several ‘X Holdings’ companies to fund potential Twitter buyout

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Thursday’s filing dispelled some doubts, though Musk still has work to do. He and his advisers will spend the coming days vetting potential investors for the equity portion of his offer, according to people familiar with the matter

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index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95

Currency

Company Price Chng %Chng
Dollar-Rupee 73.3500 0.0000 0.00
Euro-Rupee 89.0980 0.0100 0.01
Pound-Rupee 103.6360 -0.0750 -0.07
Rupee-100 Yen 0.6734 -0.0003 -0.05
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Should Elon Musk be able to buy Twitter?

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Bullish on 10 multi-cap stocks, brokerages expect 14-121% returns

KV Prasad Jun 13, 2022, 06:35 AM IST (Published)

 Listen to the Article (6 Minutes)

Summary

The market always has stock opportunities whether it is a bull, bear or consolidative phase, say experts. It is for the investor to pick the right stock at the right time and the right price.

The market always has stock opportunities whether it is a bull, bear or consolidative phase, say experts. It is for the investor to pick the right stock at the right time and the right price.

Ever since the government took a raft of measures, including a cut in the corporate tax rate, experts have turned more bullish, though the market seems to have already priced in expected earnings growth. The benchmark indices have rallied 13 percent since September 20, the day the corporate tax was lowered.

Most experts expect earnings and economic growth to pick up in the next financial year, though Q2 GDP pointed to a deepening slow down in the economy. The third quarter is unlikely to be better, considering the weakness across major sectors.

Experts do not see a major improvement in earnings this year and GDP growth could be well below 5 percent. They, however, do expect double-digit earnings growth next year, with around 6 percent growth in GDP though on a low base of last year.

“The disconnect between equity markets and economy could stay for some time as high-frequency indicators are not showing any signs of improvement, whereas markets could remain at elevated levels on hopes of certain sops likely to come in the forthcoming Union Budget,” Kotak Securities MD & CEO Jaideep Hansraj said.

Better farm income, after a good monsoon, coupled with measures taken by the government and RBI could help improve demand in the calendar year 2020, say experts.

“The low base effect of this year could also help companies report decent revenue and operating profit growth in FY21. We expect Nifty 50 earnings to grow by 10 percent in FY20 and 27 percent in FY21. For the next three years, we are building in earnings CAGR of 18 percent for the Nifty 50 as compared to the previous three years CAGR of 8 percent,” Hansraj added.

In December 2020, he expects the one year forward EPS of the Nifty to be around Rs 767, which valued at 17.5x gives a one-year target of 13,400 and a similar target for the Sensex will work to 45,500, he said.

Hence, experts expect that the rally, which restricted to a few stocks that lifted 13 percent return in short period, to broaden next year.

To benefit from this broad rally, brokerages pick these top 10 stocks that could give 14-121 percent return in the next 8-15 months.

Brokerage: Motilal Oswal

(This story first appeared on moneycontrol.com)

Elon Musk forms several ‘X Holdings’ companies to fund potential Twitter buyout

3 Mins Read

Thursday’s filing dispelled some doubts, though Musk still has work to do. He and his advisers will spend the coming days vetting potential investors for the equity portion of his offer, according to people familiar with the matter

 Daily Newsletter

KV Prasad Journo follow politics, process in Parliament and US Congress. Former Congressional APSA-Fulbright Fellow

Previous Article

Oil Fluctuates as Traders Assess China’s Vow, Unrest in Libya

Next Article

Shanghai residents turn to NFTs to record COVID lockdown, combat censorship

LIVE TV

today's market

index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95

Currency

Company Price Chng %Chng
Dollar-Rupee 73.3500 0.0000 0.00
Euro-Rupee 89.0980 0.0100 0.01
Pound-Rupee 103.6360 -0.0750 -0.07
Rupee-100 Yen 0.6734 -0.0003 -0.05
Quiz
Powered by
Are you a Crypto Head? It’s time to prove it!
10 Questions · 5 Minutes
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Win WRX (WazirX token) worth Rs. 1500.
Question 1 of 5

What coins do you think will be valuable over next 3 years?

Answer Anonymously

Should Elon Musk be able to buy Twitter?