Sunday, August 22, 2010
Are American Small Investors shying away from Stock market?
Saturday, August 21, 2010
Monday, August 9, 2010
Infosys - A Chop Shop?
Criticising companies outsourcing highly-paid American jobs, a US Senator has described Indian IT major Infosys as a "chop shop", a place where stolen cars are dismantled and parts sold separately.
The comments were made by Democrat Senator of New York Charles E Schumer during discussions on the Border Security Bill, a USD 600-million emergency package aimed at strengthening security along the porous Mexican border.
"The emergency border funds will be paid for by assessing fees on foreign companies known as chop shops that outsource good, high-paying American technology jobs to lower wage, temporary immigrant workers from other countries.
"These are companies such as Infosys," Schumer said on the Senate floor on Thursday.
My Comments:
Infosys and other Indian Software Company should try to do at least one or two products, to prove that they also have real capability in developing software. I am always surprised to see them keep on multiplying their revenues Year-over-year even when the Global Economy itself
is under performing, even without holding any IP and real competitive edge.
My thoughts is that they are leveraging the gap between the cost of essential life services in India vs the same in US (indirectly through the currency value difference between Indian Rupee and the US Dollar). But this Currency Value difference itself is the ugly offspring of US making its Paper currency the world's Currency (giving a monopoly player status for US). The US is now tasting its own medicine it had been administrating to the entire world.
What is happening is that non-tech, non-financial service providers (read as middle class people) value has eroded under globalization across the globe. This exploitation cannot go on forever and US non-tech, non-finance service providers are now fighting back. Their Indian Counterparts to would start fighting back soon.
Wednesday, August 4, 2010
Urbanization & Growth : India, China & Asia
Notes from Reuters Special on Urbanization - India & China Story
1. It happens every year. When monsoon rains lash Mumbai, the city turns into a cesspool, which along with its potholed roads and gridlocked traffic, mocks its ambition of becoming a global financial center. India has Asia's third-largest economy and the increasing global clout that goes with it. It is already home to a quarter of the world's 20 most densely populated cities.
2. Indian cities over the next two decades will also house 40 percent of the country's population and generate some 70 percent of new job opportunities, McKinsey Global Institute (MGI), the research arm of consultancy McKinsey, estimates in a report.
"Across all major quality-of-life indicators, India's cities fall well short of delivering even a basic standard of living for their residents," the report said. To cater to this growth, India needs to invest $1.2 trillion in capital expenditure, mainly infrastructure, over that period, an eight-fold increase of current spending levels, MGI said.3. India will, over the next two decades, see an urban transformation the scale and speed of which has not happened anywhere except China, with many cities becoming larger than many countries, in terms of population size and GDP.
"It's going to be one of the most defining changes that we have yet to see," said Roopa Purushothaman at Everstone Investment Advisors.
Analysis :Historically, India's politicians and policy-makers have focused on villages. Urbanization has largely been a result of existing cities expanding economically and demographically, rather than anything planned. This is reflected in Sonia Gandhi's approach, who has conceded that the price hike in petrol is to fund the social schemes (read village oriented). This would tantamount to penalize the urban population to help rural population.
Monday, August 2, 2010
Economic plan ensured jobs not heading to India, China: Obama
From: Hindu
A Chinese Innovation - Metro -meets BUS meets TRAM


Finally Chinese have come of age and are now providing innovative solutions to world's problems.
Here is a Metro Meets BUS meets TRAM idea that might be implemented in Beijing Suburb this year. The concept is interesting where Countries like India can leverage on its new road infrastructure to create better Mass Transport Systems.