18 December 2009

Mukesh Ambani ranked 5th best CEO in the world

Mukesh Ambani ranked 5th best CEO in the world

NEW DELHI: Mukesh Ambani, who heads India's most valuable company Reliance Industries, has been ranked among top five best performing CEOs in the
Mukesh Ambani
world by the prestigious Harvard Business Review.

Ambani, the only Indian to feature among top 50 CEOs, is in the same league as Steve Jobs of Apple, Yun Jong-Yong of Samsung Electronics, Russian energy firm Gazprom's Alexey Miller and John Chambers of Cisco Systems.

He is also ranked number two among the top 10 emerging market CEOs with Miller at the top.

K V Kamath of ICICI Bank is the other Indian in the list of Top 10 Emerging Market CEOs. He is ranked at number 9.

The Harvard Business Review said it ranked CEOs of large public traded companies in a study conducted over 2000 CEOs worldwide. The entire group represented 48 nationalities and companies based in 33 countries.

It put Ambani in the list of "up-through-the-ranks leaders" along with the Samsung boss.

"Among the up-through-the-ranks leaders on our list are Yun Jong-Yong, who joined Samsung straight out of college and worked there 30 years before becoming CEO, and Mukesh Ambani, who joined RIL in 1981, when it was still a textile company run by his father. These CEOs may not all be household names, but here's an objective look at who delivered the top results over the long term," HBR said, ranking Steve Jobs as the top CEO in the world.

Jobs, it said, delivered a whopping 3,188 per cent industry-adjusted return (34 per cent compounded annually) after he rejoined Apple as CEO in 1997, when the company was in dire strait.

From that time until the end of September 2009, Apple's market value increased by USD 150 billion.

He was followed by Yun Jong-Yong, who ran South Korea's Samsung Electronics from 1996 to 2008. "Yun is an example of a leader who has stayed out of the limelight. During his tenure he capably transformed Samsung from a maker of memory chips and me-too products into an innovator selling digital products such as leading-edge cell phones."

Miller was number 3 followed by Chambers. HBR said none of the top three CEOs had a MBA. Ambani and Chambers were the only two on the top five to hold degrees in business administration.

"CEOs who were promoted from inside the company tended to have stronger performance than those brought in from the outside," said HBR.

mOre @ Mukesh Ambani ranked 5th best CEO in the world

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Heard on the street

Heard on the street


Rain Commodities on a high as FIs turn bullish



Shares of Rain Commodities, one of the largest producers of calcined petroleum coke (CPC), have been on an upward journey despite a downtrend in the broader market in the past few weeks. Market sources say institutional investors have been bullish on the stock with a leading mutual fund acquiring sizeable stake through the open-market route recently.

Analysts expect CPC demand to get a boost amid commissioning of many large aluminium capacities in the next few years. Rain Commodities also manufacturers cement which is marketed under the brand ‘Priya Cement’ in the South. Last week, Reliance Mutual Fund bought a 4.5% equity, raising its stake to 9.1% in the company.

The growing institutional interest in the counter is also reflected in the sharp rise in the share price. The stock climbed 9% to Rs 234.8 in a flat market on Thursday, recording a 39% jump in the past one month.

Overseas fund managers welcome early trade

Foreign fund managers tracking India out of Singapore and Hong Kong are happy that trade timings have been advanced rather than extended, while domestic fund managers wish that it would have been the other way round. These money managers start their day as early as 7 am (Hong Kong/Singapore time).

By the time those markets close, there is about two-and-a-half hours of trading still left in India. So, the fund managers leave for home at 6 pm (HK/Singapore). Had timings been extended beyond 3:30, these fund managers would have been delayed in office for another hour. But domestic fund managers are unhappy, considering that they will now have to begin their day earlier.

Lack of clarity on RIL’s Lyondell bid drags down

Shares of Reliance Industries drifted lower on Thursday, shedding 1.2% over its previous close to end the day at Rs 1,034, and weighing down the main indices. The market is awaiting whether RIL will make a financial bid for Dutch petrochemical firm LyondellBasell.

Market participants say officials from RIL’s investor relations team had met up with fund managers on Tuesday, where it was indicated that the bidding process could be a long-drawn affair, and that it would bid “reasonably” and not “aggressively”.

(Contributed by Vijay Gurav & Santosh Nair)


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