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15 October 2009
Srisai's Instinct Stock Calls
This(Srisai's Instinct Stock Calls) will be a New Initiative of this blog to Publish Blog Author's Own Investment/Trading Calls for Short-Medium Term perspective. But All these Calls are not given on Purely Technical perspective. Most of these Calls are given by Blog Author from His past Investment/Trading experiences. So Do not expect More depth in Calls. Author has tried his best to give some calls for the benefit of Investors/Traders from his experience and from some media/web/news based call. So author request all the investors/traders to take/try these Calls as RISK CALLS. And Keep Strict Stop Loss Own (or) Keep Resi,Supp levels As Stop Loss for their Trading(or) Trade/Invest @ your Own Financial Risk. All type of Comments are Welcome about this New Initiative. Dont Forget to Keep Stop Loss and Again Author Remembering you that he is giving calls only from his past trading experience...
3-5 calls will be given in every SRISAI's INSTINCT STOCK CALLS.
Dt: 15.10.2009
India Infoline: Cmp 161
Stock has well surpassed Resi levels of 146-150 in Last two sessions. If it Closes above 146-150 levels for 2-3 days, then expect more upside from Here... So watch this... Supp @ 146-150 levels.
South Indian Bank: Cmp 141
THis Stock also has crossed Key Resi of 126 levels in last 2 session... Supports @ 118-126 levels. If That 126 level holds then It may Surpass 162-176-183 levels in Short Term.. Watch..
GDL: Cmp 125
GDL has supports at 111-116 level. So Buy This Stock with 111- as Stop Loss for a Target 134-144 levels.. Keep Strict SL...
SAIL: Cmp 180
Stocks Year high was at 188 levels.. Will It break or Not???? If it Breaks then it can go 198-206 levels soon... Supports @ 156-161-165 levels.
Essar oil: Cmp 161
Stocks has tried nearly 2-3 attempts to cross 166-170 levels... May it be Strong resistance zone at current levels... So try this stock after crossing that levels for the Tgt of 190 range... Supports at 156-147-144 levels.
Always Keep Strict Stop Loss... Keep Supp as SL(Long Trading), And Resi as SL(Short Trading)..
Ok..... Bye ....
By
Srisai
Heard on the Street and Stock Views - ET
15 Oct 2009, 0559 hrs IST
Even as India Inc is banking on real estate IPOs to help trigger the muchneeded turnaround in the primary market, merchant bankers are sceptical about investor appetite.
15 Oct 2009, 0316 hrs IST
We are upgrading our earnings estimates by 4.6% to Rs 92.1 for FY10 and by 7.7% to Rs 102.9 for FY11 to factor in higher volumes in both domestic and export markets, better realisation, driven by improving product mix, higher operating leverage, higher interest income on treasury operations
15 Oct 2009, 0315 hrs IST
ARIL has not only been able to comfortably ride the entire downturn (from net debt of Rs 280 crore in FY07 to net cash of around Rs 420 crore in FY09), but is now also looking to buy distressed assets.
15 Oct 2009, 0312 hrs IST
Over the past couple of years, State Bank of India has been focusing on drawing significant synergies through an internal consolidation of its associate banks. The CASA ratio stands at 38%.
15 Oct 2009, 0309 hrs IST
Deccan Chronicle will post a 1.7% Y-o-Y decline in quarterly revenue due to higher base of last year. Advertising revenue is set to grow sequentially by 2%. Decline in newsprint price will benefit the company.
15 Oct 2009, 0307 hrs IST
The bank has repriced Rs 1,200 cr deposits in the Q1. In FY10, it is planning to reprice the additional deposits worth Rs 26,000 cr, which will improve on margins.
14 Oct 2009, 1222 hrs IST
Options data in beginning of October series gave a tentative range of 4700-4800 on lower side and 5200-5300 on higher side to act as strong support and resistance zone respectively.
Src:Economictimes.Indiatimes.com
14 October 2009
Forbes India: Ratan Tata among top 50 global thinkers of' 09
Ratan Tata among top 50
global thinkers of 2009
Published on Wed, Oct 14, 2009 at 13:02 , Updated at Wed, Oct 14, 2009 at 16:13
Source : Forbes India
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By: Neelima Mahajan-Bansal/Forbes India
Whose ideas shape modern business and management practices? Forbes
Few management thinkers have the ability to come up with one winning idea after another. C.K. Prahalad is a rare exception. He has the remarkable ability to be ahead of the times. Look at any of his key ideas — be it core competence, co-creation or the bottom of the pyramid — Prahalad’s influence on the study and practise of management has been immense.
It is no wonder then that for the second time in a row, the Indian-born management guru has earned the distinction of being the most influential management thinker alive according to the Thinkers 50, a biennial ranking of the top 50 business and management thought leaders in the world, brought out by the UK-based Suntop Media. Prahalad first topped the Thinkers 50 in 2007, unseating the formidable strategy don Michael Porter. Malcolm Gladwell, the author of Tipping Point, Blink and the more recent Outliers, came in at No. 2, while Nobel Prize winning economist Paul Krugman came in at No. 3.
The 68-year-old Prahalad is on an exciting new journey these days. Having been an avid researcher for almost four decades now, Prahalad is looking for new knowledge at the intersection of various themes he has dealt with. “My research [these days] is focused on innovation opportunities that lie at the intersection of inclusive growth [i.e. the bottom of the pyramid], sustainability, connectivity [a theme explored in the books The Future of Competition and The New Age of Innovation] and globalisation [again, a theme explored in The Multinational Mission]. This intersection will provide opportunities for new governance systems, and an ability to manage volatility,” says Prahalad. He believes that emerging countries like
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Prahalad’s ascendance to the top of the list signals the growing influence of Indian management thinkers, a trend that first showed up in the 2007 ranking when four Indians — Prahalad, CEO coach Ram Charan, Tuck School of Business’ Vijay Govindarajan and Harvard Business School’s Rakesh Khurana — made it to the top 50.
This year, Indians have more to cheer about with a total of six Indians on the list. Apart from the original four, the two notable additions this year are senior leaders from India Inc.: Ratan Tata, CEO of Tata Industries, who makes his debut at No. 12, and Infosys co-founder Kris Gopalakrishnan, who comes in at No. 15. From the original lot, Ram Charan has moved up several slots from No. 22 to No. 13 while Govindarajan came down to No. 24 from 23 last year and upcoming leadership expert Rakesh Khurana moved up one slot to No 44.
The Indian brigade is making waves globally. For two years, Govindarajan handled the role of Chief Innovation Consultant at GE, a prestigious assignment for an academic. Says Govindarajan, “The GE assignment will shape my research agenda going forward. I want to push the thinking on the concept of reverse innovation — developing products in countries like
Khurana, on the other hand, after having explored the disastrous consequences of hiring “superstar CEOs” (the research that catapulted him to superstardom himself), is now focussing on the reform of MBA education, an area that is dominated by stalwarts like McGill University’s Henry Mintzberg and Stanford’s Jeffrey Pfeffer. His latest book, From Higher Aims to Hired Hands, explores the lacuna in management education. “My second area of focus is in the area of large institutional change, with a focus on leadership, globalisation, and addressing society’s most pressing global problems through the construction and reform of a new type of institutional leadership,” says Khurana.
Another Indian — London Business School’s Nirmalya Kumar — features in the list of ‘Thinkers shaping the future’, a bunch of people who aren’t on the ranking yet but have great potential going forward.
Apart from the growing influence of Indian thought leaders, this year’s Thinkers 50 shows some other interesting trends. This year’s ranking has 14 notable new entrants like Grameen Bank founder Muhammad Yunus (an impressive No. 6), Google’s Eric Schmidt, Nobel Prize winning economist Joseph Stiglitz, Rotman School of Management’s Roger Martin, Wired’s Chris Anderson, Black Swan author Nassim Nicholas Taleb, economic historian Niall Ferguson and Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales.
The economic turbulence has had a bearing on the ranking, bringing to the forefront people such as Krugman and Stiglitz whose ideas now have even more takers. Also, as the ranking points out, “caring capitalists are the new heroes”, be it Prahalad’s idea of the Bottom of the Pyramid, Bill Gates’ concept of creative capitalism which borrows from Prahalad’s ideas to some extent, or Muhammad Yunus and the micro-credit revolution in
Interestingly, 26 percent of the top 50 have entered the ranking for the first time. While people like Tom Peters, Jim Collins, Henry Mintzberg, Warren Bennis, Charles Handy and John Kotter still figure in the ranking, the newcomers are a welcome change. The world of management research could do with a fresh infusion of new ideas.
Src: Moneycontrol.com < Forbes India: Ratan Tata among top 50 global thinkers of' 09 >