Categories
Humor Image

Say “Acche Din” again

Categories
Links

Linkfest:February 09,2016

Some stuff I am reading today morning:

BSE hires merchant bankers for its IPO (MoneyControl)

Prashanth Jain faces heat as investors exit (RJ)

What went wrong with Kitex Garments (Capital Mind)

IPO grey market abuzz with activity (Mint)

Read this before buying insurance (Bala)

How to Buy and Sell Direct Mutual Funds (FreeFinCal)

Investing in your old age (Subramoney)

How bottom up stock pickers endure bear markets (TRB)

Gold traders are betting on a bigger comeback (Bloomberg)

Biggest Technology Change in next 5 years (A VC)

Categories
Cartoon

How the Chinese Stock Market Works

Categories
Links

Linkfest: February 08,2016

Some stuff I am reading today morning:

SEBI uses Facebook for insider trading evidence (Mint)

Citi:We should all fear Oilmageddon (Bloomberg)

Is Crompton Greaves an investment opportunity? (BS)

My Marico stock experience (Value Investor India)

Confession of a Value Investor (Outlook Business)

The great thing about dividends (Common Sense)

The death of stock markets (VRO)

Using “normal” drawdowns as a timing signal (EconPic)

Ray Dalio’s No 2 is trying to impeach him (Dealbreaker)

How Rocket Internet made billions (Hustle)

Categories
Excerpts

How Subhash Chandra made his fortune

In his biography The Z Factor, television mogul Subhash Chandra has been extraordinarily candid about his past.

He acknowledges what was long suspected: that he profiteered enormously from dubious rice deals with the Soviets in the early 1980s. He was awarded a lucrative contract to export basmati to Russia, on the understanding that he would share 50 per cent of his profit with his benefactors in the Congress party.

Chandra confesses that it was Rajiv Gandhi who steered the deal his way through his aide Vijay Dhar. Chandra writes that he deposited half the share of profits, first with Dhirendra Brahmachari, then with Sitaram Kesri and finally with Arun Nehru.

An interesting sidelight to the story is that while the Soviets were paying for expensive basmati rice, Goyal cut corners by mixing basmati with the cheaper ‘parmal’ variety. The Russians, unfamiliar with the various grades of Indian rice, assumed that he was cheating them since their long-standing rice supplier, Tulsi Tanna, had only been supplying parmal and they thought parmal was the better quality rice. Chandra did not argue with the Russians, but made even bigger profits by exporting only parmal henceforth. – from Indian Express