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Links

Linkfest:05 May,2014

Some stuff I am reading today morning:

Markets may fall by 10%-15% if results disappoint (ET)

Reliance Capital weathers economic slowdown (Mint)

Steelmakers brace themselves for Orissa mining ban (FE)

SEBI frowns on plan to extend trading hours on result day (BS)

Why Analjit Singh won’t invest in telecom again (FirstBiz)

Jeremy Grantham makes a specific call when the Bubble will burst (BI)

Indian women start ignoring their husbands while voting (Bloomberg)

Asset Allocation-Why it is difficult (Subramoney)

18 Things you’ll never hear a portfolio manager say (DailyReckoning)

Strange investment strategies that actually work (DailyReckoning)

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Image

India’s top eCommerce Sites

Hat Tip Sampad

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Quotes

Islamic Cruelty & Hindu Meanness

The Hindus criticise the Mohammedans for having spread their religion by the use of the sword. They also ridicule Christianity on the score of the inquisition. But really speaking who is better and more worthy of our respect—the Mohammedans and Christians who attempted to thrust down the throats of unwilling persons what they regarded as necessary for their salvation or the Hindu who would not spread the light, who would endeavour to keep others in darkness, who would not consent to share his intellectual and social inheritance with those who are ready and willing to make it a part of their own make-up ? I have no hesitation in saying that if the Mohammedan has been cruel the Hindu has been mean and meanness is worse than cruelty.-said Dr.Babasaheb Ambedkar

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Links

Weekend Mega Linkfest: 2 May,2014

Some off beat reads for the weekend:

No Indians Please:Singapore’s Rental Discrimination (BBC)

Arvind Kejriwal:The Runaway Messiah (AatishTaseer)

Nita Ambani’s Rs.4 Million Sari (FashionScandal)

Thanksgiving in Mongolia  (NewYorker)

How to lose $100 Million (Politico)

How the world’s most notorious drug lord was captured (NewYorker)

Travelogue:Koh Lanta,Thailand (TeamBHP)

The Quixotic EC (MediaCrooks)

The most awesome candidates of elections 2014 (GreatBong)

Nigeria’s stolen girls (NewYorker)

A Eulogy for Twitter (Atlantic)

Jet Airways:In a tailspin (ForbesIndia)

Sick of Mumbai’s restaurant scene (MumbaiBoss)

Warren Buffett lost $132 Million on derivatives (BI)

Modi and Muslims (SwapanDasgupta)

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Interview

Interview with Vishwavir Ahuja,CEO of Ratnakar Bank

(Disclosure:I am market making in Ratnakar Bank)

How has your transformation journey unfolded so far?

We have been three-and-a-half years now into our transformation journey. In some aspects our transition has been smooth, while on some others we are still working. We aim to grow in the 30-45 per cent range annually. Also, the focus will be more on bottomline as we come closer to the IPO stage (later this fiscal).

How has your bank performed in FY 2014?

In July 2010, when I joined the bank, we inherited a balance sheet (deposits and loans) of ₹2,200-2,300 crore. We will close FY 2014 at about ₹18,000 crore against a balance sheet size of about ₹13,000 crore as on March-end 2013. Our goal is to reach a business size of ₹30,000 crore in three years, and take CASA (current account, savings account) to 22 per cent (from 20 per cent now).

Which areas of lending are you focusing on?

When we look at the large corporates, we don’t look at direct lending. Since my base rate is higher, I am uncompetitive and they need lower interest rates. In the ecosystem of large companies, we lend to their partners, such as vendors or distributors. Their linkage to the large corporates mitigates our losses. We are the bank for the middle class anyways, and that’s how we have managed to keep the NPA levels low.

In the past one year, where has your growth come from?

The corporate book has grown. We have exceeded the priority sector lending (PSL) requirement — all of it was direct lending and no loans were bought out. Our agriculture and SME portfolios, too, have grown.

What are you doing to differentiate your bank from competition?

We are taking a cluster approach. We go to one area, become part of that neighbourhood and add four to five branches there so that there is enough presence and we give everything the customers want. We are seeing retail deposits grow in these areas.

What is your branch expansion plan?

We ended FY 2014 with about 175 branches. We added about 50 last year but now we will slow down as we want to make the existing branches profitable first. This is our DNA, we do not proceed before making money. It should not be a dead investment. It takes 18-22 months for the branch of a big bank like HDFC Bank to break even. We try within the same range, and because we are a small bank, we want to make it profitable first. So, we will add about 20 branches this year; but ATMs, we will add 100 more this year.-from BusinessLine