Large realty players in India looking to raise funds

QIP plans of the large real estate companies in India.

HDIL (about Rs 3,000 crore through QIP and Rs 850 crore through
promoter warrants), Parsvnath and Akruty (Rs 2,500 crore each),
Anantraj (Rs 2,000 crore), Sobha Developers (Rs 1,500 crore),
Puravankara (Rs 750 crore) and Orbit Corp (Rs 500 crore through QIP and
an unidentified amount through promoter warrants).

Nokia’s not all that smart

The mobile phone market is going to start looking like the pharma industry is. A bunch of “generic” drug makers sold OTC at cheap prices and another set of very expensive prescription drugs. Nokia’s on route to become the generic maker and Apple, RIM will compete the high end. No wonder I compare the iPhone to Pfizer’s Viagra. It was not until later that Cialis (Blackberry’s Bold) came out, but Viagra had won the mindshare by then.

Of course people try to convince me the Palm Pre is going to change it all.

My answer, Yeah Right. If the Palm Pre does well, then expect Nokia to buy them out quickly. Else its yet another and an also ran.

Are you a producer or consumer

Rob says that the single most important question in your career should be “Are you a producer or a consumer“.

“But if you realize that one of the pleasures in your life is to read
about code/startups/entrepreneurs/music, then embrace that you are a
consumer. Knowledge for knowledge’s sake is not bad as long as you
realize that you are not working towards an end beyond your own
edification, which again, is not a bad thing.

Likewise, if you’re someone who has an unquenchable desire to produce something,
then stop reading about other people, and start doing it yourself.
Seriously, don’t read another blog post, tweet, or issue of Fast
Company until you’ve made a visible move towards that goal you so
desperately want, but think that reading and dreaming about will
somehow make it come true. Once you’ve made that single action towards
advancing your idea, you can come back and read a few more posts.”

I think its not a simple “either you are a producer or a consumer” discussion. Most people are more of one than the other, but being a producer requires more commitment to consuming for sure. Most producers cannot consume in a vacuum and the ability to consume what’s relevant is important.

Personally I have reduced my consumption primarily because I have too many “useless” interests. I am thrilled I found this out and am taking a proactive step towards reducing my “junk reading” purely for the sake of spending time on reading. It makes you more “learned” but its a big time commitment.

3 Things I (and probably you) did not know about the US car industry

From NYTimes.

1. Of the 16 best selling cars & trucks in America 10 are American vehicles. The Camry is the best selling car, but the Ford F 150 is the best selling vehicle (outselling the Camry by about 75% more)

2. GM and Ford both dropped far less than Toyota OR Honda in Dec 2008 ( I suspect its because of incentives).

3. Chevrolet is the only brand in the top 16 cars with positive change in sales year over year.

The World (actually US mostly) economy is a story of 2 theories and 2 people only

Paul Krugman on beating the recession:

1. Milton Friedman, in particular, persuaded many economists that the
Federal Reserve could have stopped the Depression in its tracks simply
by providing banks with more liquidity, which would have prevented a
sharp fall in the money supply. Ben Bernanke, the Federal Reserve
chairman, famously apologized to Friedman on his institution’s behalf:
“You’re right. We did it. We’re very sorry. But thanks to you, we won’t
do it again.”

2. John Maynard Keynes, who argued that monetary policy is ineffective
under depression conditions and that fiscal policy – large-scale
deficit spending by the government – is needed to fight mass
unemployment.

Strange how 2 economists have influenced the entire US thinking on macro economics, but its true.

The focus on short term vs. long term & striking the balance

In his piece End of the financial world as we know it, there’s an interesting paragraph on the long and short of Wall street’s interests:

“OUR financial catastrophe, like Bernard Madoff’s pyramid scheme,
required all sorts of important, plugged-in people to sacrifice our
collective long-term interests for short-term gain. The pressure to do
this in today’s financial markets is immense. Obviously the greater the
market pressure to excel in the short term, the greater the need for
pressure from outside the market to consider the longer term. But
that’s the problem: there is no longer any serious pressure from
outside the market. The tyranny of the short term has extended itself
with frightening ease into the entities that were meant to, one way or
another, discipline Wall Street, and force it to consider its
enlightened self-interest.”

This balance of short and long term is no different from other balance that gets talked about a lot – Work/Life.

There’s no easy answer to solving either balance problem and I’m not sure solving it is going to get people happy either. Trouble is that the “balance” is mostly self determined. One person’s short term is another person’s immediate term and so on.

The personal blog of Mukund Mohan