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Mar 08, 2016

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  • -An IIM Lucknow

    Students Initiative

  • Ankur +91-7275556449|Jatin +91-9709039074|Jay +91-9519901252| Jaykarthik (PGPSM)

    +91-9731006690 |Rahul +91-8149382508 | Pradnya +91-9960670701 | Srikanth +91-8087106828 | Vaishali +91-9519901285 | Vinay +91-9966286024

    ________________________________________________________________________________

    https://twitter.com/Ignicion2016 https://www.facebook.com/Ignicion2016/ http://www.pagalguy.com/@ignicion

    Indian Institute of Management, Prabandh Nagar, Off Sitapur Road, Lucknow-226013 (U.P.) India Tel: +91-522-2734101-120

    An IIM Lucknow Initiative

    E - Mail: [email protected]

  • Ankur +91-7275556449|Jatin +91-9709039074|Jay +91-9519901252| Jaykarthik (PGPSM)

    +91-9731006690 |Rahul +91-8149382508 | Pradnya +91-9960670701 | Srikanth +91-8087106828 | Vaishali +91-9519901285 | Vinay +91-9966286024

    ________________________________________________________________________________

    https://twitter.com/Ignicion2016 https://www.facebook.com/Ignicion2016/ http://www.pagalguy.com/@ignicion

    Indian Institute of Management, Prabandh Nagar, Off Sitapur Road, Lucknow-226013 (U.P.) India Tel: +91-522-2734101-120

    An IIM Lucknow Initiative

    E - Mail: [email protected] Disclaimer: The list of questions/topics given below is not meant to be comprehensive. It is meant to provide guidelines/pointers on certain focus issues. Wherever possible, the participants are expected to have their view on the topics rather than knowing the facts as they are. Keeping abreast with the current affairs both in the national and international circles in the areas of polity, economy, business, sports, etc. are of paramount importance. India: Current Affairs Delhis odd-even vehicle rule The AAP cabinet announced private vehicles will be allowed to run across the city based on their registration numbers. This was done to put a check on the capital city's

    alarming pollution rate. This system was implemented in Beijing in 2008 just before the summer

    Olympics, Paris, Mexico and Bogota to curb road jams and pollution. Everything You Need To Know About Delhis Odd-Even Rule, Delhis odd-even scheme: The ultimate analysis

    Rising intolerance in India The country has been rocked by the raging intolerance debate after the

    murder of 3 well-known rationalist thinkers, the mob lynching of a Muslim man over cow slaughter

    and the killing of Dalit children. In addition, a slew of scientists, writers, historians and filmmakers

    return top government awards in protest, Bollywood actors Shah Rukh Khan and Aamir Khan have

    also expressed concern about the intolerance. Here's what the intolerance debate in India in 2015 was all about, The myth of Intolerant India, The Debate over Rising Intolerance in India

    The suicide of Rohith Vemula On Jan 18, Rohith Vemula, a scholar at the Hyderabad Central

    University, and a Dalit hanged himself in a hostel room. Two weeks prior to this, Rohith & 4 other

    Dalit students were locked out of their hostel rooms and forbidden from accessing the canteen,

    administration building and other common areas as a disciplinary action taken because of allegedly

    assaulting (ABVP) member Susheel Kumar. His death has sparked off protests and caste-debate

    across the country regarding the discrimination faced by Dalit students in the class, dormitories,

    cafeteria, and occasionally even by the faculty on campus. What happened at Hyderabad Central University that led to Rohith Vemula's suicide? Why Rohith Vemula's death is the tipping point in caste bias on campus, Agitating students to name Smriti Irani in FIR PM Modi response to the incident

  • Ankur +91-7275556449|Jatin +91-9709039074|Jay +91-9519901252| Jaykarthik (PGPSM)

    +91-9731006690 |Rahul +91-8149382508 | Pradnya +91-9960670701 | Srikanth +91-8087106828 | Vaishali +91-9519901285 | Vinay +91-9966286024

    ________________________________________________________________________________

    https://twitter.com/Ignicion2016 https://www.facebook.com/Ignicion2016/ http://www.pagalguy.com/@ignicion

    Indian Institute of Management, Prabandh Nagar, Off Sitapur Road, Lucknow-226013 (U.P.) India Tel: +91-522-2734101-120

    An IIM Lucknow Initiative

    E - Mail: [email protected] Union Cabinet Clears Presidents rule in Arunachal Pradesh The Union cabinet headed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi has recommended imposition of Presidents Rule in Arunachal Pradesh under Article 356 (1) of the Constitution as they feel that the State is heading for a breakdown.

    Key facts Union Government took this decision after state assembly failed to comply with the

    provisions of Article 174 (sessions of the state legislature, prorogation and dissolution) of the Constitution.

    As per the provisions of Article 174, the session of state assembly was to be held in 21st

    January 2016, six months after the last sitting. But the state assembly failed to comply with

    this provision which may led to constitutional breakdown The political crisis in the north eastern hill state began in December 2015 after 21 out of 47 ruling

    Congress legislators in the 60-member house rebelled along with 11 BJP and 2 independent

    legislators and extended support to KalikhoPul to form new government. Arunachal Pradesh

    Governor Jyoti Prasad Rajkhowa also had advanced the date of the convening of the assembly

    session in order check the majority of ruling government in the assembly. All you need to know about Presidents rule in Arunachal Pradesh, Union Cabinet recommends President's Rule in Arunachal Pradesh, Politics, impropriety and Presidents Rule

    Government Initiatives: Smart Cities The objective is to promote cities that provide core infrastructure and give a decent quality of life to

    its citizens, a clean and sustainable environment and application of 'Smart' Solutions. The focus is

    on sustainable and inclusive development and the idea is to look at compact areas, create a replicable

    model which will act like a light house to other aspiring cities.

    First list of 20 smart cities includes: Bhubaneshwar, Pune, Jaipur, Surat, Kochi, Ahmedabad,

    Jabalpur, Vishakhapatnam, Solapur, Dhawangiri, Indore, NDMC, Coimbatore, Udaipur,

    Guwahati, Chennai, Ludhiana, Bhopal, Kakinada, Belgaum. What is a 'smart city' and how it will work The upsides and downsides of smart cities

    Net Neutrality & Free Basics Salient Features of Net Neutrality

    Equal and unrestricted access to all lawful sites.

  • Ankur +91-7275556449|Jatin +91-9709039074|Jay +91-9519901252| Jaykarthik (PGPSM)

    +91-9731006690 |Rahul +91-8149382508 | Pradnya +91-9960670701 | Srikanth +91-8087106828 | Vaishali +91-9519901285 | Vinay +91-9966286024

    ________________________________________________________________________________

    https://twitter.com/Ignicion2016 https://www.facebook.com/Ignicion2016/ http://www.pagalguy.com/@ignicion

    Indian Institute of Management, Prabandh Nagar, Off Sitapur Road, Lucknow-226013 (U.P.) India Tel: +91-522-2734101-120

    An IIM Lucknow Initiative

    E - Mail: [email protected] Same speed of access for all subscribers of all apps and websites at the level of telecom/ ISP. Non-discriminatory data cost per KB/MB for access to every site. No censorship or selective access to any information available on the net.

    No preferential treatment for any particular website in terms of speeding up its access, or

    making some sites free over others. Consequences of not having net neutrality:

    Telecom operators might discriminate against certain types of content and political opinions.

    Cartel of telecom operators may degrade traditional internet access to force apps and content providers to use the telecom operators new "premium" services.

    Telecom operators may compete for contents by charging different fees for different

    content providers (e.g. Google, Flip kart, etc.), which will result in certain content being

    available only with certain telecom operators, causing fragmentation of the internet.

    The ability of smaller and start-up Apps to compete with established Apps may be

    adversely affected and may deter start-ups from joining the market.

    Facebooks Internet.org was rechristened as Free Basics in September 2015, with the aim to provide an open platform for Indian developers the opportunity to make their services & websites available free of cost to those who cannot afford internet access. But how open is it if Facebook restricts access to only partner website and applications. This violates the basic principles of net neutrality.

    An Introduction to Net Neutrality: What It Is, What It Means for You, and What You Can Do About It,

    The Pros and Cons of Net Neutrality, 10 things to know about Facebook's Free Basics, net neutrality

    Union Cabinet approves amendments of Power Tariff Policy 2006 to promote clean energy The comprehensive amendments bring required changes for holistic view of the power sector and

    also to achieve the objectives of Ujwal DISCOM Assurance Yojana (UDAY) with the focus on 4

    Es. These 4 Es are: Electricity for all; Environment for a sustainable future; Efficiency to ensure

    affordable tariffs; Ensure financial viability and Ease of doing business to attract investments. Key Highlights:

  • Ankur +91-7275556449|Jatin +91-9709039074|Jay +91-9519901252| Jaykarthik (PGPSM)

    +91-9731006690 |Rahul +91-8149382508 | Pradnya +91-9960670701 | Srikanth +91-8087106828 | Vaishali +91-9519901285 | Vinay +91-9966286024

    ________________________________________________________________________________

    https://twitter.com/Ignicion2016 https://www.facebook.com/Ignicion2016/ http://www.pagalguy.com/@ignicion

    Indian Institute of Management, Prabandh Nagar, Off Sitapur Road, Lucknow-226013 (U.P.) India Tel: +91-522-2734101-120

    An IIM Lucknow Initiative

    E - Mail: [email protected] Electricity: 24X7 power supply, Micro Grids will provide power to remote unconnected

    villages, People near coal mines will be provided power from coal washery reject based plants.

    Efficiency: Reduction in power cost through expansion of existing power plants, sharing

    of benefit from sale of un-requisitioned power; competitive bidding to be used for

    transmission projects.

    Environment: promotion of Renewable Power Obligation (RPO), Renewable Generation Obligation (RGO); 100% power procurement produced from Waste-to-Energy plants in

    order to give big boost to Swachh Bharat Mission. Ease of Doing Business: Investments will be encouraged in coal rich states like West Bengal,

    Odisha, Jharkhand and Chhattisgarh to generate employment. Additional readings:

    India, China leading in renewable energy initiatives CCEA approves 5000 MW of Grid-connected Solar PV Power Projects The projects will be set up in four trenches during four succeeding financial years and implemented

    by Solar Power Developers with Viability Gap Funding under Jawahar Lal Nehru National Solar

    Mission (JNNSM). These projects will generate employment to 30,000 people and help in reduction

    of more than 8 Million tonne of CO2 emissions into environment every year.

    Jawaharlal Nehru National Solar Mission (JNNSM): launched in 2010 by the Union Government

    with a target to setup 20,000 MW of grid connected solar power by 2022. Later in 2014, the target

    was enhanced up to 1,00,000 MW World Affairs

    Europes Migrant crisis The EU is currently facing its worse migrant crisis since WW2. Wars in Iraq and Syria, unrest in

    Africa, and chaos in Libya have spurred an exodus of refugees. In 2015, more than 1 million

    refugees arrived in Europe by boat, rail or road, fleeing violence, persecution and poverty. Some

    countries (including Hungary, Macedonia, and Slovenia) have built razor-wire fences on their

    borders to curb thousands of migrants from entering. John Oliver commentary on Migrants and Refugees

  • Ankur +91-7275556449|Jatin +91-9709039074|Jay +91-9519901252| Jaykarthik (PGPSM)

    +91-9731006690 |Rahul +91-8149382508 | Pradnya +91-9960670701 | Srikanth +91-8087106828 | Vaishali +91-9519901285 | Vinay +91-9966286024

    ________________________________________________________________________________

    https://twitter.com/Ignicion2016 https://www.facebook.com/Ignicion2016/ http://www.pagalguy.com/@ignicion

    Indian Institute of Management, Prabandh Nagar, Off Sitapur Road, Lucknow-226013 (U.P.) India Tel: +91-522-2734101-120

    An IIM Lucknow Initiative

    E - Mail: [email protected] The Migrant crisis explained

    COP 21

    The historic United Nation Climate Change Conference held in Paris in December 2015, marked

    a near consensus among 195 countries regarding mitigating the effects of climate change.

    However, there is criticism that the deal puts pressure on developing countries like India, while

    relieving developed countries of their major responsibility to tackle the issue. COP21 & India Why No Country Matters More Than India at the Paris Climate Talks

    US lifts nuclear sanctions on Iran

    The US has removed a wide range of nuclear sanctions against Iran after it has met its commitments

    to roll back its nuclear programme. These sanctions were lifted after International Atomic Energy

    Agency (IAEA) confirmed that Iran has met its commitments under the Joint Comprehensive Plan

    of Action (JCPA) or Vienna agreement with P5+1 countries (USA, Russia, China, UK, France +

    Germany) signed in July 2015. Key facts:

    US has only removed secondary sanctions on Iran that mainly restricts dealings of other countries with Iran. These include financial services, banking, insurance, energy and

    petrochemicals, shipping and ports. However, primary sanctions imposed by US on Iran still remains in force. These sanctions

    bar US

    citizens and companies from doing business with Iran. Benefits to India:

    Lifting of primary sanctions will benefit India with lower oil prices on imports from its traditional supplier Iran and also boost trade opportunities.

    It will also bring proposed India-Pakistan-Iran (IPI) gas pipeline closer to reality. Give impetus to development and construction of strategic Chabbar port which is focal point

    of Indias gateway to energy through proposed International North South Trade Corridor (INSTC).

    Additional readings: What Lifting Sanctions on Iran Means for India,

  • Ankur +91-7275556449|Jatin +91-9709039074|Jay +91-9519901252| Jaykarthik (PGPSM)

    +91-9731006690 |Rahul +91-8149382508 | Pradnya +91-9960670701 | Srikanth +91-8087106828 | Vaishali +91-9519901285 | Vinay +91-9966286024

    ________________________________________________________________________________

    https://twitter.com/Ignicion2016 https://www.facebook.com/Ignicion2016/ http://www.pagalguy.com/@ignicion

    Indian Institute of Management, Prabandh Nagar, Off Sitapur Road, Lucknow-226013 (U.P.) India Tel: +91-522-2734101-120

    An IIM Lucknow Initiative

    E - Mail: [email protected] Iran Complies With Nuclear Deal; Sanctions Are Lifted, Lifting of Iran sanctions: Boon or bane for Indian companies?

    2016 US Presidential Elections The United States presidential election of 2016, scheduled for Tuesday, November 8, 2016, will be

    the 58th quadrennial U.S. presidential election. Voters will select presidential electors who in turn

    will elect a new president and vice president through the Electoral College. The term limit established

    in the Twenty-second Amendment to the United States Constitution prevents the incumbent,

    President Barack Obama, from running for a third term.

    The 2016 U.S. Presidential Race: A Cheat Sheet, 2016 US presidential election: what happens when and how

    Other Important Issues

    Zika Virus

    India and France Agreements

    Bank of japan - negative interest rates

    Start up India , Stand up India

    SpaceX Lands Rocket Successfully Makes Reuse Possible

    U.N. Passes Resolution on Syria Peace Process

    US first rate hike since 2008

    Climate Change Deal Reached by about 200 Countries

    Paris terrorist attack, hundreds dead

    Russian passenger plane crashed in Sinai

    TPP trade deal reached by 12 pacific rim countries

    Russia intervenes Syria civil war

    Flowing liquid water found on Mars

    Mecca Hajj stampede, hundreds dead

    Volkswagen emission scandal

    Migrant crisis of Europe

    Microsoft introduces Windows 10

    Iran Nuclear Deal Reach

    Greece Vote NO to Bailout Deal

    Earthquake 7.9 Magnitude hits Nepal

  • Ankur +91-7275556449|Jatin +91-9709039074|Jay +91-9519901252| Jaykarthik (PGPSM)

    +91-9731006690 |Rahul +91-8149382508 | Pradnya +91-9960670701 | Srikanth +91-8087106828 | Vaishali +91-9519901285 | Vinay +91-9966286024

    ________________________________________________________________________________

    https://twitter.com/Ignicion2016 https://www.facebook.com/Ignicion2016/ http://www.pagalguy.com/@ignicion

    Indian Institute of Management, Prabandh Nagar, Off Sitapur Road, Lucknow-226013 (U.P.) India Tel: +91-522-2734101-120

    An IIM Lucknow Initiative

    E - Mail: [email protected] Saudi Arabia leads attack on Houthi rebels in Yemen

    Leftist leader win Greece prime minister election

    Charlie Hebdo Attack at Paris

    India-Australia Civil Nuclear Cooperation deal

    Russia inks deal with HAL to manufacture 200 Kamov helicopters

    LPG subsidy linked to income

    Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank launched

    IOC tops in Fortune 500 Indian Companies

    India Russia Agreements

    Shanghai Cooperation Organization

    Abdul Kalam

    Bitcoin

    Mahamana Express

    James Webb Space Telescope

  • Ankur +91-7275556449|Jatin +91-9709039074|Jay +91-9519901252| Jaykarthik (PGPSM)

    +91-9731006690 |Rahul +91-8149382508 | Pradnya +91-9960670701 | Srikanth +91-8087106828 | Vaishali +91-9519901285 | Vinay +91-9966286024

    ________________________________________________________________________________

    https://twitter.com/Ignicion2016 https://www.facebook.com/Ignicion2016/ http://www.pagalguy.com/@ignicion

    Indian Institute of Management, Prabandh Nagar, Off Sitapur Road, Lucknow-226013 (U.P.) India Tel: +91-522-2734101-120

    An IIM Lucknow Initiative

    E - Mail: [email protected]

    FINANCE &

    ECONOMICS

  • Ankur +91-7275556449|Jatin +91-9709039074|Jay +91-9519901252| Jaykarthik (PGPSM)

    +91-9731006690 |Rahul +91-8149382508 | Pradnya +91-9960670701 | Srikanth +91-8087106828 | Vaishali +91-9519901285 | Vinay +91-9966286024

    ________________________________________________________________________________

    https://twitter.com/Ignicion2016 https://www.facebook.com/Ignicion2016/ http://www.pagalguy.com/@ignicion

    Indian Institute of Management, Prabandh Nagar, Off Sitapur Road, Lucknow-226013 (U.P.) India Tel: +91-522-2734101-120

    An IIM Lucknow Initiative

    E - Mail: [email protected] Opportunity Cost- Economics deals with choosing one alternative among various alternatives. The decision process begins with ranking all alternatives on priority basis, and then choosing the alternative which is on the top of the priority list. This choice implies sacrifice of other alternatives; hence cost of this choice will be evaluated in terms of the sacrificed alternatives. The cost of this choice is the benefit of the next best alternative foregone. This is called opportunity cost. Therefore, opportunity cost is the highest valued benefit that must be sacrificed as a result of choosing alternative.

    Microeconomics is the study of individual consumers and producers in specific markets. It involves the determination of price through the optimizing behavior of economic agents, with consumers maximizing utility and firms maximizing profits. Thus Microeconomics seeks to answer questions related to supply & demand, pricing of output, production process, cost structure and distribution of income & output.

    Law of demand:Other things remaining the same, there is an inverse relationship between price and quantity demanded. The amount of a good that buyers purchase at a higher price is less because as the price of a good goes up, so does the opportunity cost of buying that good. As a result, people will naturally avoid buying a product that will force them to forgo the consumption of something else they value more. Law of Supply: It basically establishes the relationship between the supply of a product and its price. It states that Supply of a particular product is directly proportional to its price keeping other factors constant. Producers supply more at a higher price because selling a higher quantity at higher price increases revenue.

    Equilibrium refers to a situation in which the price has reached the level where the quantity supplied equals the quantity demanded. As you can see on the chart, equilibrium price and quantity are determined by the intersection of demand & supply curves. At this point, the price of the goods will be p* and the quantity will

  • Ankur +91-7275556449|Jatin +91-9709039074|Jay +91-9519901252| Jaykarthik (PGPSM)

    +91-9731006690 |Rahul +91-8149382508 | Pradnya +91-9960670701 | Srikanth +91-8087106828 | Vaishali +91-9519901285 | Vinay +91-9966286024

    ________________________________________________________________________________

    https://twitter.com/Ignicion2016 https://www.facebook.com/Ignicion2016/ http://www.pagalguy.com/@ignicion

    Indian Institute of Management, Prabandh Nagar, Off Sitapur Road, Lucknow-226013 (U.P.) India Tel: +91-522-2734101-120

    An IIM Lucknow Initiative

    E - Mail: [email protected] be q*. These figures are referred to as equilibrium price and quantity. Consumers can purchase all they want & producers can sell all they want at the market-clearing price i.e. p*.

    Macroeconomics is the study of the aggregate economy. It addresses many topical issues like: Why does the cost of living keep rising? Why are millions of people unemployed, even when the economy is booming? What causes recession? More specifically it is a study of national economies and the determination of national income.

    Gross Domestic Product: The monetary value of all the finished goods and services produced within a country's borders in a specific time period, though GDP is usually calculated on an annual basis. GDP is commonly used as an indicator of the economic health of a country, as well as to gauge a country's standard of living. Critics of using GDP as an economic measure say the statistic does not take into account the underground economy - transactions that, for whatever reason, are not reported to the government. Others say that GDP is not intended to gauge material well-being, but serves as a measure of a nation's productivity, which is unrelated. A variety of measures of national income and output are used in economies to estimate total economic activity in a country or region. They are the product (or output) approach, the income approach, and the expenditure approach.

    The expenditure method:

    GDP = private consumption + gross investment + government spending + (exports imports), or GDP = C + I + G + (X M)

  • Ankur +91-7275556449|Jatin +91-9709039074|Jay +91-9519901252| Jaykarthik (PGPSM)

    +91-9731006690 |Rahul +91-8149382508 | Pradnya +91-9960670701 | Srikanth +91-8087106828 | Vaishali +91-9519901285 | Vinay +91-9966286024

    ________________________________________________________________________________

    https://twitter.com/Ignicion2016 https://www.facebook.com/Ignicion2016/ http://www.pagalguy.com/@ignicion

    Indian Institute of Management, Prabandh Nagar, Off Sitapur Road, Lucknow-226013 (U.P.) India Tel: +91-522-2734101-120

    An IIM Lucknow Initiative

    E - Mail: [email protected]

    The income method: GDP = compensation of employees + gross operating surplus + gross mixed income + taxes less subsidies on production and imports

    GDP = COE + GOS + GMI + TP & M SP & M

    The product approach:

    Gross Value Added = Value of output- Value of Intermediate Consumption.

    Value of Output= Value of the total sales of goods and services + Value of changes in the inventories.

    The sum of gross value added in various economic activities is known as GDP at factor cost.

    GDP at factor cost plus indirect taxes less subsidies on products is GDP at Producer Price. Gross National Product It is an economic statistic that includes GDP, plus any income earned by residents from overseas investments, minus income earned within the domestic economy by overseas residents.

    GNP is a measure of a country's economic performance, or what its citizens produced (i.e. goods and services) and whether they produced these items within its borders.

    Gross National Product (GNP) is the market value of all products and services produced in one year by labor and property supplied by the residents of a country.

    GNP = C + G + I + NX +NFP

    Consumption (C) is the actual consumption spending of the household sector.

  • Ankur +91-7275556449|Jatin +91-9709039074|Jay +91-9519901252| Jaykarthik (PGPSM)

    +91-9731006690 |Rahul +91-8149382508 | Pradnya +91-9960670701 | Srikanth +91-8087106828 | Vaishali +91-9519901285 | Vinay +91-9966286024

    ________________________________________________________________________________

    https://twitter.com/Ignicion2016 https://www.facebook.com/Ignicion2016/ http://www.pagalguy.com/@ignicion

    Indian Institute of Management, Prabandh Nagar, Off Sitapur Road, Lucknow-226013 (U.P.) India Tel: +91-522-2734101-120

    An IIM Lucknow Initiative

    E - Mail: [email protected] Goods and services (G) is the next largest component of government purchases.

    Investment spending (I) includes business spending that will improve the ability to produce in the future Net exports (NX) component is equal to exports (goods and services purchased by foreigners) minus imports (goods and services purchased by domestic residents).

    Net factor payments (NFP) are the net amount of payments that an economy pays to foreigners for inputs used in producing goods and services, less money the economy receives for selling the same factors of production.

    GNP Vs. GDP

    GNP is the final value of goods and services produced by domestically-owned means of production (using domestic labor and resources); GDP is the final value of goods and services produced within a given country's border. Part of GNP, therefore, is earned overseas, while some domestic production is added to GDP only.

    Example involves U.S. Company Intel which manufactures silicon chips in Ireland. The production from that facility is added to U.S. GNP, but not U.S. GDP. When U.S. residents earn more abroad than foreigners earn in the U.S., GNP exceeds GDP and vice versa.

    Purchasing Power Parity Purchasing power parity (PPP) is a measure of long-term equilibrium exchange rates based on relative price levels of two countries. The concept is founded on the law of one price, the idea that identical goods should (under certain conditions) sell for the same price in two different countries at the same time. The absolute PPP exchange rate equates the national price levels in two countries if expressed in a common currency at that rate, so that the purchasing power of one unit of a currency would be the same in the two countries. Relative PPP focuses on changes in the price levels and the exchange rate, rather than the level.

  • Ankur +91-7275556449|Jatin +91-9709039074|Jay +91-9519901252| Jaykarthik (PGPSM)

    +91-9731006690 |Rahul +91-8149382508 | Pradnya +91-9960670701 | Srikanth +91-8087106828 | Vaishali +91-9519901285 | Vinay +91-9966286024

    ________________________________________________________________________________

    https://twitter.com/Ignicion2016 https://www.facebook.com/Ignicion2016/ http://www.pagalguy.com/@ignicion

    Indian Institute of Management, Prabandh Nagar, Off Sitapur Road, Lucknow-226013 (U.P.) India Tel: +91-522-2734101-120

    An IIM Lucknow Initiative

    E - Mail: [email protected] The PPP exchange-rate calculation is controversial because of the difficulties of finding comparable baskets of goods to compare purchasing power across countries. An example of one measure of law of one price, which underlies purchasing power parity, is the Big Mac Index, which looks at the prices of a Big Mac burger in McDonald's restaurants in different countries.

    India stands 11th by Nominal GDP ($ 1.5 trillion) and 4th by PPP ($ 4.06 trillion).

    Big Mac Index Generally PPP is measured by the cost of a basket of goods in different countries. A famous indicator used to measure PPP is the Big Mac Index. This index was proposed by The Economist. The Big Mac was chosen as it is available to a common specification in many countries around the world thus enabling a comparison between many countries currencies.

    Fiscal &Monetary Policy - The government exerts its control over the nations economy using two distinct set of policies. One is the monetary policy (the central bank manages this on behalf of the government) and secondly the fiscal policy.

    Fiscal policy is the use of government expenditure and revenue collection through taxation to influence the economic activity. With the help of monetary policy the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) attempts to stabilize the economy by controlling interest rates and spending. Monetary policy comprises of various policy rates and reserve ratios.

    Policy Rates & Reserve Ratio

    Bank Rate - Bank Rate is the interest rate that is charged by a countrys central or federal bank

    on loans and advances to control money supply in the economy and the banking sector. This is

    typically done on a quarterly basis to control inflation and stabilize the countrys exchange rates.

    A fluctuation in bank rates triggers a ripple-effect as it impacts every sphere of a countrys

    economy. For instance, the prices in stock markets tend to react to interest rate changes. A change

    in bank rates affects customers as it influences prime interest rates for personal loans. This is the

    rate at which RBI lends money to other banks (or financial institutions. The bank rate signals the

  • Ankur +91-7275556449|Jatin +91-9709039074|Jay +91-9519901252| Jaykarthik (PGPSM)

    +91-9731006690 |Rahul +91-8149382508 | Pradnya +91-9960670701 | Srikanth +91-8087106828 | Vaishali +91-9519901285 | Vinay +91-9966286024

    ________________________________________________________________________________

    https://twitter.com/Ignicion2016 https://www.facebook.com/Ignicion2016/ http://www.pagalguy.com/@ignicion

    Indian Institute of Management, Prabandh Nagar, Off Sitapur Road, Lucknow-226013 (U.P.) India Tel: +91-522-2734101-120

    An IIM Lucknow Initiative

    E - Mail: [email protected] central banks long-term outlook on interest rates. If the bank rate moves up, long-term interest

    rates also tend to move up, and vice-versa. Banks make

    a profit by borrowing at a lower rate and lending the same funds at a higher rate of interest. If the RBI hikes the bank rate (this is currently 6 per cent), the interest that a bank pays for borrowing money (banks borrow money either from each other or from the RBI) increases. It, in turn, hikes its own lending rates to ensure it continues to make a profit.

    Repo Rate A repurchase agreement, also known as a repo, RP, or sale and repurchase agreement, is the sale of securities together with an agreement for the seller to buy back the securities at a later date. The repurchase price should be greater than the original sale price, the difference effectively representing interest, sometimes called the repo rate. The party that originally buys the securities effectively acts as a lender. The original seller is effectively acting as a borrower, using their security as collateral for a secured cash loan at a fixed rate of interest

    Reverse Repo RateThe rate at which RBI borrows money from the banks (or banks lend money to the RBI) is termed the reverse repo rate. Reverse repo rate signifies the rate at which the central bank absorbs liquidity from the banks, while repo signifies the rate at which liquidity is injected. The RBI uses this tool when it feels there is too much money floating in the banking system. If the reverse repo rate is increased, it means the RBI will borrow money from the bank and offer them a lucrative rate of interest. As a result, banks would prefer to keep their money with the RBI (which is absolutely risk free) instead of lending it out (this option comes with a certain amount of risk). Consequently, banks would have lesser funds to lend to their customers. This helps stem the flow of excess money into the economy. Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR) The portion (expressed as a percent) of depositors' balances banks must have on hand as cash. This is a requirement determined by the country's central bank, which in the U.S. is the Federal Reserve and in India is reserve bank. The reserve ratio affects the money supply in a country.

    For example, if the reserve ratio in the U.S. is determined by the Fed to be 11%, this means all banks must have 11% of their depositors money on reserve in the bank. So, if a bank has deposits of $1 billion, it is required to have $110 million on reserve.

  • Ankur +91-7275556449|Jatin +91-9709039074|Jay +91-9519901252| Jaykarthik (PGPSM)

    +91-9731006690 |Rahul +91-8149382508 | Pradnya +91-9960670701 | Srikanth +91-8087106828 | Vaishali +91-9519901285 | Vinay +91-9966286024

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    Indian Institute of Management, Prabandh Nagar, Off Sitapur Road, Lucknow-226013 (U.P.) India Tel: +91-522-2734101-120

    An IIM Lucknow Initiative

    E - Mail: [email protected] Statutory Liquidity Ratio (SLR) SLR indicates the minimum percentage of deposits that the bank has to maintain in the form of gold, cash or other approved securities like treasury bills. It regulates the credit growth in India.

    The RBI reviews these rates and ratios on a monthly basis with intent to keep a check on money supply and inflation rate in economy. In order to increase the supply of money in economy RBI may decrease its policy rates and reserve ratios. The decrease will have the combined effect of increasing the deposits available with the commercial banks which may be offered as loans to general public thereby pumping more money into the economy.

    Exchange rate regimes

    The manner in which a country manages its exchange rate with other currencies in the world is called as the exchange rate regime. There are many types of exchange rate regimes like Fixed, Floating and Pegged float. Fixed exchange rate regime was prevalent before the 1970s when there was a direct convertibility between different currencies of the world that is the exchange rate is fixed in this regime. In a floating exchange rate, the market dictates movements in the exchange rate. In pegged float, the central bank keeps the rate from deviating too far from a target band or value, via policy actions. If the rate moves outside the band, the central bank would intervene in the market by buying or selling the currency to bring the rate back to the pegged value.

    Inflation- Inflation is a rise in the general level of prices of goods and services in an economy over a period of time. Consequently, inflation also reflects erosion in the purchasing power of money a loss of real value in the internal medium of exchange and unit of account in the economy.

    Inflation rate = (this years price index last year price index) / last years price index

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    Indian Institute of Management, Prabandh Nagar, Off Sitapur Road, Lucknow-226013 (U.P.) India Tel: +91-522-2734101-120

    An IIM Lucknow Initiative

    E - Mail: [email protected] The consumer price index (CPI) is the best know indicator of inflation. In India, Food Inflation is a

    significant indicator since food expense is the major expense for most of the people in India.

    The quantity theory of money is widely accepted as an accurate model of inflation in the

    long run. Consequently, there is now broad agreement among economists that in the long run, the inflation rate is essentially dependent on the growth rate of money supply. However, in the short and medium term inflation may be affected by supply and demand pressures in the economy, and influenced by the relative elasticity of wages, prices and interest rates.

    Today, most mainstream economists favor a low, steady rate of inflation. Low (as opposed to zero or negative) inflation may reduce the severity of economic recessions by enabling the labor market to adjust more quickly in a downturn, and reduce the risk that a liquidity trap prevents monetary policy from stabilizing the economy.

    Central bank (RBI in India) has the role to encourage growth and control inflation. RBIs desired level of inflation is 4-5 %, above which it becomes hawkish to check inflation.

    Severe form of Inflation is called hyperinflation.

    Currently, Indias Consumer price index is 9%, Wholesale Price Index is 8.5%, and Food Inflation is 10% approximately.

    Deflation Deflation is a decrease in the general price level of goods and services. Deflation occurs when the inflation rate falls below 0% (a negative inflation rate). Inflation reduces the real value of money over time; conversely, deflation increases the real value of money the currency of a national or regional economy. This allows one to buy more goods with the same amount of money over time. Deflation is correlated with depressions.

    Deflation results in a lower level of demand in the economy due to lower production capability requirements of industry and this further leads to increased unemployment.

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    Indian Institute of Management, Prabandh Nagar, Off Sitapur Road, Lucknow-226013 (U.P.) India Tel: +91-522-2734101-120

    An IIM Lucknow Initiative

    E - Mail: [email protected] A deflationary spiral is a situation where decreases in price lead to lower production, which in turn leads to lower wages and demand, which leads to further decreases in price. Since reductions in general price level are called deflation, a deflationary spiral is when reductions in price lead to a vicious circle, where a problem exacerbates its own cause. The Great Depression was regarded by some as a deflationary spiral. Japan is struggling with deflation since late

    1980s where the prices are constantly decreasing.

    Stagflation Stagflation is a situation in which the inflation rate is high and the economic growth rate is low. Stagflation can happen due to two reasons. First, stagflation can result when the productive capacity of an economy is reduced by an unfavorable supply shock, such as an increase in the price of oil for an oil importing country. Such an unfavorable supply shock tends to raise prices at the same time that it slows the economy by making production more costly and less profitable. Second, both stagnation and inflation can result from inappropriate macroeconomic policies. For example, central banks can cause inflation by permitting excessive growth of the money supply, and the government can cause stagnation by excessive regulation of goods markets and labor markets. Either of these factors can cause stagflation. Both types of explanations are offered in the US stagflation of the 1970s: it began with a huge rise in oil prices, but then continued as central banks used excessively simulative monetary policy to counteract the resulting recession, causing a runaway wage-price spiral.

    FDI & FII

    Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) refers to the investment by foreign investors in projects in the country. This type of investment is more involved with the management, technology transfer and other field expertise and knowhow in the project. FII refers to Foreign Institutional Investors. These investors invest in the country indirectly by purchasing stocks of the companies listed on the stock exchanges. The FII money inflows or outflows are also called hot money flows.

    Types of industry

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    Indian Institute of Management, Prabandh Nagar, Off Sitapur Road, Lucknow-226013 (U.P.) India Tel: +91-522-2734101-120

    An IIM Lucknow Initiative

    E - Mail: [email protected] Monopoly - It exists when a specific individual or an enterprise has sufficient control over a particular product or service to determine significantly the terms on which other individuals shall have access to it. Monopolies are thus characterized by the ability of a firm to raise price without losing all its sales. Monopolies often arise as a result of barriers to entry. For Example, Indian Railway has monopoly in serving passengers through train as no other player exists.

    Perfect Competition It describes markets such that no participants are large enough to have the market power to set the price of a homogeneous product. A perfectly competitive market has the following characteristics like there are many buyers & sellers in the market, the goods offered by the various sellers are largely the same and firms can freely enter or exit the market. A competitive market has many buyers and sellers trading identical products so that each buyer and seller is a price taker. Buyers and sellers must accept the price determined by the market. Perfect competition serves as a benchmark against which to measure real-life and imperfectly competitive markets.

    Oligopoly - An oligopoly is a market form in which a market or industry is dominated by a small number of sellers. It is characterized by only a few sellers, each offering a similar or identical product to the others. Because of the few sellers, the key feature of oligopoly is the issue between cooperation and self-interest. At least some firm have large market shares and thus can influence the price of the product.

    Example: - Indian Petroleum Industries which is dominated by few players like HPCL, BPCL, IOCL etc. and the decisions of the one influences the decision of the others.

    Financial Markets

    Difference and demarcation between money market and capital market is made on the basis of maturity period of instruments and claims.

    Capital Market deals with longer maturity financial assets and claims. Capital market

    includes trading in the financial instruments such as shares (equity as well as preference),

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    Indian Institute of Management, Prabandh Nagar, Off Sitapur Road, Lucknow-226013 (U.P.) India Tel: +91-522-2734101-120

    An IIM Lucknow Initiative

    E - Mail: [email protected] public sector bonds and units of mutual funds. In case of capital market even a small individual

    investor can deal by sale/purchase of shares, debentures or mutual fund units.

    Examples: Governments issue Treasury Bonds in the Bond Market, Company through its IPO, taps the investing public for capital and is therefore using the capital markets

    The capital market includes the stock market (equity securities) and the bond market (debt).

    In primary markets, new stock or bond issues are sold to investors via a mechanism known as underwriting.

    In the secondary markets, existing securities are sold and bought among investors or traders, usually on a securities exchange, over-the-counter, or elsewhere.

    Money Market - Short-term instruments maturing within a period of one year are traded in money market such as inter-corporate deposits, certificate of deposits, treasury bonds, commercial papers, commercial bills, etc. Money market is a wholesale market and the participants in money market are large institutional investors, commercial banks, mutual funds, and corporate bodies.

    Money market consists of a number of sub-markets:

    Call money market

    Commercial bills market or discount market

    Acceptance market

    Treasury bill market

    Instruments of Money Market: institutions, and credit unions. Certificate of Deposit - Time deposits, commonly offered to

    consumers by banks, thrift

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    Indian Institute of Management, Prabandh Nagar, Off Sitapur Road, Lucknow-226013 (U.P.) India Tel: +91-522-2734101-120

    An IIM Lucknow Initiative

    E - Mail: [email protected] Repurchase Agreements - Short-term loans - normally for less than two weeks and frequently

    for one day - arranged by selling securities to an investor with an agreement to repurchase

    them at a fixed price on a fixed date.

    Treasury Bills - Short-term debt obligations of a national government that are issued to mature in three to twelve months.

    Bankers Acceptance - is a short term credit investment created by a non-financial firm.

    Commercial Paper - Unsecured promissory notes with a fixed maturity of one to 270

    days; usually sold at a discount from face value

    Shares: A unit of ownership interest in a corporation or financial asset. While owning shares in a business does not mean that the shareholder has direct control over the business's day-today operations, being a shareholder does entitle the possessor to an equal distribution in any profits, if any are declared in the form of dividends. The two main types of shares are common shares and preferred shares.

    Debentures: The long-term requirements of capital are raised by the company primarily through the issue of Shares and Debentures. While the shareholders are essentially the owners of the enterprise, those who buy debentures are creditors for long-term funds and do not enjoy voting rights. In brief all securities other than shares issued by a company will come under the term debentures. A debenture like a share is also a movable property transferable in the manner provided in the Articles of the company.

    Some of the characteristics of debentures are as follows: An instrument to acknowledge the creditors of the company

    A debenture holder is not a member but a creditor. Debenture carries a fixed rate of interest.

    A debenture holder cannot have voting rights.

    At the time of winding up debenture holders have a priority over the shareholders regarding the return of amount due to them.

    Bonds: A debt investment in which an investor loans money to an entity (corporate or governmental) that borrows the funds for a defined period of time at a fixed interest rate. Bonds

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    Indian Institute of Management, Prabandh Nagar, Off Sitapur Road, Lucknow-226013 (U.P.) India Tel: +91-522-2734101-120

    An IIM Lucknow Initiative

    E - Mail: [email protected] are used by companies, municipalities, states and U.S. and foreign governments to finance a variety of projects and activities. Bonds are commonly referred to as fixed-income securities and are one of the three main asset classes, along with stocks and cash equivalents.

    Derivatives: The term Derivative stands for a contract whose price is derived from or is dependent upon an underlying asset. The underlying asset could be a financial asset such as currency, stock and market index, an interest bearing security or a physical commodity. Today, around the world, derivative contracts are traded on electricity, weather, temperature and even volatility.

    Types of Derivative Contracts

    Derivatives comprise four basic contracts namely Forwards, Futures, Options and Swaps. Over the past couple of decades several exotic contracts have also emerged but these are largely the variants of these basic contracts. Let us briefly define some of the contracts.

    Forward Contracts: These are promises to deliver an asset at a pre- determined date in future at a predetermined price. Forwards are highly popular on currencies and interest rates. The contracts are traded over the counter (i.e. outside the stock exchanges, directly between the two parties) and are customized according to the needs of the parties. Since these contracts do not fall under the purview of rules and regulations of an exchange, they generally suffer from counterparty risk i.e. the risk that one of the parties to the contract may not fulfill his or her obligation.

    Futures Contracts: A futures contract is an agreement between two parties to buy or sell an asset

    at a certain time in future at a certain price. These are basically exchange traded, standardized

    contracts. The exchange stands guarantee to all transactions and counterparty risk is largely

    eliminated. The buyers of futures contracts are considered having a long position whereas the

    sellers are considered to be having a short position. It should be noted that this is similar to any

    asset market where anybody who buys is long and the one who sells in short. Futures

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    Indian Institute of Management, Prabandh Nagar, Off Sitapur Road, Lucknow-226013 (U.P.) India Tel: +91-522-2734101-120

    An IIM Lucknow Initiative

    E - Mail: [email protected] contracts are available on variety of commodities, currencies, interest rates, stocks and other

    tradable assets. They are highly popular on stock indices, interest rates and foreign exchange.

    Options: It gives the buyer (holder) a right but not an obligation to buy or sell an asset in future.

    Options are of two types - calls and puts. Calls give the buyer the right but not the obligation to

    buy a given quantity of the underlying asset, at a given price on or before a given future date.

    Puts give the buyer the right, but not the obligation to sell a given quantity of the underlying asset at a given price on or before a given date. One can buy and sell each of the contracts. When one buys an option he is said to be having a long position and when one sells he is said to be having a short position. It should be noted that, in the first two types of derivative contracts (forwards and futures) both the parties (buyer and seller) have an obligation; i.e. the buyer needs to pay for the asset to the seller and the seller needs to deliver the asset to the buyer on the settlement date. In case of options only the seller (also called option writer) is under an obligation and not the buyer (also called option purchaser). The buyer has a right to buy (call options) or sell (put options) the asset from / to the seller of the option but he may or may not exercise this right.

    In case the buyer of the option does exercise his right, the seller of the option must fulfill whatever is his obligation (for a call option the seller has to deliver the asset to the buyer of the option and for a put option the seller has to receive the asset from the buyer of the option). An option can be exercised at the expiry of the contract period (which is known as European option contract) or anytime up to the expiry of the contract period (termed as American option contract).

    Swaps: Swaps are private agreements between two parties to exchange cash flows in the future according to a prearranged formula. They can be regarded as portfolios of forward contracts. The two commonly used swaps are:

    Interest rate swaps: These entail swapping only the interest related cash flows between the parties in the same currency.

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    +91-9731006690 |Rahul +91-8149382508 | Pradnya +91-9960670701 | Srikanth +91-8087106828 | Vaishali +91-9519901285 | Vinay +91-9966286024

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    Indian Institute of Management, Prabandh Nagar, Off Sitapur Road, Lucknow-226013 (U.P.) India Tel: +91-522-2734101-120

    An IIM Lucknow Initiative

    E - Mail: [email protected] Currency swaps: These entail swapping both principal and interest between the parties, with the cash flows in one direction being in a different currency than those in the opposite direction. Types of Traders in the Derivatives Markets

    Types of Traders in the Derivatives Markets: The traders in the derivatives markets are classified into three broad types, viz. hedgers, speculators and arbitrageurs, depending on the purpose for which the parties enter into the contracts.

    Hedgers trade with an objective to minimize the risk in trading or holding the underlying securities. Hedgers willingly bear some costs in order to achieve protection against unfavorable price changes.

    Speculators use derivatives to bet on the future direction of the markets. They take calculated risks but the objective is to gain when the prices move as per their expectation.

    Arbitrageurs try to make risk-less profit by simultaneously entering into transactions in two or more markets or two or more contracts. They profit from market inefficiencies by making simultaneous trades that offset each other thereby making their positions risk-free.

    IPOs and FPOs:

    When a SEBI registered company wants to raise funds or capital for its expansion programs, it floats an IPO for the first time related to that project. The IPO document will in detail inform the investor of the project, its growth trajectory, and its profit potential. The risk factors are also outlined. Based on his personal assessment, the investor may invest as a shareholder, by buying shares at the face value as announced by the Company. Each investor who buys stocks through the IPO gets dividend or profits based on the companys performance, as declared by the company. If the company faces losses, the equity holder also bears the losses. In uncertain market situations, IPOs incur losses and so does each investor.

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    +91-9731006690 |Rahul +91-8149382508 | Pradnya +91-9960670701 | Srikanth +91-8087106828 | Vaishali +91-9519901285 | Vinay +91-9966286024

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    Indian Institute of Management, Prabandh Nagar, Off Sitapur Road, Lucknow-226013 (U.P.) India Tel: +91-522-2734101-120

    An IIM Lucknow Initiative

    E - Mail: [email protected] When a company floats its second or third public offering, its called FPOs or Follow-on Public Offers.

    FII or Foreign Institutional Investors: FIIs are funds that are active in both primary and secondary markets, invest in stocks and aim at reaping short-term profits. Though they bring foreign currency, the flight of the capital is sudden, at times leading to currency and monetary fluctuations. FIIs are heavily involved in speculative practices like futures trade and short selling. They indulge in heavy trading in times of crisis making the situation very volatile. Still, FIIs push up the stock prices, enhance national reputation, increase the investment profits of stock players, strengthen the stock exchange and generally increase the brand value of the region.

    Venture Capital It is the money available to a risky project. Financier is convinced of the idea, its blue print, viability and execution. The financier is only involved in investing heavily. Any management personnel, entrepreneur, individual or a small company can get funds through a venture capitalist and start his/her project. The IT boom has been powered by venture capital.

    Hedge Funds Hedge funds are investment pools of some of the uber-rich or very high net worth individuals across the wealth. The hedge funds have a certain tendency to aggressively invest and usually their returns are typically higher than any other form of investment. Hedge funds had initially reaped high returns in the US realty boom. They have been accused of short selling. Much of their strategies remain secret. They operate high risk markets. Hedge funds have this ability to return profits in both the bear and bull hugs.

    Short selling The selling of a security that the seller does not own, or any sale that is completed by the delivery of a security borrowed by the seller. Short sellers assume that they will be able to buy the stock at a lower amount than the price at which they sold short. Participatory Notes: Participatory notes are a stock trade facilitating financial instrument in the Indian stock exchange. As per SEBI guidelines only those individuals/companies registered with SEBI can trade at the stock exchange. This has kept out a substantial category of high net worth individuals who would not register/open shop in India. Since the ultimate stockholder is not known, India did not encourage this. However, from late 1990s, under SEBI

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    +91-9731006690 |Rahul +91-8149382508 | Pradnya +91-9960670701 | Srikanth +91-8087106828 | Vaishali +91-9519901285 | Vinay +91-9966286024

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    Indian Institute of Management, Prabandh Nagar, Off Sitapur Road, Lucknow-226013 (U.P.) India Tel: +91-522-2734101-120

    An IIM Lucknow Initiative

    E - Mail: [email protected] watch, participatory notes were issued to non-registered individuals/companies to become stock players after registering themselves through FIIs. Thus FIIs were in some way careful of the players who entered bourses through their participatory notes. Note: This list is not exhaustive. It has been prepared just to give you an idea about what you can expect in an interview. People with relevant work experience in finance domain can expect questions related to their job profile.

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    Indian Institute of Management, Prabandh Nagar, Off Sitapur Road, Lucknow-226013 (U.P.) India Tel: +91-522-2734101-120

    An IIM Lucknow Initiative

    E - Mail: [email protected]

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    Indian Institute of Management, Prabandh Nagar, Off Sitapur Road, Lucknow-226013 (U.P.) India Tel: +91-522-2734101-120

    An IIM Lucknow Initiative

    E - Mail: [email protected] Need: It is state of deprivation of some basic satisfaction. eg.- food, clothing, safety, shelter.

    Want: Desire for specific satisfier of need. eg.- Indians needs food wants paneer tikka/ tandoori chicken. Americans needs food- wants hamburger/ French fries.

    Demand: Want for a specific product backed up by ability and willingness to buy. eg.- Need transportation.

    Demand is influenced by making product :

    APPROPRIATE

    ATTRACTIVE

    APPROACHABLE/ AFFORDABLE

    AVAILABLE EASILY

    Product Anything that can be offered to the market to satisfy the needs and wants.

    Product Category Products satisfying a specific need or want. E.g. Detergent, Shampoo

    Product Form Type of product category E.g. Detergent can be in powder/ liquid/ bar.

    Brand A name and/or symbol to identify the product of one seller and to differentiate it from others.

    Brand Valuation It is the process of estimating the total financial value of a brand (both tangible as well as intangible part).

    Brand Equity A set of intangible assets that literary add value to the brand and to the firm as a whole (goodwill).

    Commodity Products which have no names. E.g. wheat, sugar etc. sold from grocery where

    there is no branding or assurance. Brands which cannot be differentiated are called

    commodityclass.

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    Indian Institute of Management, Prabandh Nagar, Off Sitapur Road, Lucknow-226013 (U.P.) India Tel: +91-522-2734101-120

    An IIM Lucknow Initiative

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    Product Classification Physical Goods, Services, Persons, Places, Organizations, Ideas

    Product Life Cycle - Products have limited life. Sales pass through different stages where

    they encounter different opportunities and challenges. Profits also vary at different stages.

    So the products require different marketing and manufacturing strategies at different stages.

    There are 4 stages in the PLC: Introduction, Growth, Maturity and Decline.

    What is marketing? - The American Marketing Association defines Marketing as the activity,

    set of institutions, and processes for creating, communicating, delivering, and exchanging

    offerings that have value for the customers, clients, partners, and society at large. In layman

    terms, marketing is about finding need gaps, and creating, communicating and delivering

    value to the consumer in a way that benefits the organization and its stakeholders.

    Marketing concept It implies that an organization aims all of its efforts at satisfying its customers profitably. Selling vs. Marketing Marketing is not the art of selling products. In fact, the aim of marketing is to understand the customer so well that the product fits him and sells itself, thus making selling superfluous. Selling then remains as only the tip of the iceberg. In short the essence of marketing is to make selling redundant.

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    Indian Institute of Management, Prabandh Nagar, Off Sitapur Road, Lucknow-226013 (U.P.) India Tel: +91-522-2734101-120

    An IIM Lucknow Initiative

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    Marketing Mix It is a set of tools that facilitate the marketing effort. Product- Features, specifications, design, quality

    Price Value for money, MRP, discounts, credit, installments, maintenance Place Distribution, warehousing, availability, coverage

    Promotion

    As opposed to goods, services are intangible. People and process of delivery is important in service. Clients presence is must, so ambience should be good.

    Marketing

    Selling

    Marketing is everything that a firm does to Selling is everything a firm does to influence a

    reach its customers and to generate leads.

    customer to buy a product or service, or in other words close the sale

    Understanding

    Technical Name

    Understanding Customer Needs

    Marketing Research

    Converting Needs into Products

    Customer driven engineering

    Communication about the product

    Promotion

    Marketing the product available

    Distribution

    Transaction

    Selling

    After sales service/feedback

    Customer support

  • Ankur +91-7275556449|Jatin +91-9709039074|Jay +91-9519901252| Jaykarthik (PGPSM)

    +91-9731006690 |Rahul +91-8149382508 | Pradnya +91-9960670701 | Srikanth +91-8087106828 | Vaishali +91-9519901285 | Vinay +91-9966286024

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    Indian Institute of Management, Prabandh Nagar, Off Sitapur Road, Lucknow-226013 (U.P.) India Tel: +91-522-2734101-120

    An IIM Lucknow Initiative

    E - Mail: [email protected] People Attraction, selection, training, motivation, retention of people

    Process

    Physical Evidence Interior decoration, ambience

    Price only ensures cash inflow, all other Ps results in cash outflow.

    Difference between Price, value and satisfaction Value reflects the sum of perceived tangible and intangible benefits and costs to customers. Value increases with quality and decreases with price. However, other factors can also play a vital role in our perceptions of value. Satisfaction reflects a persons judgments of products perceived performance in relation to expectations.

    5Ms of Advertising Mission, Money, Message, Medium, and Measurement Note: A candidate should concentrate on having plausible answers for a few (indicative but not exhaustive) questions substantiating his interest in marketing.

    Why are you interested in marketing?

    How would you connect your graduation background with a prospective career in marketing?

    Which brand/product/advertisement has left a lasting impression upon you? Why do you think you would suit a marketing profile?

  • -

    OPERATIONS

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    ________________________________________________________________________________

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    Indian Institute of Management, Prabandh Nagar, Off Sitapur Road, Lucknow-226013

    (U.P.) India; Tel: +91-522-2734101-120

    An IIM Lucknow Initiative

    E - Mail: [email protected]

    Operations Management Operations Management deals with the design and

    management of products, processes, services and supply chains. It considers the

    acquisition, development, and utilization of sources that firms need to deliver the

    goods and services their clients want.

    Goods vs. ServicesThere are five essential differences between services and goods. The first is that a service is an intangible process that cannot be weighed or measured, whereas a good is a tangible output of a process that has physical dimensions. This distinction has important business implications since a service innovation, unlike a product innovation, cannot be patented. Thus, a company with a new concept must expand rapidly before competitors copy its procedures. Service intangibility also presents a problem for customers since, unlike with a physical product, they cannot try it out and test it before purchase.

    The second is that a service requires some degree of interaction with the customer for it to be a service. The interaction may be brief, but it must exist for the service to be complete. Where face-to-face service is required, the service facility must be designed to handle the customer's presence. Goods, on the other hand, are generally produced in a facility separate from the customer. They can be made according to a production schedule that is efficient for the company.

    The third is that services, with the big exception of hard technologies such as ATMs and information technologies such as answering machines and automated Internet exchanges, are inherently heterogeneousthey vary from day to day and even hour by hour as a function of the attitudes of the customer and the servers. Thus, even highly scripted work such as found in call centers can produce unpredictable outcomes. Goods, in contrast, can be produced to meet very tight specifications day-in and day-out with essentially zero variability. In those cases where a defective good is produced, it can be reworked or scrapped.

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    Indian Institute of Management, Prabandh Nagar, Off Sitapur Road, Lucknow-226013

    (U.P.) India; Tel: +91-522-2734101-120

    An IIM Lucknow Initiative

    E - Mail: [email protected]

    The fourth is that services as a process are perishable and time dependent, and unlike goods, they can't be stored. You cannot come back last week for an air flight or a day on campus.

    And fifth, the specifications of a service are defined and evaluated as a package of features that affect the five senses.

    Production process A production process is defined as a user of resources to

    transform inputs into desired output. For a plant that manufactures tyres, raw material,

    labor and capital can be inputs while the finished rubber tyre will be the output. The

    steps through which the raw material is converted into a finished good can be

    referred to as a process.

    A simple parameter to measure efficiency of a process is productivity. In a broad sense, productivity is the ratio of goods/services produced to resources used (output to input).

    Bottleneck A point of congestion in a system that occurs when workloads arrive

    at a given point more quickly than that point can handle them. The inefficiencies

    brought about by the bottleneck often create a queue and a longer overall cycle

    time.

    The primary objective of a manager in the operations department is to eliminate the bottleneck that exists in the process. By removing this inefficiency, the manager can increase profits by reducing time to produce.

    Inventory Management Inventory management refers mainly to when a firm strives to attain and uphold an optimal inventory of goods while also taking note of all orders, shipping and handling, and other associated costs. Inventory

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    ________________________________________________________________________________

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    Indian Institute of Management, Prabandh Nagar, Off Sitapur Road, Lucknow-226013

    (U.P.) India; Tel: +91-522-2734101-120

    An IIM Lucknow Initiative

    E - Mail: [email protected]

    management is mainly about identifying the amount and the position of the goods that a firm has in their inventory. Inventory management is imperative as it helps to defend the intended course of production against the chance of running out of important materials or goods.

    Inventory management also includes making essential connections between the replenishment lead time of goods, asset management, the carrying costs of inventory, future inventory price forecasting, physical inventory, available space for inventory, demand forecasting and much more.

    By balancing these competing requirements, a company will discover their optimal inventory levels. This is an ongoing process, as the firm will need to shift and adjust as it changes and expands.

    Planning & ForecastingPlanning is defined as The establishment of objectives, and

    the formulation, evaluation and selection of the policies, strategies, tactics and action

    required to achieve them. Planning comprises long term/strategic planning and

    short term/operational planning. The latter is usually for a period of up to one year.

    Forecasting is an attempt to estimate the future. It is based on available past

    data, the extrapolation of trends and the application of judgement.

    As an operations manager, material requirement planning or demand estimation needs to be done on a regular basis. This is to ensure that the company meets the customers requirements within time. The plans may be short-range plans (less than 3 months) or longrange plans (over 1 year). Efficient planning will lead to reduction in costs due to sudden variations in demand. Planning and scheduling is a popular exercise undertaken by companies that manufacture seasonal products.

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    ________________________________________________________________________________

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    Indian Institute of Management, Prabandh Nagar, Off Sitapur Road, Lucknow-226013

    (U.P.) India; Tel: +91-522-2734101-120

    An IIM Lucknow Initiative

    E - Mail: [email protected]

    SCM Supply chain management is the management of a network of all business processes and activities involving procurement of raw materials, manufacturing and distribution management of finished goods. SCM is also called the art of management of providing the Right Product, At the Right Time, Right Place and at the Right Cost to the Customer.

    JIT Just in time (JIT) is a production strategy that strives to improve a business return

    on investment by reducing in-process inventory and associated carrying costs. The

    philosophy of JIT is simple: inventory is waste & all efforts are made to eliminate waste

    also known as Muda.

    Lean Manufacturing: Lean Manufacturing is also called Just in Time (JIT). It is based on the principle of doing more less inventory, fewer workers, less space. It is about smoothing the flow of material to arrive just as it is needed. So, JIT and Lean Manufacturing are used interchangeably.

    Kanban Kanban is one of the many methods through which JIT is achieved. It is a scheduling system for lean and just-in-time (JIT) production that helps determine what to produce, when to produce it, and how much to produce.

    TQM Total Quality Management (TQM) is a comprehensive and structured approach to organizational management that seeks to improve the quality of products and services through ongoing refinements in response to continuous feedback.

    Kaizen- The Japanese word "Kaizen" means improvement, improvements without spending much money, involving everyone from managers to workers, and using much common sense. The Japanese way encourages small improvements day after day, continuously. The key aspect of Kaizen is that it is an on-going, never-ending

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    ________________________________________________________________________________

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    Indian Institute of Management, Prabandh Nagar, Off Sitapur Road, Lucknow-226013

    (U.P.) India; Tel: +91-522-2734101-120

    An IIM Lucknow Initiative

    E - Mail: [email protected]

    improvement process. It's a soft and gradual method opposed to more usual western habits to scrap everything and start with new.

    TOCTheory of Constraints (TOC) is a holistic way of thinking about a system (i.e. optimize the system globally and not locally). Traditional cost accounting and productivity measure may promote local optimization. TOC recognizes that the bottlenecks or constraints are present in the system which limits system output.

    Note: It is advisable to go through subjects like Industrial Engineering if taught to you. If not, you need to know why you are interested in Operations Management, some related concepts to your work (if relevant) and why you want to shift to a career in Operations.

    ALL THE BEST!!