Nov '22
Business Briefs
Welcome to Twitter, an Elon Musk Company
After months of drama and legal tussles, Elon Musk, the boss of X-Space and electric car pioneer Tesla, finally gets to own the popular microblogging platform Twitter, shelling out a staggering $44 bn. His detractors, however, call the deal too expensive. But if you thought the drama ended with what is easily one of the most expensive buyout deals in the social network space, then you may be mistaken. For, what is happening currently, post acquisition, it looks like the beginning of the next chapter in the Musk-Twitter saga. Meanwhile, Musk, announced his arrival at the social network giant's head office with a tweet that read, "Entering Twitter HQ - let that sink in!" His first major decision, as 'Chief Twit' (as he now calls himself), has been the award of 'golden parachutes', worth $122 mn, that he has handed over to the outgoing top executives-in a way, he has removed the entire top leadership. "Musk fired Parag Agrawal, who succeeded Jack Dorsey as Twitter CEO, and Chief Financial Officer Ned Segal, both of whom were in the building at the time and escorted out by security, The Verge commented, adding, "Vijaya Gadde, the company's policy chief whom Musk had publicly criticized, was also ousted. Sean Edgett, the general counsel, is gone, too (as per Bloomberg, security escorted him out, as well.) Chief customer officer Sarah Personette was also fired." The outgoing CEO has been offered $38.7 mn, Segal got $25.4 mn, Gadde was given $12.5 mn, and Personette, who earlier tweeted about how excited she was for Musk's takeover, received $11.2 mn.
It may be recalled that Musk had originally offered to buy Twitter in April this year. He, however, changed his mind and
tried to back out in July. He was back to the negotiation table once again when, on October 4, he filed a letter with the market
watchdog Securities and Exchange Commission affirming his commitment to the original deal. On October 28, he tweeted,
"The bird is freed", a day after he finally became the social network,s official owner.
Full Article ...
Energy
OPEC+ Production Cut
Will It Backfire?
Amidst the allegations of dominance and political ploys, OPEC and other oil-producing countries (including
Russia) announce to cut oil production output, despite an already tight market, in a move that is bound to send
energy prices soaring again.
A coalition of oil producing nations, also know as OPEC+, that controls more than 40% of global oil supplies and
about 90% of proven oil reserves, took a controversial decision on October 5 to cut production by 2 million barrels
a day (mb/d), an amount equivalent to 2% of the world's total output. After
the biggest production cut since the start of the pandemic and months of market
volatility and missed targets, the oil cartel which comprises the OPEC group of 13
countries and 10 allies led by Moscow, is determined to restore its credibility and
regain control of crude oil price. It may be recalled that oil prices have fallen to
around $80 a barrel from more than $120 in early June amid growing fears about
the prospect of a global economic recession. The decision comes despite the fact the
energy cartel has already been producing (3.6 mb/d) less than its quota of 42.4 mb/d.
Full Article ...
Forex Markets
Central Banks
Of a Rampaging Dollar, Global Interest Rates, and EM Currencies
The US Federal Reserve's relentless rate hike spree, which has caused a seemingly unstoppable bull-run of the
dollar, is ensuring that global inflation pressures are being transmitted to the rest of the world. This has forced
other central banks to follow suit or else risk the flight of capital as interest rate differentials narrow.
Most major central banks around the world, led by the West, continue to maintain their hawkish stance in a hint that
the war on inflation is far from over. For example, the US Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) concluded its
September 20-21 meeting by hiking the federal funds target rate by another 75
basis points (bps) to a range of 3% to 3.25%. For the record, the Federal Reserve has
effected five rate hikes this year so far (albeit in tranches), beginning in March when
it raised the benchmark rate by 25 bps to the range of 0.25% to 0.50%-the first rate
hike announced by the US central bank since 2018. In the European Union, the
European Central Bank, central bank of the 19 EU countries whose official currency
is the euro, also implemented a similar rate hike in September, lifting its benchmark
rate to 1.25%.
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International
UK
In a Full-Blown Economic Crisis?
The world's sixth-largest economy is grappling with a plethora of thorny
challenges, from soaring food prices to high energy costs to low growth to, last
but not least, an unusually long period of political instability. Given that, it is
clear the task for the newly appointed government led by Rishi Sunak, the first
British PM of color, is cut out.
The UK economy is in a major cri
sis, exacerbated by a raft of
thorny issues, including the economic
fallout of Brexit; Boris Johnson's
numerous U-turns; and Liz Truss's
shocking departure from 10 Downing
Street. Truss, who became the fourth
prime minister to resign since 2016,
said she was sorry for the mistakes
made by her government and accepted
responsibility for "going too far and too
fast" with her contentious "trickledown"
economics approach. However,
her faulty policies and her failed bid to
deliver "growth, growth, growth" via unfunded
tax cuts (which sparked a bond
market revolt) have only pushed the
economy into an even deeper crisis.
Full Article ...
Clean Energy
Geothermal
India's New Hope
India, which has enhanced its share of renewable energy with the support of solar and wind energy, would do
well to also include geothermal energy in its armory towards reaching the net-zero goal.
While it is true that India's fossil fuel consumption will remain high for the next few decades, which would
push both carbon and greenhouse gas emissions higher, the government is doing well to tap all the possible
renewable energy sources, including solar and wind, which could contribute to bringing down emission levels. The
need to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and global warming has heightened the
urgency of researching new types of renewable energy sources. In that quest, it has now
stumbled upon one more such clean energy source: geothermal energy.
Full Article ...
Cover Story
Startups
The Funding Winter Is Here
Indian startups' funding winter may last longer than expected as the macro environment becomes all the more
challenging, while jittery investors adopt a 'wait and watch' approach.
Altough winter is officially yet to set in, India's startup ecosystem has already begun to feel the biting chill. A massive
drop in venture funding, a drying deal pipeline, rising 'dry powder' (an industry jargon) and shrinking average ticket size
only confirm that Indian startups are already in the middle of what many call a harsh funding winter, even before
winter actually arrives. According to a PwC report titled, "India Start-up Deals Tracker Q3 CY22", funding in the world's thirdlargest
startup ecosystem hit a two-year low at $2.7 bn in the third quarter ended September 30, falling both sequentially as
well as on a year-on-year basis. In fact, the decline in funding activity was much sharper compared to the same period last year
when investors pumped in a record $11.4 bn across 326 deals.
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Viewpoint
Global Central Banks
Rate Hiking Spree
The rate rising spree of central banks poses recession risks to economies of the world.
Raising interest rates is a dampener for growth. When growth is affected, it impacts the purchasing power of companies and consumers. The increase in interest rates is akin to a levy of taxes which affects the way income
for the consumer, investment in capital goods, investment in stocks and investments are made. The reduced
purchasing power also leads to a reduced investment in securities and financial assets.
All this leads to reduced money in the economy and in turn, leads to recession.
Full Article ...
Banking
Central Bank Digital Currency
Revolutionizing Digital Payments
Globally, more economies are increasingly leaning towards digital solutions. Indeed, new technologies like
CBDC need to be adopted, as was the case with cryptocurrencies, so that they can be used efficiently in the
fast-changing payment ecosystem.
The currency's evolution has been steady, from the exchange of goods and services to metal coin minting to
currency notes and now to digital currency. This evolution is inevitable with the end-users' changing needs and
global scenarios. However, the evolution has been phenomenal more so during the past decade with the advent of
several technological developments that have paved the way for out-of-the-box innovations.
The digital currency revolution, conceptualized by the invention of distributed
ledger technology (blockchain), started with the introduction of
cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin which gained huge popularity and acceptance.
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Banking
Central Banks Pivot
Shock Therapy on the Global Economy
The drive by central banks around the world to control rising inflation rates is beginning to cause serious cracks in
global bond markets while increasing financial instability.
The cost of borrowing and servicing debt is rocketing. Suddenly, investors holding government bonds are facing
serious losses, particularly pension funds in Europe that tend to invest in long-term bonds using short-term
interest rates to borrow-short-term interest rates are up; long-term bond prices are down. That's a mismatch in
asset values. In the case of the United Kingdom, pension funds and others had been employing a piece of financial jiggerypokery
called "liability-driven investment" schemes. This was the practice of buying bonds that were then used as collateral
for loans to purchase more bonds-as much as €1.5 tn over the last decade since
the Global Financial Crisis. If the value of the bonds used as collateral drops like a
stone, as it has just done, then the ability to borrow vanishes. So the Bank of England
(BoE) has been forced to loan €65 bn to such bondholders to bail them out of their
Ponzi scheme.
Fintechs
Digital Lending
A Case for Credit Card Innovation
Despite the overwhelming success of UPI, there exists scope for product innovations in both the B2C as well
as B2B credit card segments. This will give a further boost to digital payments in the country and facilitate a
faster transition towards a less-cash society.
With seven billion transactions per month, the number of real-time digital payments and transfers in India is three
times as much as in China and six times as much as in the US. This incredible feat has decisively muted all those
who scoffed at the idea of 'Digital India'.
The buzz in the fintech space is driven by the BHIM UPI application that has facilitated real-time payments from
the mobile phone in a flash. With its 2-step secure authentication for the transfer of money from one bank account to
another using just the mobile number, BHIM UPI has set new global standards. The winning feature is the digital
payment is at zero transaction cost.
Full Article ...
Macro Matters
Australia: Yet Another Rate Hike
Australia: Yet Another Rate Hike
The Reserve Bank of Australia announces another rate hike as inflation hits 32-year high.
With seven billion transactions per month, the number of real-time digital payments and transfers in India is three
times as much as in China and six times as much as in the US. This incredible feat has decisively muted all those
who scoffed at the idea of 'Digital India'.
The 'Lucky Economy'-one of the many sobriquets by which Australia is known by-needs a stroke of luck (perhaps a
bountiful one) as it battles the worst inflation in years. Led by surging housing and food prices, the consumer price
inflation in Australia hit a multi-decade high during the just concluded third quarter ended September 30, 2022,
which has stoked fears that its central bank will raise rates even further when its board meets next.
Full Article ...
Decoding Data
'Crude' (Oil) Facts
Global Crude Oil Demand Rebounded in 2021 after falling a year before, suggests the latest study by BP.
According to the 'Statistical Review of World Energy 2022' report, released recently by the UK-based petrochemicals
giant BP, global oil consumption rebounded sharply in 2021 after experiencing a record decline in
2020 in the wake of the Covid-19 virus outbreak. Crude consumption had risen for nine straight years before demand
fell by more than 9% in 2020. As per the study, oil consumption increased by 5.3 million barrels per day (b/d) in 2021, but
remained 3.7 million b/d below 2019 levels. Oil demand in 2021 averaged 96.9 million b/d. Much of this weakness, said the
report, was concentrated in aviation-related oil demand, which was more than 2.5 million b/d (33%) below 2019 levels.
Nevertheless, it has consistently been losing out to renewables and other substitutes. Fossil fuels accounted for 82% of
primary energy use last year, compared to 83% in 2019 and 85% five years ago, the
report said.
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Leadership
Executive Health, Work Addiction, and Executive Burnout
"Look After Yourself ... As Well As Your Employees!"
In some organizations, there is still a stigma attached to executive illness. Having open and transparent
arrangements to support the sick executive will help remove any sense of stigmatization that some (i.e., political
rivals perhaps) may wish (inappropriately and unfairly) to attach to an executive's absence.
While the health and well-being of every member of the workforce matters a great deal, this article focuses on executive
health and the importance of ensuring that each member of the executive elite takes good care of themselves. If they
don't, then who else will?
A primary responsibility of leadership is the welfare of staff. Another is ensuring the continuity, and continuing success,
of the business as a whole. The drive to make things happen, be successful, develop the
business and consider the well-being and welfare of staff can actually result in a leader
neglecting to monitor and manage their own health and well-being.
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Arts
TS Eliot
Centennial of The Waste Land
As the literary world is quite excited about the centennial celebrations of Eliot's masterpiece of modernism, Analyst
too joins the lot in celebrating "What the Thunder Said".
October 2022 marked 100 years
since TS Eliot's The Waste
Land was published. Literary
enthusiasts and critics have already
written hundreds of thousands of words
to give expression to their impression
about these four hundred and thirtythree
lines that constitute this landmark
poem during the last hundred
years and I am sure tens of thousands
more are likely to be written in the centenary
year alone.
Now, you may question, what is so
unique about The Waste Land that
stirred modern men to write so much
about so few lines that roar all about
unfulfilling lives, "broken images" and
loss-sounding more like a parody, pastiche,
allusion. The answer is simple:
breaking from tradition, yet desperately
attempting to rebuild with
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