Monday, January 12, 2009

China shuts down 91 sites containing porn

China has shut down 91 websites containing porn and lewd content in the past three days, according to state news agency Xinhua.

The Chinese government last week launched a fresh campaign to "purify the internet", led by the State Council Information Office. It has targeted top portals and search engines such as Sina, Baidu and Google.

Chinese authorities have also vowed to beef up crackdown efforts in the coming days, and have urged offending webmasters to voluntarily turn themselves in to public security departments.

As part of the censorship campaign, the government has listed 33 international sites – including Google and MSN - which the company claims are not doing enough to censor pornography and other "inappropriate content".

In a progress update published last week, most of the sites – including Google – were chided for needing to "continue the clean up." Chinese search site Baidu was listed as making "ineffective" clean up efforts.

Satyam CEO arrested as company faces breakup

Satyam CEO and founder Ramalinga Raju has been arrested over his involvement in the $1 billion false accounting scandal, which has wiped out an estimated $2.2 billion of investor wealth.

New company chairman Deepak Parekh has told Bloomberg that the company may need to be broken up - and parts of the company sold off - in an attempt to stem the rapid decline in value of the company.

Separation may also be needed to shield any potential buyers from lawsuits lodged by angry investors, he said. Satyam is facing at least three class-action lawsuits in the US alone.

The board will also work to determine how much cash Satyam has on hand to fund its business operations and pay its 53,000 employees.

Meanwhile, Raju, his younger brother and Satyam CFO Srinivas Vadlamani have been remanded in custody, and face charges including forgery and criminal conspiracy. The first hearing will take place on January 23.

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Satyam Chairman Resigns






Satyam Computer Services Ltd. Chairman Ramalinga Raju resigned after saying he falsified accounts and assets, sending shares of the Indian software services provider to a record decline.

Raju, 53, unsuccessfully tried to sell two companies to Satyam last month in a final attempt to plug 50.4 billion rupees ($1.04 billion) of “fictitious assets” on the company’s balance sheet, Hyderabad-based Satyam said in a statement today. Profits from the main business have been inflated “over a period of last several years,” Raju said in a letter to the board.

The transactions started to unravel after shareholders vetoed the sale of two construction companies, four directors quit the company and the World Bank barred Satyam from bidding for contracts. India’s markets regulator C.B. Bhave said the event is of “horrifying magnitude” as Satyam dragged down the benchmark stock index already hit by a record slump last year.

“This is a black day for India, the software sector and corporate governance claims,” Arun Kejriwal, founder of Kejriwal Research & Investment Services, said in Mumbai. “If at all there’s an event that could be the biggest setback for corporate India, it is this.”

Shares of Satyam, which means “truth” in Sanskrit, plunged 69 percent to 55 rupees in Mumbai trading. The Sensitive Index tumbled 4.3 percent.

‘Non-Existent’

Of the reported cash and bank balances of 53.61 billion rupees on Sept. 30, 50.4 billion rupees was non-existent, Raju said in the letter sent to the Bombay Stock Exchange.

Operating margin at Satyam, India’s fourth-largest software exporter, in the quarter ended Sept. 30 was 3 percent of revenue, instead of the reported 24 percent, Raju said in the letter. The company’s revenue was 21 billion rupees, 22 percent less than the inflated figure of 27 billion rupees that had been reported.

Raju arranged 12.3 billion rupees “to keep operations going” at Satyam over the last two years by pledging the founders’ shares and raising funds from other sources, he said.

“What started as a marginal gap between actual operating profit and the one reflected in the books of accounts continued to grow over the years,” Raju said. “It was like riding a tiger, not knowing how to get off without being eaten.”

‘Easy Target’

The founders’ concern was that a poor performance, combined with the fact they held a small stake in the company, would make Satyam an easy target for a takeover, exposing the inflated figures, he said.

Satyam yesterday denied a report that the company received a merger offer from Tech Mahindra Ltd., an Indian software-services provider controlled by Mahindra & Mahindra Ltd. and partly owned by BT Group Plc.

Tech Mahindra termed the report of a proposed all-stock merger as “speculative.”

Earlier in the week, MindTree Ltd. denied a report it was one of two smaller rivals in talks for a merger with Satyam. The Hyderabad-based company is in talks to merge with smaller rivals including HCL Technologies and MindTree, the Business Standard reported on Jan. 5, citing unidentified people at investment banks.

Raju’s attempts to “keep the wheel moving” at Satyam was finally derailed as lenders sold most of the pledged shares because of margin calls, he said.

Reduced Holdings

SRSR Holdings Pvt., which holds the founding family’s stake, reduced their holding to 3.6 percent from 5.13 percent, Satyam told the Bombay Stock Exchange yesterday. Of the 3.6 percent, 1.7 percent is pledged with lenders, it said.

The stake sales by the families of Chairman Raju and his younger brother, manager director Rama Raju, reduced their holdings to below levels held by institutional investors including Aberdeen Asset Management Plc. Funds run by Aberdeen own 6.6 percent of Satyam, according to data compiled by Bloomberg until the end of October.

Raju scrapped the planned acquisition of Maytas Properties Ltd. and Maytas Infra Ltd. last month, less than 12 hours after announcing it, after the company’s ADRs plunged.

Separately, the World Bank Dec. 23 declared India’s fourth- biggest software-services provider ineligible for contracts for eight years, alleging “improper” benefits were given to the bank’s employees.

Satyam was founded in 1987 by Ramalinga Raju and Rama Raju and counts ArcelorMittal, the world’s largest steelmaker, and Nissan Motor Co., Japan’s third-biggest carmaker, among its customers.

“This company had a five-star independent board and it had a leading auditor and still it managed the con,” said Tarun Sisodia, a Mumbai-based analyst with Anand Rathi Securities Ltd. “So the question is why only Satyam, why not every other company.”

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Obama’s victory: What does it mean for Indian IT?

Barack Obama has finally won the US presidential election. A BBC poll showed that most of the countries wanted Obama to win the elections. In India, these results are important as USA is important for our IT & ITES industry. In USA, outsourcing of jobs becomes an election issue.

 

The issue of outsourcing jobs to India was first raised by Obama in February last month he told his voters in an election rally that their jobs had been taken away by offshore companies set up in places like India and China. He further said that there was a need to end those tax breaks that go to companies that ship jobs overseas.

 

The total software and service market was about $63 billion for the financial year ending March 2008. Out of which, exports are over $ 40 billion and the domestic market is about $ 23 billion. During last financial year, US accounted for 67% of the total exports. If trend continues in this financial year, then total outsourcing to the US will be to the tune of $26.80 billion.

 

However, IT industry is not worried by such political statements. Indian IT industry has hailed Obama's victory. Following are some of the important views of industry associations and leaders on this issue:

 

NASSCOM, an apex body representing India's IT & ITES industry:

When Obama referred to outsourcing in context of migration of jobs, he was basically referring to the manufacturing sector. In IT & BPO sector there is a shortage of skilled manpower and hence India can help in it's the growth of US economy.

 

Raman Roy, chairman and managing director of Quatrro and considered as father of Indian BPO industry:

Obama has said that everything is part of global economy. Outsourcing is a part of world economy. His first priority will be to tackle economic meltdown. I believe India can help in it.

 

Som Mittal, President, Nasscom:

NASSCOM shares many of the same economic and diplomatic goals outlined by President-elect Obama during the course of his campaign.  Specifically, we support expanding the H1B visa program so that highly skilled workers can help companies lead the way on innovation and contribute additional jobs and economic growth in the United States.