The
first-ever survey
of India's best equity analysts. Part of Business Today's
ongoing year-round
specials.
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Boom
Checks In With the economy booming
and
domestic tourism taking off, the
hotel industry is gearing up to
add some 30,000 rooms at a
cost of Rs 6,000 crore. more...
60
Minutes Patents are a measure of research output and
IBM Research has the largest number of patents as compared with any
other corporate laboratory in the world. BT meets up with Paul Horn,
who currently heads eight IBM research labs across the world, including
the one at IIT, Delhi. more...
The
World's #1
Venture Capitalist It's
no longer Vinod Khosla
but another Delhi-born Indian,
Promod Haque.
Here's what makes
him tick. more...
The
Reclusive GMR Grandhi Mallikarjuna Rao runs one of India's
most happening infrastructure businesses with a clutch of power plants,
a couple of national highway projects, even an airport development.
And lest we forget, he hasn't spoken to the media in the Rs 1,500-crore
group's 27 years of existence. more...
The
Brothers Dalmia Abhishek
and Chaitanya Dalmia have emerged as one of Dalal Street's biggest
bargain hunters, grabbing under-valued stocks and rattling managements.
But are the brothers serious investors or mere punters? more...
Managing
Expectations India Inc. discusses managing
expectations and employees at the
second Business Today
Corporate Governance
Summit. more...
Q&A: Jagdish
Sheth
The originator of the 'Rule of Three' as a market evolution concept
and Charles H. Kellstadt professor of marketing at the Goizueta Business
School, Emory University, has been conducting brand workshops in India.
But being an Emory professor, the one question he cannot escape is
what he makes of The Coca-Cola Company's succession quandary. More
Web Exclusives More
Net Specials
Apple SFX
Apple Computer wants to target its snazzy technology at Hindi cinema's
growing market for special effects.
Q&A: Tarun
Khanna
When a strategy professor at Harvard Business School tells the world
that global analysts and investors have been kissing the wrong frog-it's
India rather than China that the world should be sizing up as a potential
world leader-people could respond by dismissing it as misplaced country-of-origin
loyalty. Or by sitting up and listening.
Raghuram
Rajan
The Chief Economist of the IMF doesn't hesitate to tell the country
what he thinks. That's good.
Leaping
To Safety See a sliding stockmarket?
Fret not. You, the retail
investor, are not without
strategic options. more...
MT
Redux After the medical transcription boom and bust,
the industry has settled into a steady-state mode that bodes well
for companies in the field, and their employees. In short, things
are just the way the doctor ordered. more...
Own
Volition A bare-all look-back at a life wilfully wrecked,
another on whether globalisation is good and a third on the yield
curve. more...
Quiet
HQ Of The DNA Sisterhood A walkabout of the Golden Jubilee
Biotech Park for Women at Siruseri in
Tamil Nadu. more...
People Starring Infosys Technology's N.R. Narayana Murthy,
steel baron Lakshmi Niwas Mittal of LNM Group, ace auditor Kashi
Nath Memani, WorldTel's Chairman and India's telecom architect Sam
Pitroda, Nasser Munjee and Data Access' Siddharth Raymore...
The
Urban Governance Imperative More Indian cities are
waking up to the urban governance imperative pioneered by Bangalore
and Hyderabad. more...
Q&A
With Stephen S. Roach Morgan Stanley's Chief
Economist speaks to BT on the falling dollar, China and India. more...
Is
There A Steel Cartel Around? Consumers say yes, but
steel producers
point to rising input costs as the cause of zooming prices. more...
Is
IBM Buying Daksh? Seems likely, and such
an acquisition would certainly make a lot of sense to IBM. more...
The Flight To Academia Why are corporate
execs giving up top-dollar assignments for academic jobs?.
Help, Tarun!
Brain Burrowing
High Networth Network more...