s ICICI Bank customers can withdraw cash at ATMs sans debit card. Here's how By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-01-21T11:32:13+05:30 The offering of ‘Cardless Cash Withdrawal’ from iMobile enables customers to withdraw cash securely and conveniently for everyday usage and purchases, all from the convenience of their mobile phone. Here is a look at how you can use this facility. Full Article
s 5 smartphone trends to look for in 2020 By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-01-27T06:30:00+05:30 2019 saw some major innovations in the smartphone segment. After a happening year as far as smartphone launches were concerned, 2020 is expected to witness a lot more competition in innovation as well as on the design front. ET Wealth lists 5 such trends. Full Article
s 4 handy tips to get the most from your gadgets By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-02-10T06:30:00+05:30 If you are using a Windows computer with a standard hard drive, sooner or later the computer will become sluggish. One way out is to tweak Windows to perform better with your existing hardware. Full Article
s 5 accessories to help you get better mobile photographs By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-02-24T06:30:00+05:30 You can take your mobile photography to the next level if you have the right accessories. ET Wealth tells you about five must-have add-ons to get creative with mobile photography. Some of them can be purchased from prices starting as low as Rs 199. Full Article
s 6 smartphones costing less than Rs 12,000 for heavy users By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-03-09T06:30:00+05:30 If you are a heavy smartphone user and are looking for a smartphone that offers higher battery power but are running a tight budget for such a spend, then here are six options that will solve your problem. These fall in the below Rs 12,ooo price range. Full Article
s Cancel flight ticket, or reschedule? The best way to readjust travel plans in times of coronavirus By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-03-12T11:16:59+05:30 Now all domestic airlines, including government-owned Air India, have announced a waiver on re-booking charges in case a customer does not want to travel on the designated date. Wadia group-owned private carrier GoAir, which was earlier offering free cancellation, has said it will now allow people to only reschedule their flights for no charge. Full Article
s Working from home? Here are the 6 best laptops under Rs 40,000 By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-03-23T06:30:00+05:30 If you are someone who has been asked to work remotely and are looking for a laptop at a reasonable price, here are six of the best ones under Rs 40,000. Full Article
s How to clean up your computer, smartphone to get them ready for life after the lockdown By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-04-06T06:30:00+05:30 Your computer, smartphones might be holding videos, photos and audio in various folders, and you would not even know that it's there. Hence, ET Wealth tells you the following methods on how to clean up your devices for more efficiency. Full Article
s Tanishq brings Akshaya Tritiya online this year By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-04-19T14:10:27+05:30 Once the situation returns to normalcy and services resume, the customers can either opt to go to the store and pick up their jewellery or get it delivered to their doorstep, Tanishq said in a statement. Full Article
s Akshaya Tritiya: Kalyan Jewellers takes online route By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-04-20T12:52:58+05:30 Customers can purchase the precious metal from two grams upwards following which a gold ownership certificate would be sent to them on the day of Akshaya Tritiya based on the customer recommended platforms. Full Article
s 5 compact, powerful smartphones By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-05-04T06:30:00+05:30 Mobile phone manufacturers are focusing on increasing the screen size of devices. However, if you are someone who prefer a more compact phone, ET Wealth rounds up some of the best options. Full Article
s Pressure mounts on BS Yediyurappa to rework govt staff pay By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-04-24T11:29:43+05:30 Bengaluru: The Union Cabinet’s decision to freeze the DA of its employees till July 2021 and Kerala’s decision to absorb a month’s salary of its employees to the CM’s relief fund to fight Covid-19 has put pressure on chief minister BS Yediyurappa to bite the bullet.The chief minister or the Karnataka Cabinet is yet to take a call on reworking pay and compensation package of its employees in the face of a sharp drop in revenues, and enormous pressure on the finance department to meet the rising demand for funds for Covid-19-related activities and the farm sector.The chief minister had told ET last week that he will take a decision in two weeks after assessing the situation.Karnataka’s salary and pension bill per month comes to about Rs 5,500 crore, and the state has been able to hold on because of the impressive GST collections last month on account of good business climate in February. The commercial tax department does not have any hopes of decent collections over the next two months because of the host of relief announced by the ministry of finance to dealers on GST remittances. The department can hope to have considerable collections only in June. All other major revenue sources for the Karnataka government such as liquor sales, property and vehicles registration are nearly dry.Several IT companies such as TCS, Infosys and Wipro have deferred annual increments. Full Article
s Developers may face liquidity crisis on NBFC woes: Fitch By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2019-08-16T15:59:50+05:30 MUMBAI: Liquidity risk is increasing for Indian-based real-estate developers, as non-bank financial institutions (NBFI; including housing finance companies) are shying away from lending to the sector, said Fitch Ratings.Developers that rely on refinancing from NBFIs, particularly those with weak financial profiles, will be affected the most should conditions persist. The availability of unencumbered assets among large developers may be of limited use, as NBFIs are looking to shed their already-high exposure to the sector, especially to large borrowers.NBFIs have disproportionately increased their share of real-estate sector credit in the previous few years, owing to heightened risk aversion by banks; banks have been cutting exposure due to their own funding challenges that began in late 2018, which have become more acute in the previous few months; domestic bank exposures fell to 2.3% of loans in the financial year ending March 2019 from 2.8% in 2015-16.NBFIs are now also shying away from refinancing maturing debt of even large, proven developers to limit concentration risk to the sector. This is pushing developers towards alternative funding channels, such as private equity. The availability of such funding could be more limited than the value of maturing debt and may only be available to established developers with sufficient unpledged assets. It would also come at a higher cost. We believe banks may still consider exposure to quality real estate, but overall exposure continues to decline.Developers that are focused on high-end projects may face higher risk, as sales of such projects have slowed in the last two years. We believe these developers would be wary of taking sharp price corrections on unsold inventory to boost sales, except in extreme circumstances, as this could diminish the value of unsold inventory and weaken collateral cover for existing lenders.In addition, any boost in sales would be temporary. Meanwhile, developers with substantial exposure to affordable housing may still benefit from marginal access to lenders in light of healthy pre-sales growth, supported by India's substantial housing deficit and government incentives for buyers via the credit-linked subsidy scheme as well as for developers, including tax deductions and grant of infrastructure status, which entitles companies to some benefits and concessions.The government has announced measures to improve NBFI-sector liquidity, but their efficacy remains to be seen. For example, we believe the government's July 2019 announcement to provide a first-loss guarantee of 10% on securitised assets issued by NBFIs to banks could ease funding pressure for NBFIs in the short term. However, the provision refers only to financially sound issuers and there is a lack of clarity about the duration of the guarantee and the definition of what comprises a 'financially sound' entity. In addition, most of the actions by the authorities to alleviate the liquidity squeeze will benefit the largest and least risky NBFIs and is unlikely to address the pressure on the more property focused players.Defaults by two NBFIs - Infrastructure Leasing & Financial Services Ltd (IL&FS) in September 2018 and Dewan Housing Finance Corporation Ltd (DHFL) in June 2019 - have contributed to the sector-wide liquidity squeeze, as investors have become more risk averse. Banks' low appetite for lending to real-estate developers is evidenced by the usually high risk weights attached to such loans. These are due to developers' typically low credit ratings amid high leverage, making exposure to the sector an inefficient use of banks' already-limited capital.Substantial bank recapitalisation to increase lending capacity could benefit NBFIs as well as real-estate developers, subject to the banks' risk appetite. Although a structural improvement in NBFI asset books would take time. Nonetheless, even under better conditions we expect NBFI's to tighten credit standards, with developers facing funding pressure until there is a broader improvement in their operations, with better end-user demand and pricing support. Full Article
s Office realty leasing rises 30%, on track to beat last year high By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2019-10-18T08:18:48+05:30 Mumbai: Robust demand for office spaces has pushed commercial property leasing in the first three quarters of 2019 by 30% from a year ago, taking it closer to entire 2018’s performance and making sure that this year surpasses the peak touched last year.Driven by tech corporates — accounting for about a third of the leasing activity — office space take-up touched 47 million sq ft in the first nine months against entire 2018’s performance of 48.9 million sq ft, showed data from CBRE South Asia. With this, office leasing activity is now expected to touch its highest level ever, estimated to be over 60 million sq ft in 2019.Leasing activity stood at about 15.4 million sq ft during the quarter ended September, rising by nearly 23% on an annual basis. This was dominated by small- to medium-sized transactions. Small-sized transactions of less than 10,000 sq ft accounted for over 40% of the transaction activity in the quarter. 71641558 “With office leasing scaling a historic high in 2019, we expect further strengthening of occupier sentiment in the medium to long term, backed by corporates looking to expand or consolidate their operations. Favourable government initiatives, transparency in the real estate sector and the right reforms will improve investor sentiment greatly in the coming quarters,” said Anshuman Magazine, CEO, India, South-east Asia, Middle East and Africa, CBRE.Like last year, he expects occupiers would put in greater efforts to incorporate flexibility in their portfolios due to changes in the business environment. Occupiers continued to futureproof their portfolios and hedge against future rental escalations by pre-leasing space across various cities.Bengaluru, followed by Hyderabad, dominated large-sized deal closures, while a few large deals were also reported in the NCR and Pune as well. Large-scale deal closures were mostly dominated by tech firms and flexible space operators. Firms belonging to sectors such as research, consulting & analytics, banking, financial services & insurance (BFSI), and engineering & manufacturing also closed large-sized deals.Tech corporates led the office space take-up, followed by research, consulting & analytics companies (19%) and flexible space operators (15%). The rise in the share of flexible space operators (10% in the second quarter of 2019) was primarily a result of their continued expansion across almost all cities.“The share of the tech sector rose from 31% to 40% annually during 2019 year-to-date, which implies that a rise in technology alternatives, insourcing / job preservation in the US and a global slowdown have not had any specific impact on India’s position as a preferred outsourcing destination for both high-skilled and low-skilled tech services, research and development,” said Ram Chandnani, managing director, advisory & transaction services, India, CBRE South Asia.Supply addition rose by more than 80% in 2019 YTD on an annual basis, with about 43.5 million sq. ft. of development completions reported.Four cities — Hyderabad, Bengaluru, NCR and Mumbai — accounted for almost 80% of this supply addition.Compared to the first three quarters in 2018, the share of SEZs in supply dipped from 40% to 27% during 2019 YTD. Supply addition in the quarter also rose by about 6% on a quarterly basis, touching about 15 million sq. ft. More than 70% of this supply was driven by Hyderabad and NCR, followed by Bengaluru. Full Article
s Meet the Indian advising Trump on Covid By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T23:00:00+05:30 When the Covid-19 pandemic caused a sudden shortage of hand sanitisers, alcoholic beverage major Pernod Ricard was among the companies in the US that stepped up to ensure there was no dearth of the product in the market. Leading the initiative was Ann Mukherjee, who took over as chairman & CEO of Pernod Ricard North America in December 2019. Mukherjee has spent almost 30 years in sales, marketing and brands, including with Frito-Lay North America and SC Johnson. The Kolkata-born Mukherjee was last month chosen by US President Donald Trump to be part of a high-profile group to advise the American government on how to kick-start US manufacturing in the post-pandemic era. Trump has formed several such groups to focus on various sectors of the economy. In an interview with Ishani Duttagupta, Mukherjee says that re-entering life and enabling safe travel will be the biggest challenges that all nations face in a post-lockdown world. Edited excerpts...You took over the reins at Pernod Ricard North America only last December; how are you dealing with the crisis caused by the pandemic?My first priority was the health and safety of our employees. That meant creating an infrastructure and agile ways of working to enable working from home through confinement. It also meant creating and maintaining safety protocols for our essential frontline workers, especially our teams in production facilities and distilleries. Second, we focused on our ability to give back to the communities we serve and partner with. Given our entrepreneurial culture, many teams went into action creating opportunities with speed. Working closely with the White House COVID taskforce, we were able to get clearance to produce and supply hand sanitiser for the US government. We provided this free of cost to help first responders across the country. Our Jameson team --- realizing that many bartenders that partner to make the brand great would be out of work – donated $600,000, and generated another $700,000 in matching funds, to the US Bartenders Guild charity fund. Also, our on-premise team worked with multiple charities to provide free meals for hospitality workers affected by the crisis.Finally, we dealt with the crisis by closely collaborating with our distributor partners to keep our business open in the short term, while working together to create a roadmap for recovery. We leveraged our resilience and our culture of conviviality to keep spirits high -- and work with optimism -- during difficult times.As the head of the American operations of an European giant, what are the challenges? Are there any cultural issues?Honestly, cultural issues never even enter the conversation. The culture is centred around conviviality…..bringing people together. That is true for what we sell and how we interact together as business units. Our CEO Alex Ricard sets the tone and walks the walk. He is a very expansive thinker and an inclusive leader who unites us and our different experiences to make for a more powerful whole. Take me for example. He hired an Indian American with very strong roots in India, with North American commercial experience and global marketing experience. He looks for people with broad perspectives and experiences. 75649631Is the American market for scotch whisky growing?Scotch is the best-selling imported whiskey in the US by revenue. Blended scotch has been somewhat flat, with some growth during the crisis, and we see that with our iconic Chivas brand. Single malt is where we see the growth; sales increased almost 10% last year. Our Glenlivet brand has been a huge driver of that growth, bringing new drinkers into both the brand and the category. The brand is positioned to challenge the more traditional conventions of scotch drinkers and celebrates the young unconventional drinker, especially appealing to women who are now open to enjoying single malt as their drink of choice.You are part of the team of top CEOs advising President Trump on reviving the US economy. What are some of the key issues that you think the US government needs to address at this point? It’s an honour to serve the country in this capacity. Our number 1 objective is to help the administration bring back and rebuild confidence. It is a very difficult balance between managing public health and insuring a sustainable economy. We must protect the population from this virus but we need to ensure there is an economy to come back to post the recovery. If we open too quickly, we might be back in confinement; if we don’t re-open with smart speed, we might create a bigger crisis. So we need to ensure that there are the right protocols in place for recovery, ensure there is adequate supply and access to protective accessories needed, and the right partnerships in place with private enterprise, local government and federal oversight. What should the Indian government do?As the world’s largest democracy, India has a very strong state-driven government system with strong central government oversight, not unlike the US. It is critical to get that balance right and work together to strengthen and unite the mosaic that is India. India defines entrepreneurship. It is vital to tap into that cultural advantage and unite business leaders, scholars and government to create out of the box solutions. Private enterprise will need to understand that we as CEOs have not only a fiscal responsibility to our companies, but also a societal responsibility. One feeds the other; without a vibrant market, our businesses cannot thrive, so working together as a collective across business and government is key.The alcobeverages sector traditionally didn’t have women in top roles. Do you see that changing? What are the challenges?I absolutely see it changing, though I wish progress was faster. Companies need to reflect their consumer base, and a majority of everyday purchase decisions globally are made by women. That fact is only accelerating as women become more educated, empowered as single parents or heads of households across many countries. In beverage alcohol in the US, a majority of decisions are actually made by women. The challenge is that we need corporate boards and top management teams to get more rigorous about achieving this objective. Companies must put shorter term and longer term 5-10 year succession plans in place to achieve ambitious targets for women in top management roles; they need to be identified early, developed, and given aggressive career plans to groom them for these positions. This is a passion point for Pernod Ricard driven by our Chairman, Alex Ricard. It’s about achieving better balance…and I personally like this approach. It isn’t about favouring one gender over the other, it’s about getting the right balance reflective of the marketplace and in creating tomorrow’s workforce now. Going forward, what do you think are the biggest challenges that your company and sector will have to grapple with as lockdown gradually lifts across the US and the world?Re-entering life safely is the biggest challenge the world faces. Whether it’s re-entering your neighbourhood, your town, travelling within your own country, or beginning to travel the world again. It also will be parents letting go of their children after they kept them from harm in confinement, and trusting school systems to keep them safe. And family members trusting each other to maintain safety protocols as they come back home from work. We all will lose control when we come out of confinement. In our industry, our biggest challenge will be restaurants, hotels, bars and pubs. How can you enjoy and connect, but safely from a distance? Can smaller establishments have viable businesses when there need to be fewer patrons? It will be a new normal, and we need to work together to make it viable and enjoyable.What do you think are the major differences between the liquor market in the US and Europe?I believe the liquor market is very similar in the two continents. During this crisis, we have seen the market stay strong through in-home consumption, with some of the bar and restaurant consumption shifting to home consumption. People are drinking brands they know and trust. They are also looking for premium experiences to help overcome the difficulty of confinement. For us at Pernod Ricard, we have the world’s largest premium portfolio with a large stable of familiar and trusted brands. So we have seen positive performance from our portfolio in both continents. What has your experience been as a woman in a typically male-dominated industry?Joining Pernod Ricard was a great fit for me. My husband and I love entertaining, bringing friends and family together because we believe creating special moments together makes life worth living. That is exactly the spirit and culture of conviviality. So when I joined the company, I invited my leadership team to my home for a night to meet the Mukherjees as part of a bigger leadership summit. My husband, who is very proud of his bar, rebuilt all the shelves so he could light up and showcase all of the incredible Pernod Ricard brands. I show my compassion through food. So I made samosas, mutton biriyani, raita, chicken cutlet and chapali kababs, and for my vegetarian team members, I made dal makhani, matter paneer, aloo dum. As a parting gift I gave everyone a small Ganesh so our paths moving forward would have no obstacles. I believe that if you are to be a meaningful leader, you must bring your whole and authentic self to work. As a woman, I don’t shy away from sharing my personal stories as a wife, mother and daughter, or from sharing my vulnerabilities as a woman leader in how I manage, try to instil trust and inspire others. After all, we are in the human being business. Do you see a timeline for recovery of firms such as yours in the wake of the COVID-19 crisis?The only thing that is certain about this crisis is that it is uncertain. Until we have viable testing and treatment and eventually vaccines, we cannot fully recover. So the key right now is to be agile. Adjust as the marketplace adjusts. That means new ways of working, helping your workforce to be in a mode of agile planning and execution. We can help people through the stops and starts this will cause by helping them see the bigger long-term goal of recovery and viability.Do you have any connections with India?I have very strong connections with India. 98% of my family is still in India, in my native hometown of Kolkata, New Delhi where I went to high school, as well as Mumbai and Bengaluru. We talk to them daily/weekly to keep in touch and stay connected through this crisis. We speak Bengali at home as a family. I am very proud of my sari collection and dress Indian any chance I get. We have a very strong Indian community here. I am as Indian as I am American and am a better person for it. I hope and pray that everyone stays safe and recovers with prosperity. Full Article
s Moratorium on loan EMIs, credit card dues will have an interest cost By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-03-31T10:30:14+05:30 People have a lot of misconceptions about what has been promised. Keep these things in mind when you make financial decisions basis the announcements in the relief package. Full Article
s Mega PSU bank mergers come into effect from April 1. 5 things a bank customer should know By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-03-31T13:57:57+05:30 You would have given your bank account numbers and IFSC codes for various financial transactions. Unless these accounts are seamlessly merged into the financial system of the anchor bank, you would be required to change the details of your bank account. Full Article
s ICICI Bank moratorium on debit card EMIs: All questions answered By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-04-01T13:24:47+05:30 ICICI Bank, along with issuing details on availing the moratorium on loans and credit card dues, also issued a set of FAQs on moratorium for equated monthly instalments (EMIs) taken on debit cards. Full Article
s How does UPI work? By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-04-03T10:18:18+05:30 To use UPI, you must have a bank account with a member bank, i.e., your bank should allow you to use the UPI facility. Full Article
s Kotak Mahindra Bank moratorium on credit card dues: What are the terms and conditions By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-04-07T13:52:27+05:30 If you have a credit card from Kotak Mahindra Bank, here are some of the details of its three-month moratorium facility. Full Article
s Coronavirus and cybercrimes: Opting for EMI moratorium? Fraudsters are waiting By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-04-08T12:56:19+05:30 Banks have been alerting their customers of cyber frauds that can happen while availing EMI moratorium. Full Article
s EPFO eases norms for changing date of birth in records, linking UAN with Aadhaar By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-04-11T09:40:15+05:30 As per the circular, EPF members can now correct the date of birth up to plus or minus three years instead of one year earlier. This would make the linking of Universal Account Number (UAN) with Aadhaar easier. Full Article
s Investors can move these financial transactions online to deal with coronavirus impact By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-04-13T06:30:00+05:30 As the country is staying at home to fight against the coronavirus, investors are adapting themselves to the online way of working with their finances. Full Article
s Real return on money in SBI saving account is -3% per annum By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-04-15T09:39:34+05:30 The recent cut in the interest rate on savings accounts by leading banks has led to higher negative real returns on the accounts balances. Full Article
s Common application form issued for PPF, NSC and other small savings schemes By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-04-16T13:56:21+05:30 It must be recalled that the finance ministry had revised rules and introduced separate forms for each small savings scheme via a notification in December 2019. Full Article
s What RBI's announcement today means for your loans and fixed deposit interest rates By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-04-17T14:52:45+05:30 The RBI announced a host of measures today aimed at increasing liquidity in the economy. Full Article
s Coronavirus lockdown: 5 steps to protect your privacy online By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-04-20T06:30:00+05:30 Due to lockdown in the country, we are more dependent on the Internet, which also means that we are more susceptible to tracking by websites and apps for our data. Here are 5 simple steps you can take to protect your personal information. Full Article
s How to use ICICI Bank's voice banking services on Amazon Alexa and Google Assistant By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-04-20T12:04:00+05:30 To get the benefit of the voice banking offering, customers need to download the Alexa / Google Assistant and link their ICICI Bank account through a secure two-factor authentication process. Full Article
s Want to update your Aadhaar card details? Here's help By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-04-28T12:24:07+05:30 Unique Identification Authority of India has permitted Common Service Centres to offer Aadhaar update services. Full Article
s SBI's 1-year FD is offering lower interest rate than some banks' savings accounts By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-04-29T10:07:21+05:30 Apart from small finance banks, certain private banks are also offering higher interest rate on savings accounts. Banks offering higher interest rates on savings account comes with certain conditions. Full Article
s Moving Moments By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2014-10-08T05:55:56+05:30 When we think of how amazingly things work in the cosmos, it seems revelatory, because it is not something that’s in your face. Full Article
s Clockwork Cuckoos By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2014-10-10T05:50:05+05:30 A Clockwork Orange is about a sociopathic delinquent whose interests include classical music, misogyny, and what is termed ‘ultra-violence’. Full Article
s Sleep Well, Sleep Tight By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2014-10-11T07:02:39+05:30 Scientists recently found that during sleep, neural connections are loosened and memories removed. This helps in increasing mental activity. Full Article
s Getting lost, and enjoying it By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2014-10-14T06:23:32+05:30 The discoverers of this phenomenon won the 2014 Nobel Prize for Medicine, and thanks to them, we now know why we get lost. Full Article
s What’s Karma? By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2014-10-15T07:08:31+05:30 The freer our consciousness is, the more freedom of choice we experience. Avery simple way to interpret karma is that it is a conditioned response Full Article
s Master of Memories By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2014-10-17T05:23:40+05:30 Dead souls are supposed to drink from this so as not to remember their past lives upon being reincarnated! Full Article
s Corporate Sufi It Is By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2014-10-18T04:09:55+05:30 By denying women their rights, we deny rights to the entire humanity for we are also ignoring the contribution of half of humanity. Full Article
s Ash and Essence By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2014-10-20T05:50:59+05:30 Instead of using traditional fire-and-wick ceremonial lamps, the priests use muslin bags filled with ashes to worship the ritually decorated icon. Full Article
s Celebrate Like TTians By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2014-10-21T05:18:34+05:30 Others run eateries, work as tourist guides or practice medicine, law, etc, doing all the stuff we usually do to make a living, but chilled out. What’s the secret? Full Article
s Life is a Roti Wrap By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2014-10-23T04:29:29+05:30 Life, like a roti wrap, can have happy ingredients: vibrancy of red tomatoes, freshness of green cucumbers, spiritual richness of purple cabbage. Full Article
s Back to Basics By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2014-10-24T04:38:05+05:30 The tax and revenue department in Washington DC has added a 5.75% sales tax on all clubs, centres or gyms run for the purpose of physical exercise. Full Article
s How much financial risk can you tolerate in current coronavirus-hit economy? Find out By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-04-13T06:30:00+05:30 The stock market, bond market and other financial markets are feeling the negative effect of coronavirus. ET wealth presents a quiz to help you assess your risk appetite in the current market scenario. Full Article
s Family finance: Kumars need to stagger some of their money goals till income increases By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-04-13T06:30:00+05:30 His goals include building an emergency corpus, saving for his children’s (including another child in future) education and weddings, and retirement. Full Article
s 9 practical steps to prepare for and navigate the financial crisis due to coronavirus By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-04-13T06:30:00+05:30 Do not deny the possibility of losing the job, or being furloughed briefly. Full Article
s Coronavirus pandemic impact: Keep your investments liquid and focus on short term goals By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-04-18T10:11:47+05:30 Any investment decision during this period should be made factoring in the short-term goals of an individual. Full Article
s Use Excel's binomial distribution to assess chance of success of your investments By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-04-20T06:30:00+05:30 Applying this to financial markets helps investors to determine their chances of success in a fixed number of attempts (or trials). Another application of binomial distribution is to find out the probability of a company reporting positive growth in the EPS. Full Article
s Coronavirus & your money: Saving is crucial, so are these 5 expenses By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-04-20T06:30:00+05:30 The looming uncertainty caused by coronavirus without a doubt requires cutting down on expenses. You need to start exercising monetary prudence and caution. However, don’t try to cut corners in these five expenses even at such a time. Full Article
s Covid stress test: How easily can you liquidate your financial assets should the need arise? By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-04-20T06:30:00+05:30 Stores of value are worthwhile only if they can step up and be useful when we need them. Not if they also lose value, freeze up, or get locked when you must access them. In other words, you should be able to liquidate your assets without difficulty should the need arise. Full Article
s Conserving cash to dealing with debt: 6 ways you can fight the covid money crisis By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-04-20T06:30:00+05:30 Liquidating assets to pay off debts is recommended only if you find it difficult to pay EMIs. Full Article