Wednesday 17 March 2010

World's Best Universities: Top 400

February 25, 2010

http://www.usnews.com/articles/education/worlds-best-universities/2010/02/25/worlds-best-universities-top-400.html?PageNr=1


RankOverall Score
1Harvard UniversityUnited States100.0
Academic Peer Review Score100Employer Review Score100Student to Faculty Score98International Faculty Score85International Students Score78Citations per Faculty Score100
2University of CambridgeUnited Kingdom99.6
Academic Peer Review Score100Employer Review Score100Student to Faculty Score100International Faculty Score98International Students Score96Citations per Faculty Score89
3Yale UniversityUnited States99.1
Academic Peer Review Score100Employer Review Score99Student to Faculty Score100International Faculty Score85International Students Score77Citations per Faculty Score94
4UCL (University College London)United Kingdom99.0
Academic Peer Review Score98Employer Review Score99Student to Faculty Score100International Faculty Score96International Students Score99Citations per Faculty Score90
5Imperial College LondonUnited Kingdom97.8
Academic Peer Review Score100Employer Review Score100Student to Faculty Score100International Faculty Score98International Students Score100Citations per Faculty Score80
5University of OxfordUnited Kingdom97.8
Academic Peer Review Score100Employer Review Score100Student to Faculty Score100International Faculty Score96International Students Score97Citations per Faculty Score80
7University of ChicagoUnited States96.8
Academic Peer Review Score100Employer Review Score99Student to Faculty Score97International Faculty Score77International Students Score83Citations per Faculty Score88
8Princeton UniversityUnited States96.6
Academic Peer Review Score100Employer Review Score96Student to Faculty Score82International Faculty Score89International Students Score81Citations per Faculty Score100
9Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)United States96.1
Academic Peer Review Score100Employer Review Score100Student to Faculty Score89International Faculty Score31International Students Score95Citations per Faculty Score100
10California Institute of Technology (Caltech)United States95.9
Academic Peer Review Score99Employer Review Score72Student to Faculty Score87International Faculty Score100International Students Score89Citations per Faculty Score100

Some thoughts on Analysing Stocks (Keep It Simple and Safe).



Ideally a stock you plan to purchase should have all of the following charateristics:

• A rising trend of earningsdividends and book value per share.

• A balance sheet with less debt than other companies in its particular industry.

• A P/E ratio no higher than average.

• A dividend yield that suits your particular needs.

• A below-average dividend pay-out ratio.

• A history of earnings and dividends not pockmarked by erratic ups and downs.

• Companies whose ROE is 15 or better.

• A ratio of price to cash flow (P/CF) that is not too high when compared to other stocks in the same industry.

Early detection can help you save on health cost

By: Vidyalaxmi, ET Bureau

Prevention is better than cure, as they say. The growing health insurance segment bears this truism out, which is witnessing almost 100% claims ratio. Insurers say that some 16 out of every 100 policyholders register claims under the health policy every year. In other words, the cost of treating 16 policyholders is equal to the premium collected from 100.

Insurers have now discovered that they can make substantial money out of health insurance if they can prevent one out of 100 policyholders from falling ill. To this effect, they are now offering freebies like free health check-ups and discounts on gym memberships to policyholders.

The same financial logic applies to individuals as well. For instance, getting a cavity filled in early will help save several times the amount on a root canal treatment. Most ailments requiring surgery do not occur overnight, but build-up over a period of time and in many cases, can be detected early through regular checks.

Doctors say, you almost save up to 50% on health costs with regular check-ups, exercise and balanced diet. The idea is to avoid severe health complications which could also take a toll on your biological as well as financial health.

http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/quickiearticleshow/5688272.cms

Certain stocks can go up more than 50% within a few hours to days.


We all know that in the stock market is always possible to watch certain stocks go up more than 50% within a few hours to days. This is especially true in the 4th quarter of the year where the buying frenzy starts in wall street.
The financial media constantly reports about momentum stocks that are achieving tremendous gains during the same day. And even when you can see online investors that make $3000 on a single trade, it is also not unusual to watch beginner stock investors lose a great deal of money because of a series of unwise decisions
The problem is that if you don’t know how to pick among stocks & how to properly approach them you could end up wasting dollars instead of making your wallet happy. You can’t just trade stocks like if you where gambling in Vegas or Atlantic City.

This combination of tangible and intangible aspects makes picking stocks a highly subjective, even intuitive process.


Workshop Basics Of Stock Picking-

We examine some of the most popular strategies for finding good stocks (or at least avoiding bad ones). In other words, we'll explore the art of stock-picking - selecting stocks based on a certain set of criteria, with the aim of achieving a rate of return that is greater than the market's overall average.
Before exploring the vast world of stock-picking methodologies, we should address a few misconceptions. Many investors new to the stock-picking scene believe that there is some infallible strategy that, once followed, will guarantee success. There is no foolproof system for picking stocks! If you are proposing to attend this workshop in search of a magic key to unlock instant wealth, we're sorry, but we know of no such key.
This doesn't mean you can't expand your wealth through the stock market. It's just better to think of stock-picking as an art rather than a science. So many factors affect a company's health that it is nearly impossible to construct a formula that will predict success. 
  • It is one thing to assemble data that you can work with, but quite another to determine which numbers are relevant. 
  • A lot of information is intangible and cannot be measured. 
  • The quantifiable aspects of a company, such as profits, are easy enough to find. 
  • But how do you measure the qualitative factors, such as the company's staff, its competitive advantages, its reputation and so on? 
  • This combination of tangible and intangible aspects makes picking stocks a highly subjective, even intuitive process. 
Because of the human (often irrational) element inherent in the forces that move the stock market, stocks do not always do what you anticipate they'll do.
  • Emotions can change quickly and unpredictably. 
  • And unfortunately, when confidence turns into fear, the stock market can be a dangerous place. 
The bottom line is that there is no one way to pick stocks. 
  • Better to think of every stock strategy as nothing more than an application of a theory - a "best guess" of how to invest. 
  • And sometimes two seemingly opposed theories can be successful at the same time. 
Perhaps just as important as considering theory, is determining how well an investment strategy fits your personal outlook, time frame, risk tolerance and the amount of time you want to devote to investing and picking stocks.
Prof Rakesh Sud ACA, Grad CWA Director- ACMC (AIMS Center for Management Consultancy) Acharya Institute of Management & Sciences (AIMS) 1st Stage, 1st Phase, Peenya, Bangalore 560058 Karnataka, India www.acharyaims.ac.in Mobile 91 9535159757 Tel : +91 80 2837 6430 / 2839 0433 / 4117 9588 / 4125 3496 sud.rakesh@gmail.com dir.acmc@acharyaims.ac.in

Tuesday 16 March 2010

History suggests that the winners from a recession tend to win big

History suggests that the winners from a recession tend to win big

The story is possibly apocryphal, but at the height of the Guinness affair in the mid-1980s, Ernest Saunders, the soon to be disgraced Guinness chairman, is said to have been called to a crisis Sunday morning meeting in London.






Saunders insisted there was no way he could make it as he would be in Church. "I didn't know you were a religious man", the adviser remarked. "I'm not", said Saunders, "but at times like these it pays to hedge your bets".
There are still a few optimists out there, a few prepared to accept forecasts from the UK Treasury and other Western policymakers of a strong, V shaped recovery to come, but most chief executives have long since given up hope of reaching these sun lit-uplands again any time soon.
Hopefully, a Japanese-style lost decade of growth can still be avoided, yet the company boss who is not hedging his bets by thinking about how to match his cloth to such permanently reduced growth prospects would be in dereliction of his duties. Most business leaders expect at best an extended period of anaemic growth for advanced economies, and many are preparing for worse.
We already know for sure that this is no ordinary recession; whatever the official data says about growth over the next several years, it is going to feel bad for a long time. And however decisively China and other surplus nations move to stimulate domestic demand, it's not going to compensate fully for the likely fall-off in US consumption.
In recent years, US consumers have accounted for a whacking great 20pc of global GDP. Private consumption in China would need to rise by more than 30pc to offset a decline of just 5pc in US consumer spending.
Most high growth, developing economies are in any case effectively walled gardens not easily accessed by western companies. They'll keep the goodies for themselves.
If low, or even negative growth is the new reality, the implications are profound, both for the public finances (published plans for fiscal consolidation in Europe and America are heavily dependent on a return to robust growth) and the way companies are managed.
In such circumstances, are companies best advised to put themselves into cold storage, sit on their hands, and do nothing until the debt overhang is removed? That's already a quite common approach to the problem, but the evidence of past Depressions is that it is most unlikely to serve its followers well.
Instead, established business models need to be rethought and companies must adapt to survive. Recessions quickly sort businesses into winners and losers. In good times, all companies tend to float along together on a sea of rising consumption, but when the going gets tough, performance will diverge markedly.
Recessions can therefore produce seismic industrial and corporate change, and somewhat counter-intuitively, really serious ones can catalyse great leaps forward in innovation and productivity. Established market leaders get toppled, and upstarts can come from nowhere to take their place. Recessions can be as much a land of opportunity for the fleet of foot as they are the nemesis of the overblown and complacent.
These are some of the observations of a new study by David Rhodes and Daniel Stelter of The Boston Consulting Group. Their book, "Accelerating Out of the Great Recession – How to Win in a Slow-Growth Economy", convincingly demonstrates that well-managed companies can indeed prosper through tough times and what's more, tend to enjoy sustained advantage for decades afterwards.
The fight to maintain company performance during a downturn is not just about short-term survival – it is also about long-term positioning in the industry hierarchy. For examples of this, the authors have gone back to the American automobile industry during the Great Depression.
Like today, the auto-industry was one of the worst affected by the economic contraction of the 1930s. By 1932, US sales of new automobiles had fallen by an astonishing 75pc and combined annual losses had reached nearly $3bn in today's money. At the start of the Depression, General Motors and Ford enjoyed market share of roughly a third each, with the rest accounted for by smaller players.
Over subsequent years, General Motors improved its market share by a remarkable 15pc, largely at the expense of Ford and smaller players, to take nearly half the total market. But the performance of Chrysler, a comparative upstart was even more impressive. During this period it took an extra 20pc of the market to leave Ford standing.
For General Motors, the secret lay with acting decisively to cut costs and mothball plants, allowing the company rapidly to scale back production of its mid-market and high-end brands. GM slashed prices by up to 70pc to clear unwanted inventories, it crunched its sales forces and component sourcing together across brands, and it created new forms of consumer finance to replace non lending banks.
At Chrysler, the approach was even more brutal. Applying the ancient Roman principle of "decimation", it went through the payroll list sacking every third person indiscriminately. But at the same time, it put in place systems to almost double the hourly output of its assembly lines.
Despite the difficulty of the times, it also continued to invest heavily in marketing, research and development. Realising that the highway expansion programme of the New Deal would create demand for faster more powerful cars, it became the first auto-maker to use wind tunnel testing to improve design and engineering.
These are just two of the many industrial success stories of the Great Depression. Others include genuinely new industries in consumer products and business services, including Hoover and IBM, both of which experienced explosive growth in the 1930s.
It all goes to show that even the most structurally damaged of economies will eventually revive on a wave of innovative, needs-must advancement. For the industries of the future we must look to communications, biotechnology, robotics, nanotechnology, renewable energy and healthcare.
And the management qualities needed to achieve high performance in a downturn? Well, these are not so very different to those that underpin outstanding business achievement at all times – strong leadership, decisive, early action, willingness to rethink the business model and ability to take the organisation with you. It's easy enough to define what makes the difference; making it happen is something else entirely.

A lot of investment behaviour is based on irrational decision-making, driven by emotion rather than logic. Behavioural finance is now playing an increasing role in investment decision-making.


From The Times
March 13, 2010

Investment masterclass: fight against your instinct to make a profit

You can boost stock market returns by avoiding typical behaviour patterns


Since the 1960s one grand theory has dominated investors’ views of how stock markets work. The efficient market hypothesis asserts that prices accurately reflect available information and investors behave rationally. It’s an elegant idea and leads to the conclusion that it is not generally possible to beat the market except through luck or inside information.
However, it doesn’t accurately reflect the world at all times, Therefore, it can be argued that it is not particularly useful for the poor investor trying to get a handle on markets. Which is why, over recent years, a second theory has been grabbing attention. This theory, called behavioural finance, accepts that markets are not always rational but it rejects the idea that they are completely random. Although behavioural finance initially was treated with scepticism in the City, it is now playing an increasing role in investment decision-making. Bringing insights from psychology to the world of finance, it asserts that a lot of investment behaviour is based on irrational decision-making, driven by emotion rather than logic. By understanding how average investors behave and the mistakes they make, you can learn how to avoid them.
James Montier, strategist at GMO and author of The Little Book of Behavioural Investing: How Not to Be Your Own Worst Enemy, says: “Our brains have been refined by the process of evolution, just like any other feature of our existence. But remember, evolution occurs at a glacial pace, so our brains are well designed for the environment that we faced 150,000 years ago, but potentially poorly suited for the industrial age of 300 years ago, and perhaps even more ill-suited for the information age in which we now live.”
This means that investors consistently make mistakes that damage returns. Here are some of the most common and how to learn to avoid them.

The narrative fallacy
Investors are easily won over by positive stories. Even when news is bad the predominant view is that things will get better. This encourages investors to favour companies that have done well in the past, even if they are expensive and can create bubble conditions.
Forcing yourself to focus on the facts should make you a better investor.
Overconfidence
When investors have a run of good luck they become more confident in their abilities. A study by the University of California academics Terrance Odean and Brad Barber found that if investors have a good run on the stock market, they often take higher risks, trading more actively and usually less profitably. In gambling circles this is known as the “house money” effect. People are more likely to bet recklessly with money that they have won than money they brought into the casino.
The best way to overcome this is to stick to an investment discipline. If you have had a good run and feel like putting more money into the market, take a step back.
Following forecasts
Mr Montier claims that experts are often more overconfident than the rest of us, yet we tend to follow authority blindly. Even though experience tells us that many forecasts are wrong, we cling to them because of a trait known as anchoring. In the face of uncertainty, we reach out for any irrelevant number as support. It is best to ignore the experts and their forecasts.
Information overload
People often believe that to beat the market they need to know more than everyone else. However, studies shows that excess information can lead to overconfidence, not accuracy, as it makes it difficult to distinguish noise from news.
Mr Montier says: “We would be far better off analysing the five things we really need to know about an investment, rather than trying to know absolutely everything about everything concerned with the investment.”
Denial
Investors give more weight to information that appeals to them. Learn to look for evidence that proves that your own analysis is wrong.
Loss aversion
Studies show that we are about three times more likely to sell a stock that has performed well than one that has done badly. We hang on to investments that have lost us money, even if the evidence suggests that they have farther to fall, because we cannot cope with the regret of having made a bad decision. To overcome this, set yourself a buy and sell target and keep to it.
Groupthink
It is hard to go against the crowd, which is why investors tend to follow the herd and buy the latest hot stocks and funds. You can turn this to your advantage by picking stocks that are cheap and out of fashion. But be warned: this strategy takes courage.
Focusing on outcomes
Mr Montier says: “When every decision is measured on outcomes, investors are likely to avoid uncertainty, chase noise and herd with the consensus.”
Instead, he argues, investors should focus on the process by which they invest: “The management of return is impossible, the management of risk is illusory, but process is the one thing we can exert an influence over.”
Leave the herd behind and get ahead
One of the key tenets of behavioural finance is that investors follow the herd, although chasing the latest fad often ends in disaster.
In the late 1990s, tech funds were all the rage and investors poured billions into them on the back of a run of stunning performances. After the tech bubble burst in 2000 many lost 90 per cent of their value.
Commercial property funds were the runaway bestsellers of 2006 . But this rush of money proved to be the last hurrah in an already overinflated sector.
So which funds have been selling like hotcakes recently? Bond funds were one of the big success stories of 2009, attracting £9.9 billion of net retail sales, according to the Investment Management Association, and investors who took the plunge were rewarded. Standard corporate bond funds produced returns averaging 14.6 per cent last year, while those investing in riskier high-yield bonds returned 46.4 per cent. However, many fund managers warn that any investor expecting a repeat of this performance in 2010 will be disappointed. More recently property funds have been the top-selling sector, with net retail sales of £373 million in January.
So if you want to try to overcome your herd instincts, what should you be investing in now? Alan Steel, of Alan Steel Asset Management, says: “The contrarian would shun property investments and gilts in favour of equities.
“Even though stock markets have soared in the past 12 months, sentiment is still very depressed about the future prospects of both equities and the global economy. Buying shares is still a contrarian stance.”