Wednesday, April 18, 2007

Just did it!!!

For the great, the ordinary is... extraordinary! And why not? Look at Nike Inc. Who could have imagined a swashbuckling 12.7% growth in earnings per share (EPS) over a decade behind its modest M-Cap curtain of $26.45 billion?

Its financials of late, too, have been nothing short of fabulous with 9% growth in revenues – which touched $3.9 billion during the quarter ended February 28, 2007 – and an 18.5% rise in EPS to $1.37. And where competition is concerned, Nike – valued by the market at 17 times its forecasted 2008 earnings – is clearly way above its arch-rivals Adidas (valued at 12 times) and Puma (valued at 12.5 times). But while it deserves a congratulatory pat on the back for its performance, does it also mean that the world’s completely snug in Nike’s shoes?

For Complete IIPM Article, Click on IIPM Article

Source : IIPM Editorial, 2006

An IIPM and Management Guru Prof. Arindam Chaudhuri's Initiative

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Friday, April 13, 2007

Indian agriculture sector stands a perpetrator of global warming

Main agricultural sources in the biological generation of methane have been the flooded rice fields and anaerobic animal waste processing. Shockingly in India, the agricultural sector itself produces a whopping 80% of methane created in the country; of which 23% is especially from paddy cultivated regions. Almost 65% of Indian farmers have been solely dependent on rice in terms of employment as well as feeding themselves. The rice-centric obsession has ensured that rice gets cultivated even in those regions where it is environmentally not suitable.

It must be brought to notice here that the Indian Council of Agriculture Research, using complex spatially photographed data, had divided the country into 15 agro-climatic zones. The purpose here was to promote only those crops in particular environmentally sustainable regions. But almost nobody cared to follow the zone theory.

One example – much against the environment quotient, rice gets cultivated in the Ganganagar District of Rajasthan ably supported by the Indira Gandhi Canal. The effect – malaria, soil salinity and environmental destruction galore. Such examples are a dime a dozen; India needs to look within, or be doomed without.

For Complete IIPM Article, Click on IIPM Article

Source : IIPM Editorial, 2006

An IIPM and Management Guru Prof. Arindam Chaudhuri's Initiative

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