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Dollar movements

More than 70% of Indian IT Exports are to United States and exports outside of United States as well are mostly priced in US Dollars (USD). So the movement of USD with respect to Indian Rupee (INR) is of paramount importance to the industry. The economical concept at play here is very simple, gains made by USD are better for us – we get to make more Rupees per Dollar of revenue. In other words we favour INR to depreciate. This is directly opposite to what the Indian Government and other importers will desireas for every dollar they import they have to pay more Rupee. Government is the largest importer especially of Oil which is mostly priced in Dollars.

Unlike the bigger players in the Industry, SME companies like Vishwak have little room to maneuver to get end customer prices (marked in USD) increased, most of the time our contract prices are negotiated a year in advance. We can improve productivity and reduce operational costs, but their impact is limited to few percentage points, nowhere near the 10% swing that has happened in the last one year in Dollar value. Till about few months we were worried due to strengthening of Rupee, but in the last two quarters the trend reversed. Today the Dollar hit a high note of Rs. 44.89, compared to Rs.40.63 exactly a year before – exactly a 10% swing the other way. One of the financial instruments available for exporters is Forward contract (Hedging).

Forward Contract: It is a contract between the bank and its customers in which the exchange/conversion of currencies would take place at a future date at a rate of exchange agreed in advance under a contract. The essential idea of entering into a forward contract is to peg the price and thereby avoid the price risk.
Forward Rates = spot rate +/- premium/discount

RBI allows you to take these forward contracts for next 12 months (sliding window). Like many other SMEs at Vishwak we normally cover say 60-70% of our receivables for next 12 months. This has been helping us when the Dollar kept depreciating like it did for the first half of this year and whole of last year. But since the trend reversed in the last two quarters we have started losing nearly Rs.4 per dollar (10%) – of course this risk was always there just like in any other financial instruments. Our Hedging taken last year (in July/August ’07 for July ’08 and so on) for this financial year (Apr ’08 to Mar ’09) has been at various levels around Rs.39 to Rs.41, but the current rate is Rs.44.89.

This made me interested to dig into this a little deeper, so I headed to RBI’s archive site and pulled out last 13 months data and plotted it into a chart in Excel (you can download the excel sheet I prepared from here). Below is the chart – you can see clearly the wild swings of Dollar.

Dollar Movements - Source: http://www.rbi.org.in/scripts/ReferenceRateArchive.aspx

I noticed the following few points of interest from the above chart:

  1. Dollar made a decline from Rs.41.24 to Rs.39.91 between 29/Aug/07 to 20/Sep/07. Nearly Rs.1.33 change.
  2. Continued to stay in the band of Rs.39 for next 7 months till 23/Apr/08
  3. Dollar made a rise from Rs.39.95 to Rs.42.56 between 23/Apr/08 to 26/May/08. Nearly Rs.2.61 change.
  4. Dollar made a rapid rise from Rs.42.82 to Rs.44.21 in just 15 days between 14/Aug/08 to 01/Sep/08. Nearly Rs.1.39 change.
  5. Dollar continues to rise with hitting a high note at Rs.44.89 today

Click

Click by Adam Sandler

This sunday I watched this movie – Click by Adam Sandler. Many of the English movies are now available in India at affordable rates – this one (VCD) distributed by Sony Music India costs me Rs.299 (USD 7).

The story is a powerful one, something that all of us would have felt in our lives more than once – that is to have a remote control to skip unpleasant moments (or) play again the happy occasions. Unfortunately, the director of the movie Frank Coraci has missed this opportunity to exploit the story line to his advantage. He has given an average movie. The initial half an hour or so was certainly boring and the place where he gets this universal remote control that changes his live forever could have been better. The last half an hour where the incidents that unfold makes Michael Newman (acted by Adam Sandler) realize the consequences of having such a device are certainly taken well. Where he talks about work-live balance, the Director has avoided being too philosophical or toeing religious lines.

Should you watch this movie, yes if you don’t have any other choice (or) you are stuck on a plane. 

Bill Gates and Jerry Seinfeld – a Microsoft Campaign

Bill Gates is my inspiration in technology and I love Jerry Seinfeld shows, so what more better than seeing both of them together in a hilarious clip. It doesn’t matter it was a commercial from Microsoft – did it?

Bill Gates and Jerry Seinfeld - Advertisement 1 
[Watch the low-bandwidth version here]

Watch the above clip which is the first of a series of advertisement campaigns coming from Microsoft featuring Jerry Seinfeld. If this is the answer to hugely successful "Mac vs Windows" advertisements from Apple, I think Microsoft is on the right path. I think the beauty of this pilot is that it has no direct references to Windows Vista or any Microsoft Products (Read here what The Register has to say on this).

Cross browser Vector graphics

If you have tried to do a decent chart or graph or any line drawings in HTML/CSS you would have felt extremely frustrated, more so you want it to be cross-browser compatible. Though SVG and VML have been around for years, the support for them is not uniform between browsers. Recently in a newsletter from Sitepoint I came across Raphaël – a small JavaScript library (less than 19Kb in filesize) written by Dmitry Baranovskiy of Atlassian, that allows you to create and manipulate vector graphics in your web pages. It’s simple to use and supports Internet Explorer 6.0+, Safari 3.0+, Firefox 3.0+, and Opera 9.5+. Internally Raphaël uses VML in IE and SVG in the other browsers.

Raphaël is published under MIT License which basically allows you to use the code in both commercial and non-commercials applications and even redistribute freely (as in free beer).

CurrentSprocket

To do the above graph, you need to write only 30 lines of Javascript. Check it out.

Saravana Stores is in flames

The famous low price shopping destination in Chennai – Saravana Stores in Ranganathan Street (T.Nagar) unfortunately has got into flames from early morning today. From my house which is 1 or 2 kilometres from the site, standing on our water tank in 2nd floor we could clearly see the massive fumes. It is unfortunate that 20 of their employees who went in to control flames are yet to come out and are expected to be in danger – our prayers for their safe exit. About 5 to 6 fire engines from nearby and several of the firemen are fighting to control the flames.

Saravana Stores in Ranganathan Street (9:30AM) Saravana Stores in Ranganathan Street (9:35AM)