Sunday, November 30, 2008

SHAMELESS POLITICIANS PLAYING POLITICS WITH TERRORISM



Few months back we had Jamia Milla encounter in New Delhi.. An exceptional police officer was shot dead but politicians fearing their vote banks demanded an enquiry into the shoot out because they felt people from one community (Muslims) were specifically targetted... So called Intellectuals also questioned the encounter… Amar Singh gives a lakh to dead police officer and then questions the encounter..
ATS Chief Hemant Karkare did an exceptional job in cracking the Malegaon blasts. Now Politicians from the other spectrum questioned him for targeting Hindus deliberately. And when the Police officer dies, Mr Narendra Modi announces 1 crore to him.

Its a big farce... Rightly the families in both the case refused to receive compensation.

Terrorists whether Muslims or Hindus are inhuman. They have no right to kill innocent people. Terrorists kill innocent people in hundreds, and when police gun down two terrorists, human right activists and so called intellectuals question it as if their son or daughter is shot dead.. Police are doing their best. I am not saying they are right always but they need a free hand to deal with this evil. Every time police kill or arrest a terrorist a big hue and cry is raised citing ridiculous reasons. Let Police do their job. If the evidence is good enough court will punish them.

Every time a terrorist attack takes place, our Prime Minister says they will pay for it. We will not let them go scot free.. Condemns the blast.. Declares compensation to victims and promises stern action. But action remains on paper only…

Opposition parties accuse government of soft pedaling on terrorism. Elections round the corner these guys would love to have few more blasts so that they can come to power easily.

They get power and exchange places. And the farce continues…

Our great MNS leader Mr. Raj Thackrey was busy fighting the North Indian immigrants a few days back. He was holding Mumbai to ransom. He may not like if NSG or MARCOS commandos are from North Indians or Sounth Indians who played a major role in saving many lives and flushing out terrorists.. Where were his activists.. Bloody regionalism... The identity of being an Indian first is more important.


Nobody is held accountable after the terror attack. Our Home minister continues to be in the same position probably thinking what attire to wear tomorrow morning on his visit to Mumbai.. Our policemen continue to wear a bullet proof jacket which may not prevent them getting hurt even if it’s a fire cracker leave alone a bullet from a AK 47…

All Police reform system remains on paper. Nothing changes. 1993 Mumbai blasts they used the sea route, 2008 they did the same. Coastal security guard is in shambles with lack of adequate resources. Few years later blasts or terror reigns. And blame game begins. Talks of police reform surface again and the story continues….. And I will be writing a blog on this or might probably end up copying the same thing what I have written today. I am an eternal optimistic person but looking at the system and with the innocent loss of lives, I end up becoming a pessimist…

As one of the SMS which i received this morning SAID " Our fight is not against Terrorists. Commandos will take care of them. Our real fight is against our very own enemies.. THE POLITICIANS.."

A TRIBUTE TO MARTYRS






First and foremost hats off to the guys of operation CYCLONE and BLACK TORNADO. National Security Guard (NSG), Marine Commandos (MARCOS) fought the might of Terrorists and saved many lives knowing well that their life is in danger. Kudos to them.

I would like to profile few policemen who lost their valuable lives in fighting the terrorists.

Hemant Karkare. Vijay Salaskar. Ashok Kamte, Major Unnikrishnan. These men, who fell to the bullets as terror raised its ugly head again in Mumbai, were all professionals highly specialized in their chosen field of law enforcement and were held in high esteem.

Mr. Karkare was on his way home when he heard about the terror attack at the Trident. He was heading there when he was told that the firing at the Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus (CST) was much more severe. Near the CST station senior officer Sadanand Date was holding off the terrorists holed up in a lane alongside the Cama and Albless Hospital. Armed with automatic weapons, Karkare, Kamte and Salaskar got into a jeep and rushed to take on the terrorists. Unfortunately, the terrorists proved much too lethal for them and all three were gunned down.

HEMANT KARKARE

Hemant Karkare, Maharashta Police's Anti-Terrorism Squad chief, was among the 11 police officials who were killed while fighting terrorists in Mumbai on Thursday. Karkare, a 1982 batch IPS officer, had returned to his state cadre after a seven-year tenure with the Research and Analysis Wing, Indian external intelligence agency, in Austria. Hemanth Karkare, was under immense pressure investigating the Malegaon blasts. Politicians from all quarters were making baseless allegations against a man of integrity. He managed to keep the issue apolitical and continue with the investigation. One should admire the decision of Mrs Karkare to refuse the compensation of Rs 1 crore offered by Mr. Narendra Modi, the very man who had blasted Karkare for his handling of Malegaon blasts. Mr. Karkare was known for his discipline and sense of fairness. Appointed ATS chief in January this year, he was instrumental in cracking the September 2008 Malegaon bomb blasts.

VIJAY SALASKAR

Encounter specialist Vijay Salaskar on the other hand belonged to the Mumbai’s very own group of ‘untouchables’ who won accolades for their much-publicised ‘encounter killings’ targeting wanted gangsters and criminals. Mr. Salaskar was a quiet man who had an air of confidence about him. A key member of Mumbai police’s exclusive and somewhat controversial “encounter” squad, he is said to have killed close to 75 criminals. Known for his ability to weed out information about underworld gang activities in Mumbai, Mr. Salaskar was often at the helm of combating gang wars in the city. A 1983 batch officer, he was appointed the head of the anti-extortion cell at the Crime Branch.

ASHOK KAMTE

Mr. Ashok Kamte was known for his fearless ways. A 1989 batch IPS officer, he was very popular when he was commissioner of police in Solapur. A close associate said even after he left Solapur he was treated as hero whenever he was in town. Daring, but with an exceptionally cool head made Ashok Kamte an excellent negotiator in crisis situations - a quality for which he was summoned late Thursday night to deal with terrorists holed up in Mumbai buildings. Kamte, a 1989 batch IPS officer of Maharashtra cadre, who died fighting terrorists near Mumbai's Metro cinema, was one of the brightest of his batch, and one of the few officers who dared to take on challenges directly. Having undergone special training for negotiating hostage situations, Kamte was chosen to tackle one of the worst crisis faced by the financial capital of the country. "A cop that turned Solapur from a wrong city to the right one. The person who every responsible Solapurkar liked and loved. This community has been created to pay the respect and gratitude that he deserves," wrote one of his fans on the social networking web site. Survived by his wife and two children, Kamte had a panache for body building during his college days. His friends at the IPS academy also remember him as a great athlete and one of the brightest cadets of his batch.

MAJOR UNNIKRISHNAN

"Do not come up, I will handle them", these were probably the last words which Major Sandeep Unnikrishnan told his men as he was hit by bullets while engaging terrorists inside the Taj. "Major Unnikrishnan was rescuing an injured commando when he was hit," Director-General of NSG J K Dutt said after he announced mission accomplished at the Taj and quoted the slain major as telling his crack team, "Do not come up, I will handle them".
"During the operation, when a commando got injured Unnikrishnan arranged for his evacuation and started chasing the terrorists himself," a senior National Security Guards (NSG) official said here. The terrorists escaped to another floor of the hotel and during the chase Unnikrishnan was seriously injured and succumbed to his injuries, the official said.
It was Unnikrishnan's second deputation with the elite NSG force. Unnnikrishnan was commissioned in the 7th Bihar Regiment of the Army in 1999 and he first served the NSG during 1996-99 and again came back to it's 51 Special Action Group (SAG) in January 2007.
The 31-year-old officer was the lone son of his parents who hailed from Bangalore.

GAJENDER SINGH

The other braveheart, Havildar Gajender Singh, was a specialist in heli-borne operations. "Gajender Singh was chosen for the Nariman House operation as he qualified for the job extremely well. He was leading the slithering act and its follow up action," the NSG official said while paying homage to the slain commandos at the NSG headquarters in the national capital.

Tuesday, November 04, 2008

Informative article regarding current financial crisis published in Hindu...



Published in The Hindu - Sunday Magazine on Oct 5, 2008 (picture of Alan Greenspan, head of US Federal Reserve Bank)


The bursting of the speculative bubble in the U.S. housing market has destroyed billions of dollars in investor wealth across the world, crippled the banking system, expunged close to a million jobs.and India has not been spared either. With banks failing by the day.definitely, these are uncertain times for the financial services industry. While many people who have lost their jobs, are faced with permanent shrinkage of their lifestyle, others in the industry are going through the trauma of not knowing if and when their turn would come. Who is to blame?

Flashback to year 2003:
Rohit (name changed to protect identity), a good friend of mine and someone who was officially considered to be a genius with an IQ of 150+, graduated from one of the leading IIM's. Rohit managed to make it into the New York Headquarters of the most sought after firm that had arrived on campus for the first time - Lehman Brothers - a top U.S. Investment Bank (then). On joining, he was assigned to Lehman's mortgage securities desk that dealt with Collateralized Debt obligations (or CDO's).

Following is an extracted transcript of a chat session I had with Rohit back in 2004:

Me: So man, you must feel like you are on top of the world.
Rohit: Yes dude, the job here is amazing, I get to interact with people around the world, investment managers - who want to invest millions of dollars

Me: great.so tell me something interesting. What's your job all about?
Rohit: You know there is a great demand for American home loans, which we buy from the U.S. banks. We then convert these into what is called as CDO's (Collateralized Debt Obligations). In plain English - this refers to buying home loans that banks had already issued to customers, cutting them into smaller pieces, packaging the pieces based on return (interest rate), value, tenure (duration of the loans) - and selling them to investors across the world after giving it a fancy name, such as 'High Grade Structured Credit Enhanced Leverage Fund'.

Me: Wow! I would've never guessed that boring home loans could transform into something that sounds so cool!
Rohit: hahaha.actually we create multiple funds categorized based on the nature of the CDO packages they contain and investors can buy shares in any of these funds (almost like mutual funds.but called Structured Investment Vehicles or SIV's)

Me: Dude, you make your job sound like a meat shop.chopping and packaging. So, in effect when an investor purchases the CDO's (or the fund containing the CDO's), he is expected to receive a share of the monthly EMI paid by the actual guys who have taken the underlying home loans?
Rohit: Exactly, the banks from whom we purchased these home loans send us a monthly cheque, which we in turn distribute to the investors in our funds

Me: Why do the banks sell these home loans to you guys?
Rohit: Because we allow them to keep a significant portion of the interest rate charged on the home loans and we pay them upfront cash, which they can use to issue more home loans. Otherwise home loans go on for 20-30 years and it would take a long time for the bank to recover its money.

Me: and, why does Lehman buy these loans?
Rohit: Because we get a fat commission when we convert the loans into CDO's and sell it to investors

Me: Who are these investors?
Rohit: They include everyone from pension funds in Japan to Life Insurance companies in Finland

Me: But tell me, why are these funds so interested in purchasing American home loans?
Rohit: Well, these guys are typically interested in U.S. Govt bonds (considered to be the safest in the world). But unfortunately, Mr. Alan Greenspan (head of Federal Reserve Bank - similar to RBI in India) has reduced the interest rate to nearly 1% to perk up the economy after the dot-com crash & Sep 11 attacks. This has left many funds looking for alternative investments that can give them higher returns. Home loans are ideal because they offer 4-6% interest rate.

Me: Wait, aren't home loans more risky than U.S Bonds?
Rohit: We have made home loans less risky now. In fact they have become as safe as U.S Govt bonds.

Me: What are you saying, man? What if the people who have taken these underlying home loans default? Then the investors would stop getting the EMI's, and their returns would take a hit. Wouldn't it?
Rohit: Boss, may be some will default, but not definitely more than 2-3% of them. Moreover, we have convinced AIG (a leading insurance company) to insure our CDO's. This means that even if there were big defaults - the insurance company would compensate the investors.

Me: that's amazing. What are these insurances called?
Rohit: Credit Default Swaps

Me: Definitely you guys are the most creative when it comes to naming.
Rohit: Thanks

Me: and why has this AIG guy insured millions of home loans?
Rohit: see man, the logic is simple. Home prices in the U.S always go up. In fact over the last 3 yrs alone they have doubled. So even if someone defaults paying the EMI, the home can be seized and sold for a much higher price. So there is no risk. Insurance companies are actually competing to insure this, because they can earn risk-free premiums.

Me: no wonder investment managers from all over the world want to put money in your CDO's. *end of conversation extract*

NINA and the Housing Bubble

A global financial cobweb started getting built around the American dream of purchasing a home and it rest on the assumption that "home prices will keep rising". As demand for the CDO's started growing across the global investment community, the investment bankers (like Lehman) who were meant to sell these instruments also started investing a significant portion of their own capital in these. I guess after selling the story to the whole world, they themselves got sold on the seemingly foolproof concept. Gradually the markets for CDO's and Credit Default Swaps started expanding with traders and investors buying and selling these as if they were shares of a company, happily forgetting the underlying people behind these products who took the home loans in the first place and on whose capacity to repay the loans, the safety of these products depended.

As Wall Street firms like Lehman were churning more and more home loans into CDO's and selling them or investing their own money, there was a pressure on the banks to issue more loans so that they can be sold to the Wall Street firms in return for a commission. Slowly banks started lowering the credit quality (qualification criteria) for availing a home loan and aggressively used agents to source new loans. This slippery slope went to such an extent that in 2005, almost anyone in the U.S could buy a home worth $100,000 (45 lk INR) or more - without income proof, without other assets, without credit history, sometimes even without a proper job. These loans were called NINA - 'no income no assets'.

The U.S. housing market went into a classic speculative bubble. Home loans were easy to get, so more and more people were buying houses. The increased demand for houses caused the price to increase. The rising prices created even more demand, as people started to look at homes as investments -- investments that never went down in value.

When I touched base with my friend Rohit in late 2005, he was on cloud nine. During the previous one year, he managed to buy a home in Long Island (a posh area near New York City) worth almost a millions dollars, and got himself a Mercedes. All this was interesting to hear, but what shocked me was that although he was earning close to $20,000 a month (that is what CEO's in India make) he was not able to save anything because his lifestyle expenses where growing faster than his salary.

The popping of the Housing Bubble

In late 2006, Mortgage lenders noticed something that they'd almost never seen before. People would choose a house, sign all the mortgage papers, and then default on their very first payment. Although no one could really hear it, that was probably the moment when one of the biggest speculative bubbles in American history popped. Another factor that lead to the burst of the housing bubble was the rise in interest rates from 2004-2006. Many people had taken variable rate home loans that started getting reset to higher rates, which in turn meant higher EMI's that borrowers had not planned for.

The problem was that once property values starting going down, it set off a reverse chain reaction, the opposite of what had been happening in the bubble. As more people defaulted, more houses came on the market. With no buyers, prices went even further down.

In early 2007, as prices began their plunge, alarm bells started going off across mortgage backed securities desks all over Wall Street. The people on Wall Street, like Rohit, started getting calls from investors about not getting their interest payments that were due. Wall street firms stopped buying home loans from the local banks. This had a devastating effect on particularly the small banks and finance companies, which had borrowed money from larger banks to issue more home loans thinking they could sell these loans to Wall Street firms like Lehman and make money.

Everyone got into a mad scramble to seize and sell the homes in order to get back at least some of the money. But there were just not enough buyers. The guys who had insured these loans thinking they had near zero risk (e.g. AIG) could not fulfill the unexpectedly huge number of claims. The best part was that since these insurance policies (credit default swaps) could themselves be traded, multiple people had bought and sold them, and it became so tough to even trace who was supposed to compensate for the loss.

Back to 2008: The carnage

The global financial cobweb built around mortgages is on the brink of collapse. Firms, large and small, some young some as old as a 100 years have crumbled as a result of suing each other over the dwindling asset values. Lehman's India operations- that employed over a thousand staff is up for sale and many of the employees have been asked to leave. The Indian stock market has crashed almost 50% from its high (and so have markets around the world) as the Wall Street giants sold their investments in the country in an effort to salvage whatever is good in order to make up for the mortgage related loss. Hedge funds, pension funds, insurance companies all over the world have lost billions in investor's money. Many Indian Bschool graduates with PPO's (pre-placement offers) in the financial sector (India and abroad) have either received an annulment or indefinite postponement of joining dates. IT firms that built and maintained software for the U.S. mortgage industry or the related Investment Banks, have shut down their business units, laid-off people or transferred them to other verticals.

For all the hoopla over the sharp and sophisticated people on Wall Street, the current financial crisis has exposed the fragility of the system. Wall Street is blaming the entire episode on people who could not repay their home loans. But the reality seems to point towards the stupidity of people who lent all this money, financial institutions that built fancy derivative packages and in effect facilitated billions in trading and investments in these fragile low quality loans.

The U.S. Govt is planning to grant 700 billion dollars to the Wall Street firms to compensate the financial speculators for the money that they have lost. Isn't this like rewarding greed and stupidity? The head of a leading Investment Bank has stated, "This is necessary to sustain financial ingenuity. We don't want to spend this money on ourselves. We just want this money to go into the market so that we can carry on trading complex securities, borrowing and lending money." (Yeah.right, so that one can act as if nothing had happened without analyzing too much into it). The real question is: who is going to compensate the common investors across the world who have lost their wealth in the resultant market meltdown? (either directly or through pension funds).

After being unreachable for a month now, finally I heard back from my pal, Rohit, saying he is back in India to take a break from the roller coaster ride that he had lived through. After Lehman's collapse he has lost his job and probably the house that he had bought by taking a hefty loan. I really don't know whether to feel happy for him, for getting an opportunity to learn a lesson or two from the experience or to feel sad for him for losing his job. May be I'll get a better sense of things once I meet him next week.

Monday, November 03, 2008

Anil Kumble - The legend calls it a day...



"Only one team played in the right spirit" - This statement from Anil after the Sydney fiasco made a huge impact on Australians and their media... People who supported Aussies way of approaching the game suddenly paused to take note of this statement from Anil Kumble - the legend who hang up his boots yesterday...

The visuals of Anil wearing bandage over his head and coming on to bowl against West Indies and trapping Brian Lara plumb in front of the wicket conveys a lot about the legend...

No one ever believed that Anil will play for longer with so many limitations up his sleeve.. Kapil Dev felt the same when he saw Anil for the first time.. Critics wrote an obituary for Anil.. He cant turn his leg breaks, is a medium pace bowler etc......

But credit to Anil Kumble for what he his today... More than 1000 wickets in both forms of the game.. Career spanning 18 years... A man who never gave up.. A Smiling Assasin.. our very own Jumbo...

Felt very sad that he will no more be part of cricket... Loved to watch him bowl.. His determination to bowl irrespective of the match condition is phenomenal... Words are not enough to describe Anil.. An era has come to an end....