Wednesday, June 29, 2011

IFMR Placement Report 2011

Institute For Financial Management and Research (IFMR), Chennai, completed its placement process for its 111 students across three post graduate programs- PGDM, PGDM-Financial Engineering and PGDM-Development & Sustainable Finance. Year ended on a good note with recruiters from different sectors like IT , Consultancy, BFSI (including PSUs like Bank of India), FMCG, Hospitality & Manufacturing visiting the campus.

With regard to number of offers being given, ICICI bank tops the list with 20 offers followed by INFOSYS (17 offers) and Genpact (14 offers). Accenture was the highest paying recruiter offering Rs 10.65 Lakh followed by Bank of America offering Rs 9 Lakh.A total of 30 companies made offers during the placements. Two students opted out of placement process, one for pursuing higher research work and the other to join his family business.

Batch Strength

111

Students opting-out of placements

2

Effective number of students for placements

109

Total number of companies

30

Total number of offers

118

Offers/student

1.06

Highest salary

Rs 10.65 Lakhs

Average salary

Rs 7.34 Lakh


















Banking and Financial Services (BFSI)
41% of the batch got placed in Banking and Financial Services (BFSI) sector with roles offered in corporate finance, corporate and institutional banking, commercial banking, risk management, equipment finance, derivative & equity research , wealth management and marketing.

ICICI Bank was the largest recruiter with 20 offers as assistant manager scale II. Bank of America was the highest paying recruiter in this sector, package offered was Rs 9 Lakh. Irevna offered profiles of equity and derivative research analyst. UBS offered roles of research analyst. L&T finance gave roles in equipment financing. PSU bank ‘Bank of India’ and HDFC bank offered roles in finance and marketing. SBI life, SBI capital, Sriram city union finance ltd, ICICI securities offered finance profiles in their respective domains. FINO and IFMR trust offered roles in rural finance and micro finance. A total of 48 students opted for roles in BFSI sector.

IT/Systems
IT/Systems majors like Infosys, Accenture, Cognizant, HCL, Mahindra Satyam, Mphasis, 3i Infotech, Ramco systems & GAVS visited IFMR for recruitment this year. Accenture became the highest paying recruiter in the IT/Systems sector by offering package of Rs 10.65 Lakh. The company offered the role of Team Lead. Infosys, with 17 offers, became the recruiter who gave maximum number of offers in the sector. Infosys offered the profile of Associate Consultant. Cognizant, HCL, Mahindra Satyam, Mphasis, 3i Infotech & Ramco systems offered profiles of Business Analyst and Business Consultant. GAVS offered profiles in human resources. A total of 48 students opted for roles in IT/System sector.

Consulting
The consulting sector was represented by Deloitte, Capgemini & Genpact. Genpact became the largest recruiter in this sector by giving 14 offers. Genpact offered varied profiles in risk management, Treasury & Marketing. Deloitte was the highest paying recruiter in consulting sector with Rs 8.06 Lakh, the profile offered was that of Business Analyst. Capgemini too offered the role of consultant.

Others
Companies from Manufacturing, FMCG, Hospitality & Business research sectors too visited IFMR for recruitment. UCAL Fuels Ltd. offered HR profiles. Berger Paints offered marketing profiles. Hospitality sector was represented by ITC Welcome group, which offered a marketing profile while Business research sector was represented by A C Neilson.

Summer Placements:
Current IFMR students of the batch 2010-2012 have got placed for summer internships in varied sectors, profiles and roles. Some of the reputed government firms where students have got placed are Reserve Bank of India, National Housing Bank, Allahabad Bank, Punjab National Bank & State Bank of Hyderabad. Other important BFSI firms where students are doing their summer internship are Federal Bank, IL&FS, Royal Bank of Scotland, Barclays Shared Services, Dun and BradStreet, ICRA, IDBI, Reliance Capital , ING Vysya, IndusInd Bank, TATA Capital, IFIN, SREI-BNP PARIBAS etc. Consultancy profiles were offered by giants like KPMG , Price Waterhouse Coopers & Deloitte .TCS and Mphasis offered internships in IT services . IMRB & JWT offered internships in market research and Client servicing domain respectively.

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Arthasabha'11 - Post-Event Report!!!


“Arthasabha’11” – This year’s edition of the National Finance Summit of IFMR B-School --was organized in association with Bombay Stock Exchange Ltd (BSE). It was well received by corporate executives, academics and students, who came from across the country to participate in the daylong event. It was held at International Convention Hall, BSE, Mumbai, and focused on the theme, “New Financial Paradigms for the Indian Enterprise”. The event included set of keynote speeches, and panel discussions on issues of financing the Indian multinational corporations, managing associated liabilities, and understanding the key risks faced in such expansion. The agenda went beyond the standard approaches and literature to get insight from the eminent speakers who are practitioners in the field. The summit generated awareness on less recognized facets, and a rule of thumb roadmap to handle these complex issues, as corporate India goes global.

Mr. S.Vishvanathan, MD of SBI Capital markets was the distinguished chief guest. In his keynote address, he touched upon important issues like the changes in corporate India, the need to balance growth with regulation, and lessons from events affecting other parts of the world. “Indian companies have gained expertise and confidence to take on global competition. We see smaller companies acquiring larger foreign companies,” he said. On banking, he elaborated on increasing professionalism in lending, and the broadening of the loan portfolio for tier 2 corporates to include foreign currency loans. He spoke on the bright prospects of the Indian bond market, implementation of the Basel norms and SBI Capital’s work on developing the infrastructure to support trading in the market.

Mr. Madhu Kannan, CEO and MD of BSE, was the guest of honour. His talk was on the dynamics and trends in the exchange business and BSE’s initiatives to enable fast, easy and low cost access to most asset classes for retail, corporate and financial institutions. “Mobile technology has been leveraged to leapfrog lacunae in physical infrastructure to give low cost, convenient access,” he said in the context of BSE’s mobile trading capability. He listed improving price discovery by innovation in market micro structure, developing products to meet sophisticated needs of institutions and lowering of membership costs to reach a larger customer base as major areas of focus for the exchange.

The morning keynote address titled “Financing Challenges and Choices facing Indian multinationals” by Mr.Srikanth, Deputy CFO of RIL elicited tremendous interest. Mr. Srikant spoke extensively about the increasing depth of the Indian equity markets, allowing companies to issue follow on offerings and placing securities via QIPs. On the debt side, Indian firms are a major and continuously growing borrower in offshore bond markets. Financial institutions were the primary borrowers. “Despite rising cost of borrowing, there’s been little increase in credit spreads”, he added. He spoke of the tightness in the secondary bond markets and the inadequate credit availability for sub AA borrowers as major factors for tapping bond markets abroad. “The advantages include very large issuances for long tenures at cheap rates to a much wider investing community. Fixed rates are possible for long tenors” he said. He then shared his views on how lengthy approval processes are limiting the application of credit from export schemes which actually comes cheaper.


The morning panel discussion was on “Liability management for the Indian multinational.” The panel summarized that the crisis has been an eye opener, awareness of the importance of liability management is high in India, and that cash flow planning is vital for the same. Poor liability management was a major cause behind asset reconstruction exercises, and the financing of assets at intermediate jurisdictions creates issues of stakeholder alignment. Technology has not been leveraged to optimize liability management, and gaps in regulation and enforceability of security holder rights of foreign investors in India is a major limiting factor for sub AA borrowers.

The afternoon key note address by Mr Prabhakar Dalal, ED of EXIM Bank India was on “Financial risk management for the Indian multinational.” In the address, Mr. Dalal stressed on the need to achieve and sustain competitive advantage while understanding the risks taken for the growth. “A key management question is “How much risk to take”, he said. He concluded that the risk profile of several countries has changed, and that better capital management along with proactive approach to the risks taken for growth should be the way forward.

The afternoon panel discussion on “Major risk considerations for a global Indian enterprise,” generated tremendous interest and debate both within the panel as well as the audience. The panel summarized that regulatory risk and political risk are major considerations when expanding into advanced and emerging markets, respectively. Further what came to fore was that a dedicated risk function is absolutely necessary and must be home grown as risk management is organization and business line specific. Other risk considerations are strategy risks and the risk of losing business due to excessive risk control in the sensitive post crisis environment. The panel stressed that companies need to understand their risk appetite, plan for both the good and bad years with countercyclical approaches and be aware of cultural factors in their expansion abroad. The panel concluded that the ingenuity of the Indian entrepreneur can meet the risks and challenges of going global.

The evening session on capital markets witnessed a keynote address by Mr Prabhakaran, president-broking at IIFL, who spoke on the growth of domestic capital markets, more specifically, on investment opportunities in equities and new asset classes such as commodities. The panel discussion on “New asset classes for the Indian capital markets,” generated many ideas on capital market growth. The panel concluded that segmenting demand and understanding preferences is important in developing new asset classes, that SME is an attractive asset class which may require a dedicated infrastructure and that understanding regulatory and tax arbitrage opportunities need to be identified for developing new products in asset classes. On SME and microfinance being new asset classes, the entities on the demand side need to scale up to handle market expectations.
The summit closed with IFMR expressing a deep sense of gratitude to BSE for providing support in organizing and hosting the summit. In this regard, corporate communications team of BSE received mementos from team Arthasabha and IFMR. Arthasabha thanked all the speakers for taking time off  to participate in the summit. Arthasabha also acknowledged stupendous support from its partners for the summit. The final vote of thanks was reserved to  all attendees for making the event a success, along with an invitation for the new edition.







 

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

IFMR - Arthasabha Promo on UTV Bloomberg !!!

Catch a crisp telecast of IFMR's Arthasabha'11 on Bloomberg UTV on Saturday, 12th Feb, 5.30 pm & Sunday, 13th Feb, 2.30 pm.