Chaitanya's BlogWorld

Monday, November 27, 2006

NIRLON

Nirlon is said to be developing its about 40 acres of land the goregaon property on its own.The property would fetch a net valuation of around Rs 1,400 crore+it has 50 acres of MIDC land at Tarapur which is also under proposed sell.Now adding these 2 land sell deals if at all happens wud give nirlon around 2200cr atleast and that makes per share valuation close to 220rs.Now if we take half the land value too then also nirlon sud be valued around close to 100rs.The company's nylon tyre-cord yarn/fabrics unit at Goregaon, Mumbai, was way closed in June 2004 and workers were paid off under a VRS. It also repaid secured creditors as per the BIFR scheme.So the road seems to be rosy for nirlon going forward.At 44rs any high risk apetite investor can plan to buy these stock for med to long term --- aryan

Realty Boom : news 1
Company profile : SnapShot

Others : milestones

Thursday, May 04, 2006

Hectic Job ....

Again felt very hectic today but this time i could control everything that was missing the targets ,i mean was realising the toughness though the process is still running ,
thats bcoz of the schedule i was running in my background.Almost 30% of the deeps were achieved and for the rest , got confident of washing them by tomarrow.
Finally by the end of the day,got refreshed with a small chito-chat with ani.
Only thing i missed was the one which i made it a part of my life,tats Gym :))
Chaitu!! don't repeat this mistake again , ok....
bye self.

Friday, April 28, 2006

wanna win a person??

very simple,know what are the things he is really a die-heart fan of,shoot him with meaningful challenges abt these issues ,and finally just surrender to him once the issue gets heated up.Now take care that he shud not realise that ur intentionally surrendered!!
Thats all , next time , just go in his way and put ur idea infront,this time am sure u will get him out of rigidity.

Wednesday, April 26, 2006

Living Below Your Means

Living Below Your Means, Part One
Knowledge gives you power over money
by Stefani Leto
he average American family walks around lugging $7,000 in annual consumer debt, according to CardTrak. That’s a little more than $583 per month in extra money spent, if you want to see it in stark terms. Clearly, most people are living beyond their means.
As a solution, pundits and the popular media suggest living within your means. Heck, it’s even suggested that our government adopt this money style. Seems simple enough: you don’t spend more money than your household takes in. That’s it. It ought to be doable, and it is. But it doesn’t go far enough.

You can go on forever living within your means and never gain the security and peace that comes from living below your means.

If you live within your means, you won’t add to the mountain of consumer debt faced by most families. Your family will have enough money to pay for life’s expenses. This is a good thing, mark my words. But it’s not enough. You can go on forever living within your means and never gain the security and peace that comes from a more radical step: living below your means.
Spending less than you receive in income is the key. Easy to say, but hard to do? Maybe. I know everyone isn’t an accountant. But if you’re committed to a worry-free financial life, you’ve got to think like one for a few months. Trust me. It’s not easy, and it’s generally not much fun, unless details are your thing. If you want to end up with a surplus, it’s a step that can’t be skipped.
Knowledge is power, so they say, and the way to gain knowledge about your family and money is to write down every penny spent by any family member for three months. That’s all. No fancy budget formulas, no guilt. Just write it down. This step is difficult simply because of its tedium and because it’s not the way it’s always been done. Difficulty levels can increase with more family members spending money. A first entry in the spending log might be tiny spiral-bound notebooks and pens for each spender.
The proper tools can help, but without agreement among the responsible members of the family, notebooks won’t get you very far. In each couple, there’s usually one who spearheads each change. Maybe you are the one who wants more financial stability, maybe it’s your partner. A minimum of agreement has to exist before living below your means is a possibility.
Some of us need to be shown results before signing on to a program. If you’re the one pushing for this change (and it is a big one), take it easy on your partner. Perhaps agreeing that you won’t require to-the-penny accounting if your partner tells you the total amount they’ve spent will be enough to start with. Face it—there’s going to be some spending that won’t get recorded. You’re hoping for a pretty-good compliance rate, not perfection.

So now, it’s three months later, and you’ve done a pretty good job writing down your spending. What you have is a mound of raw data. Next comes a much more fun step. On a piece of paper or your computer financial program (many people like Quicken), roughly list budget categories. In my family, they are divided into income and outgo. Income is any money we receive, whether regular salary or unusual earnings. Outgo gets divided by use. Utility companies, groceries, animal-related costs, clothing for each family member, books, eating out, auto insurance and gas, each of th vjese gets their own line. Your family’s budget categories will reflect how you spend money.

Knowledge is power, and detail will make your money picture clearer.

One important bit—don’t neglect any budget item now, no matter how small. For instance, you may want to lump cleaning and personal hygiene products under groceries because you get them at the same store. Fine, except remember that they’re there. Knowledge is power, and detail will make your money picture clearer.
Run totals. Ideally, your outgo won’t exceed your income. In reality, sometimes that’s not the case. No matter what your totals look like, you’ve got a road map to your money future. If you’re in the red, do you notice any obvious hot spots? We found that our “miscellaneous” category was using up about $200 a month more than we’d planned. Without record keeping, we didn’t know where it was going. Maybe there’s something evident on first look, maybe not.
Assuming that increasing your income isn’t a real possibility, what do you do to lower your expenses so you aren’t spending the limit? I’ll cover some ways to do that in the next part of this article. But one last bit of good news: you don’t have to spend a lot less than your income to be making progress. Creating any overage at all is an accomplishment to savor.

Living Below Your Means, Part Two:The envelope, please
Living Below Your Means, Part Three: Hatching that nest egg
Lynn’s related links:
Your Money or Your Life: A classic book on voluntary simplicity that will change your relationship to money forever.
New Road Map Foundation: Website of the foundation set up by the authors of “Your Money Or Your Life”.
How to Get Out of Debt, Stay Out of Debt and Live Prosperously: Based on the 12 Steps of Debtors Anonymous, this is hope in a book for anyone with money troubles, or anyone who’s tired of living the acquisitive life.
The Complete Tightwad Gazette: All three volumes in the “Tightwad Gazette” series newly gathered into one big book. Not content with just giving great tips on saving money, author Amy Dacyczyn also gives you lots of reasons why you want to save money.
Positive Futures Network: Publishers of the magazine Yes! (formerly In Context), these folks are dedicated in part to voluntary simplicity.

Thursday, April 20, 2006

made up my mind .....

day before yday,when i returned from home...
Basn gave me a nice lecture in the morning about all my negative doings ,
fortunately he got a nice fault of mine, that i have taken
a CD for rent before going to home and till that day hav'nt
returned back.And in the evening when i returned room , i saw him
watching another movie and when i enquired him abt the old CD , he
said its u who hav to face it and so i brought a new one leaving the
old for you to return it back.At that spur of moment,suddenly my BP
raised in a way i havn't seen it for long past.I really forget to hate,
i couldn't hate him,but my inner self made me to react with an extreme
anger.I hav managed to react and seriously returned the CD.By then
i hav controlled my Self and was normal but something was itching me
inside.I couldn't stop , but to rethink abt the situation.And till now
am thinking of the same,and really i could say you ,i changed a lot the
time i started rethinking of the whole situation.My positive change infact.
Questioning who's right and who's wrong made me to realise that i was
doing lot of blunders with a philosopical reasoning in hand.
It made me to keep my household things perfert and keep myself keen in
even minor things.
Am still in analysis phase and will hav to change a lot........
The other incident that took place recently was related to my office work.
I was struggling to fix a bug which was scraching me very often.This time
it again reopened n not bcoz of any reason except my neglegence.I was ashamed
of it to say to my boss abt the fact.Now proactively i accepted my failure to
Self and taught of facing it with a positive sight.Now interestingly the cause
for the reopen was not the real cause and even if i fixed it ,it would hav again reopened.A small advice from my boss "please look at each and every item , mark it
if needed , then only finalise it" gave me a wonderful leason , the interesting
thing is a bigger problem was hidden in it and that i was escaping from it ,keeping
eye only on the problem which was infront of me.
Look for the worst situation when u expect bad.
And out of box thinking is a necessary tool for existence.
And there will be many ways to solve a problem, sometimes combination of ways make a fix and one way in the combination is which u never think is a way(the simplest way,
a small kid does,can give u a solution to the biggest problem)

lesson ends......
take a break n wait for my next blog until then ...
keep smiling... :))

Monday, March 20, 2006

Learning new ways of living!!

Dude don't hav time to put up wat i hav in mind right now.
Will make it short but try to put it anyway.
I was feeling shy of when going in a bicycle when i was
at my home , but yday i realised the beauty of being proud of
wat one has.Really it made me to think abt, when my frnd gave
me lift to my room n strangely that in a bicycle which i never
taught of.He is so happy in giving lift tat i couldn't find any
sort of shy or such feelings in him.I was impressed by his
attitude towards a silly thing but it reflects his character.
And wanna thank my dad for wat iam today.
And yday i remembered my mom when i was washing my clothes.Really
felt as an herculion task , mom how could u do it till date,Hats off!
Taking responsibility is a very different feeling.Its a mix of
courage and commitment.Guys am liking it and want more n more of it
but really aches me at some point of time n tat time am desperately
in need of support , atleast moral.
Thats it,will take leave ,

Monday, March 13, 2006

Whose Life Is It Anyway?

The Rediff Special/ Mahesh Nair

The sad, ironic aspect of being human is that we live vicariously and die personally. We think others lead a much more interesting life. We spend a great deal of time passing judgement on other's people lives, admiring or criticizing them. If somebody is rich or beautiful or famous or successful or powerful, we gleefully devour any nuggets of their personal life. Subconsciously we are always comparing notes. Has he become Rich through dishonest means? She may be Beautiful but is she happier than me? He is Famous but does he get private moments like me? Will I sacrifice what she did for being so Successful? She may have Power but is her life more peaceful?

Journalists like me are paid to live vicariously. Can I tell you what Jessica Lall was thinking when Manu Sharma pulled out the .22 bore pistol and shot her point blank?

Can I explain how Bina Ramani (a British passport holder) married to George Mailhot (a Canadian passport holder) and mother of Malini (a US passport holder) has become one of the most successful businesswoman in New Delhi and a veritable diva of the cocktail circuit?

Is it possible for me to explain why Amod Kant, who is the most high profile cop in India (cases investigated include that of Harshad Mehta, V Krishnamurthy, Chandra Swami, Romesh Sharma), runs Prayas, a welfare centre for under privileged children?

If you find me asking more questions than giving answers, don't blame me. That's life. This article is about how we, the vicarious residents of the New Information Age Colony, party in our minds. How we lech at other peoples lives, how we feed on the carcass of successful people's tragedies, how we wear our social moral pretensions like a low-cut evening gown with nipples thrust tightly.

It is about our collective memories swinging from one incident to another, refreshing our thirst by sipping in the gory details and forgetting instantly without the slightest trace of a hangover. Call it Mind Games. Or The Top Ten Favourites of Medulla Oblongata.. We aspire therefore we are.

Let me begin with what's still hanging in fresh within the folds of our memory. Jessica Lall was a 34-year old former model, television anchor and event management executive who liked to be a bartender on Thursday nights at Tamarind Court. Why would somebody like that want to be a bartender? People say Jessica was bubbly, fun-loving person who could put people at ease within minutes. She liked parties even if she had to work there. Especially if it was a party where the rich and famous of New Delhi land up. Remember this feeling is different from working part-time at the neighbourhood McDonald's.

On the early morning of April 30 Jessica was shot dead by Manu Sharma because she refused to serve him a drink. Why did Jessica refuse to serve him a drink? There are many versions. One has it that she found Manu Sharma already drunk and unpleasant. Another that it was closing time. And yet another that she knew Sharma and had agreed to go on a joyride with him. But since Manu did not turn up in time she fixed up an appointment with another friend which enraged the drunk Manu when he walked in later. Manu tried to pull her out for a joyride. Jessica slapped him. Manu drew out a .22 pistol and shot her in the head. The bubbly, fun-loving person who could put people at ease within minutes was dead.

The police have some questions. Why was the restaurant serving liquor when it had no permit? Why was it serving liquor in the wee hours of the morning which even permitted bars are not allowed to do?

I have some answers. Nobody asked these questions before the shootout. Those who did were convinced by restaurateur Bina Ramani that it was a very stupid thing to do. If you see a Joint Commissioner of Police like Y S Dadwal at a party enjoying himself late in the night, what would you be thinking about before gulping your Bacardi? Not Section 112 of the Delhi Police Act which prohibits sale of liquor without license.

I met Bina Ramani almost a year ago when she had come to see a friend of mine who suffers from AIDS. She was helping us raise some money for a treatment centre. "You know AIDS is a terrible thing," she said in her gruff husky voice, "I feel so much for AIDS patients. I used to spend hours visiting a hospice in New York which treated them. Some of my best friends have died of AIDS. I was speaking with Richard (Gere) in the morning and he said he also wants to help. Maybe we could have a small function for the cheque giving ceremony and you could call some photographers and press people."

In Delhi it doesn't matter who you are but who you know. This is why Bina Ramani matters so much to Delhiites. She knows kings, prime ministers, tycoons, models, artists, politicians, policemen, excise and telephone company officials by their first names. Do you?

To look at ignored archaeological ruins in your city as a piece of valuable real estate and turning it into an ethnic-modern shopping complex calls for immense enterprise and connections. Bina Ramani does it with ease. She did it with friend Suresh Kalmadi carving out an entire Hauz Khas Village, a shopping area for the rich, from nowhere. She did it again in Mehrauli , near the Qutab Minar. All this with a British passport.

So what happens when Bina Ramani makes a mistake or errs by the law? She doesn't do it alone. The guest list on that fateful night at Tamarind Court reads like a who's who the city's celebrities. Many of them were doling out Rs 100 for a coupon to be exchanged for a drink. If serving liquor without a licence is a crime, is paying for a drink in the same place also a crime? If a fashion mall set up in a protected archaeological area is illegal, then is leasing a shop within it legal? There is no such thing as collective guilt.

Two days after Jessica was shot dead, a rich businessman living in New Delhi's posh Maharani Bagh colony with Bollywood connections decided to throw a private "traffic light" party. The guest list was impressive. Many people who were at Tamarind Court landed up here to dance away the blues. The host had called pop singer Whosane as deejay. The dress code was impressive too. You had to wear red if "available"; yellow if "undecided"; and green "if taken and uninterested". Manisha Koirala wore white.

Why do the rich and the famous party? Just like we do: to have fun. What sort of fun do these people have? Well, noveau fashion designer Jatin Kochar once went to a party in Malcha Marg, the hub of diplomats in New Delhi, which allowed guests to wear only one piece of clothing. He wore an underwear, but the hostesses kept gleefully darting their manicured fingers inside his undies to check out whether he had only piece on him. I haven't had that kind of fun ever in my life.

What about Manu Sharma? What kind of a man do you think shoots a woman if she spurns his request? Sharma is the scion of a powerful political family from Chandigarh. His father was a former Union minister. In the past five years there have been at least seven "shootouts" in Chandigarh which featured scions like Sharma. What would these scions have to say to Sharma if word spread that he had returned home after being slapped by a woman bartender in front of Delhi's elite?

Now Sharma has confessed his crime. His lawyers are saying he was not in control of his actions when he shot Jessica. That he was drunk. Do drunk people shoot? Whose fault was it that he was drunk? Was it his fault, his friends, or the stewards at Tamarind Court who had been serving him for over an hour?

In South Delhi a stone's throw away from Vasant Vihar, there is a cluster of jhuggis or hutments. According to the record books it is an illegal occupation of the land but there is little that can be done about it. The people who live in it are poor; most of them serve as domestic help to the rich who live across the road. If they are thrown out, the rich will suffer.

It's in the midst of this place that Prayas, a welfare educational home for the children of the domestic helpers, is situated. A couple of months ago I had met Amod Kant here. He was excited about the opening of one more branch of Prayas in another part of Delhi. As we stood and talked, watching the children play kho-kho, Kant confessed that he was getting tired of life in the police force. He was thinking whether he should hang his boots and devote more time with children at his pet project.

I asked him whether he was getting frustrated fighting a losing battle, chasing high profile criminals who eventually went scot-free. "I don't think I am fighting a losing battle," he clarified, "Take the case of Romesh Sharma. We have lined up 17 cases against him and put him behind bars. He may eventually come out, but Sharma as an institution has been demolished. We need to identify more such Romesh Sharmas and go after them."

Two days before Jessica was murdered, Kant had persuaded Hollywood hero Steven Segal to visit Prayas and cheer up the kids. Segal obliged. He also promised his other friend Bina Ramani that he would drop in at Tamarind Court for the party on April 30. In a small place like Delhi I am sure Ramani and Kant have met and interacted before. But I wonder what were they thinking of each another when a day after the Jessica shootout Kant told the press, "The rich are less forthcoming with the police. They should co-operate more." On May 7 Bina Ramani, her husband and daughter were arrested under Amod Kant's orders and later released on bail.

Do you think one more institution was demolished?

The sad thing in Delhi is that we don't ask any of these these questions. They don't matter. Brutal murder is so frequent here that it seems odd for the front page to go without a mention of it any day. I picked up the newspaper today and read that an 82 year-old woman was strangled to death in Kalindi Colony, a stone's throw away from where the Maharani Bagh "traffic light party" was held. This was the fourth instance of an elderly person being bludgeoned to death within five days. But would you be reading this article if it was about why 60-year-old Usha Pandit was murdered by a carpenter at her middle-class home in Janakpuri?

The truth is most of us in Delhi and elsewhere -- the middle and upper class, the media, the yuppies -- are unmoved by death. We are interested only in the gossip behind it. Especially if it involves well-known personalities. Remember the vicarious pleasure we derived reading reams on the murders of Shivani Jajodia, the NDTV producer, Monica and Rajesh of Zee TV, Shivani of The Indian Express and Irfan Hussain, the Outlook cartoonist? These were some of our favourite flavours of the month.

It's Jessica's turn now.