Thursday, October 14, 2010

Microfinance needs re-evaluation to achieve financial inclusion - Experts

There is a broad international agreement on the importance of Financial Inclusion as a policy goal for all governments, including the developing countries of Asia. While microfinance is an important tool in achieving financial inclusion, it is increasingly becoming clear that inclusion is much more than providing access to microcredit alone.





What role microfinance can play in achieving financial inclusion was the topic of discussion at the opening panel of Asia Microfinance Forum in Colombo, Sri Lanka today.  Setting the tone of the panel, Mr. Philip Brown, Managing Director and Director of Risk, Citi Microfinance said, “To remain a growth sector the microfinance industry is undergoing another period of re-evaluation with a focus on improved client understanding and product innovation”.





Speaking about the role of microfinance in achieving financial inclusion, Mary Ellen Iskenderian, President and CEO of Women’s World Banking said, “I think MFIs are uniquely placed to play a role in financial inclusion as they can provide a full range of financial services to the poor. Since MFIs are focussing on women, who form the major part of financially excluded communities, microfinance can be instrumental in achieving financial inclusion of a large population”.





Ms. Ellen also delved on the impact of commercialization on the operations of microfinance institutions. Acknowledging the fact that donor money alone cannot meet the huge unmet demand of microfinance and MFIs do need to access commercial capital, she said “Investors must play constructive role in the decision making of microfinance organizations”.





Dolores Torres, President and CEO, CARD MRI, Philippines, who was also on the opening panel introduced the audience to her organization’s training program. “We established CARD MRI development institute where we train our staff. In 2006, we started CARD MRI life insurance agency and in 2007, we got registered as CARD institute bank. We are also helping our members to develop their businesses and marketing.”





Ms. Torres highlighted the uniqueness of CARD bank which has a full equity share holders owned by CARD members. “We also ensure that women participate in every aspect of the management. The total insured individuals are 6 million. For one insured member, her husband and children are also insured, making our contribution a lot higher” she added.





Briefing the audience about the current status of microfinance in Sri Lanka, W M Karunaratne, Assistant Governor of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka said, “In Sri Lanka, law and order has been established for stability. The country has entered into a new era, an era where interest rate has come down to just 5% today. Sri Lanka government has supported the economic growth.





“As far as I know Sri Lanka MFIs are well ahead and in the process to promote microfinance. Self help groups and technology to reach the masses are in place. This will be a new initiative for us to reach more people at low cost” he added.





Stressing on the need of regulated microfinance Mr. Karunaratne said, “In many countries, microfinance main objective is not to make profits but under situations when their funds have dried up, they move towards profit making. Once that happens, it becomes a financial business. At this state, MFIs need be subjected to some sort of regulation. The government of Sri Lanka has taken steps to regulate the MF system”.





The central bank of Sri Lanka reaches to the low income people by promoting linkages between banks and MFIs. It implemented a programme on behalf of the government to reach the under banked areas. “Through microfinance, we hope to promote more income opportunities and reduce income disparities.  Sri Lanka people are ready to learn, they have the capacity to come out of any adversity”.





Source : Microfinance Focus
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Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Sri Lanka wins boxing gold

Heartbreak for Wales's Sean McGoldrick, who is narrowly beaten by Sri Lanka's Manju Wanniarachchi on countbacks following a 7-7 thriller after three rounds. That's Sri Lanka's first gold medal in 72 years at the Commonwealth Games.


Sri Lanka’s Manju Wanniarachchi on Wednesday won Commonwealth Games gold in the bantamweight division for Sri Lanka’s first boxing title in 72 years.

The 30-year-old from Kandy won a points decision 16-14 to beat Welsh teenager Sean McGoldrick over three rounds in a closely contested bout in which the scores were tied 7-7.
Barney Hennricus won Sri Lanka’s only boxing gold medal at the 1938 Empire Games in Sydney.
The first round was scored even 3-3 while Wanniarachchi who hails from the central hill capital of Kandy trailed 5-6 after the second round.
Wanniarachchi nosed ahead of the 18-year-old from Newport 7-6 during the third round but the Welshman leveled with about 20 seconds remaining.
The Sri Lankan was declared the winner on a countback of the scores.
Sri Lankan boxers won two silver and a bronze medal at the next edition of the Games in Auckland in 1950.
Bronze medallists were the beaten semifinalists Tirafalo Seoko of Botswana and Louis Julie of Mauritius.
Northern Ireland’s Paddy Barnes won gold in the light flyweight division.
Barnes - the British province’s first European champion in 19 years - beat defending champion Jafet Uutoni from Namibia 8-4 on points.
Bronze went to losing semifinalists Muhammad Waseem of Pakistan and India’s Amandeep Singh.
In the picture above, the Sri Lankan boxer points to a higher power when the judges announce their decision before soaking in the adulation from his compatriots in the stands. 






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Where is the Bourse heading?

Rumours are that the Colombo Bourse is on the verge of a collapse stemming from a predicted market correction although analysts say the present downslide could only be temporary.
The upmarket Milanka Price Index at the Colombo Stock Exchange fell sharply by about 5 % a while ago (10.30 am) on Wednesday prompting Exchange authorities to halt trading under the 'cooling off' period rule.


Both indices at Colombo bourse took a beating right from  the start  go on Tuesday morning as selling pressure continued to materialized throughout the day, analysts said.

 Richard Pieris was the highest traded counter for the day. Aitken Spence came in at second, while Seylan Bank Non voting came in at third.  John Keells Holding was the top contributor to daily turnover with Rs.605 million.  Hayleys came in at second with Rs.4 million.





Analysts speculated that brokers have slowly started to unload debtors to the market and is trying to out do/out sell each other in to meet the credit granting timeline.

The All Share Price dipped 267.81 points to close at 6,566.79 points (-3.92%), whilst the Milanka Price Index also dropped  361.31 points to close at 7,141.72 points (-4.420%).

Turnover was Rs2.96 billion.


The stockmarket has been seeing sharps 'ups' and 'downs' in post-war Sri Lanka with punters having a field day, making millions of rupees in speculative trades.
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Tuesday, October 12, 2010

MR to be a guest at C'wealth closing ceremony

Sri Lanka President Mahinda Rajapaksa is set to be the guest of honour at the closing ceremony of the Commonwealth Games in India, on Thursday night.Diplomatic sources and protocol officials in Delhi today confirmed that Rajapaksa had accepted a "joint" invitation from the Indian government and the event organisers, and would be flying to India on Wednesday.

Aslam Khan, head of protocol for the games, confirmed that the choice of guest for the closing ceremony in the Jawaharlal Nehru stadium in Delhi was a "joint venture between the Indian government and the organising committee". Rajapaksa is not expected to speak at the event, Khan said.

Sri Lanka however has been blocked from hosting the next meeting of Commonwealth leaders in 2011, after Britain and Australia joined forces last year to protest at alleged human rights abuses. 




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Tata Housing to launch projects in Sri Lanka

Tata Housing, a unit of Tata Sons, is foraying into international markets with the launch of projects in Sri Lanka and Maldives in the current quarter
, a recent foreign media report said. The real estate company, known for low-cost housing projects, plans to do a mix of luxury and affordable housing projects in these markets.



"We have got interest from other foreign countries also, which we are examining. But for now, we are planning to launch our projects in one of the cities in Sri Lanka or Maldives in the current quarter," said Brotin Banerjee, managing director and chief executive officer.



The company may partner with local governments and land owners to launch its projects, he said.



He denied that the company was going the Tata group way, which derives 70 per cent of its revenues from international markets through companies such as Tata Steel , Tata Motors and others.



"It (international markets) will be a significant portion in the coming years but we will go in the reverse way to our parent. Nearly 80 per cent of our revenues will come from India [ Images ] and the rest from abroad," he said.



The company today launched an arm by the name of Smart Value Homes which will sell houses in the range of Rs 500,000 to Rs 35 lakh (Rs 3.5 million).



Tata Housing today announced the launch of its second 'Shubh Griha' project at Vasind, on the outskirts of Mumbai [ Images ], part of Smart Value Homes.



The new company will sell low-cost homes below Rs 10 lakh (Rs 1 million) and affordable homes between Rs 12 lakh (Rs 1.2 million) to Rs 35 lakh, he said.



The company has acquired five to six million sq ft of land and plans to acquire six-seven million sq ft more to launch its projects in Bangalore, Chennai, Hyderabad, Pune and Mumbai.



"All the segments of housing have high potential. But if Tata Housing did all of them, it would lead to dilution of our potential. Hence, we launched the new company," he said.




Source : Rediff.com
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Microsoft unveils first Windows Phone 7 handsets

Microsoft yesterday unveiled the first phones based on its Windows Phone 7 operating system. The first nine handsets are from Dell, HTC, LG and Samsung and all run on the Qualcomm Snapdragon processors. 



A number of operators have announced plans to offer the phones, including America Movil, AT&T, Deutsche Telekom, Movistar, O2, Orange, SFR, SingTel, Telstra, Telus, T-Mobile USA and Vodafone. 



Microsoft said a "broad selection" of the phones will begin shipping in time for this year's holidays, with more arriving in 2011, including phones from Sprint and Verizon Wireless. In addition, select models will be available at Microsoft Store locations and from Amazon. Unique features of the new OS include Live Tiles, similar to widgets which bring live updates form applications and services to the handset's home screen; mobile games over Microsoft's Xbox Live service; the Zune music service, available as a susbcription or via downloads and streaming from the Windows Marketplace; dedicated web search from the home screen with Bing; Windows Live to manage personal content, agenda and information from other Windows software; and the free Find My Phone service to remotely ring, lock, erase and show the location of the phone on a map.

Confirmed launches in time for the holdiays include AT&T with the HTC Surround, Samsung Focus, and LG Quantum; T-Mobile USA with the HTC HD7 and Dell Venue Pro; Telus with the HTC 7 Surround and LG Optimus 7; and America Movil with the LG Optimus 7 in Mexico. 




In Europe, O2 will offer the HTC HD7 in the UK and Germany; Orange will sell the HTC 7 Mozart and Samsung Omnia 7 in France and the UK; France's SFR has the HTC 7 Trophy and Samsung Omnia 7; Movistar will sell the LG Optimus 7, HTC HD7 and Samsung Omnia 7 in Spain; T-Mobile will offer the HTC 7 Mozart and Samsung Omnia 7 in Germany; and Vodafone has the HTC 7 Trophy in Germany, Spain and the UK and LG Optimus 7 in Germany, Italy, Spain and the UK.



In Asia, Singtel will sell the HTC HD 7 and LG Optimus 7 in its home market, while Telstra is launching the HTC 7 Mozart and LG Optimus 7Q in Australia. Vodafone will also sell the HTC 7 Trophy in Australia. Microsoft said that in total over 60 operators have confirmed plans to launch the phones in 30 countries.
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Airasia named the Best Asian Low-Cost Carrier

AirAsia was named the Best Asian Low-Cost Carrier by TTG, Asia Pacific’s leading travel news publisher.AirAsia was unanimously named Best Asian Low-Cost Carrier by the readers of TTG Asia, TTG China, TTGmice, TTG-BTmice China and ttgasia eDaily who cast 48,000 votes in a poll held from June to August this year.  The award reflects the airline’s popularity among travel trade insiders and the traveling public.Dato’ Aziz Bakar, chairman of AirAsia, received the award at the 21st Annual TTG Travel Awards 2010 Ceremony & Gala Dinner in Centara Grand & Bangkok Convention Centre at CentralWorld, Bangkok.  More than 700 travel industry professionals attended the event.

Dato’ Aziz said, “We are proud to be named the best low-cost airline again.  This award reflects AirAsia’s commitment to excellence and to growing travel and tourism in the region.  We have flown 100 million guests in only eight years of operations as a low-cost airline that has made it truly possible for everyone to fly.”

“The innovation that is AirAsia will go on serving the region with low fares, an extensive network of destinations, great flight frequencies and friendly ASEAN service,” he added.
Dato’ Aziz thanked the almost 8,000-strong AirAsians who have been instrumental in the success of the airline across all fronts.

In 2009, TTG’s editorial board also named AirAsia Group CEO Tony Fernandes the Travel Personality of the Year for being the “most outstanding individual for taking proactive steps to develop the travel industry and for demonstrating innovation in his field.”  Tony has led the airline in revolutionizing air travel and popularizing low fares that now allow everyone to fly.

The airline has invested millions of dollars in quality improvement measures that include the running of its world-class training center, the AirAsia Academy.  Technology is integrated in operations across the airline’s entire network to improve operational efficiency, and training programs are in place to ensure high quality service.

AirAsia, the leading and largest low-cost carrier in Asia, services the most extensive network with approximately 136 routes covering destinations in Asia, Australia and Europe. In 8 plus years of operations, AirAsia has carried more than 100 million guests and grown its fleet from just two aircraft to approximately 96. The airline today is proud to be a truly Asean (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) airline with established operations based in Malaysia, Indonesia and Thailand, servicing a network stretching across all Asean countries, China, India, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Australia. This is further complemented by AirAsia X, its low-cost long-haul affiliate carrier that currently flies to destinations in China, Australia, Taiwan, India, Iran, Japan, Korea and the UK. AirAsia is the regional carrier with the largest destination network and highest flight frequencies. AirAsia was named World’s Best Low Cost Airline in the annual World Airline Survey by Skytrax for two consecutive years in 2009 and 2010.
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