Monday, 18 November 2013

A new dawn for a new deal

A new dawn for a new deal
MIGUEL ÁNGEL LARA 11/18/2013
The two parties appear closer to agreeing a new deal for Xabi Alonso. Ancelotti may just find a present under the Christmas tree, because time is of the essence, forcing the club to make its move.
Even though a few weeks ago his future appeared to be heading away from the Bernabéu, things have now changed and the Basque midfielder is closer than he was before his injury to signing a new deal.
Ancelotti is, in footballing terms, in love with Xabi, whom he calls 'The Professor'. He sees him as an extension of himself on the pitch, and if he was a crucial member of the team before, Khedira’s injury has now made him indispensible.
The ball is in Xabi’s court
Alonso’s requests remain the same. A two-year deal and a pay rise which sees him take a step up the salary ladder at the club. The club knows what his demands are and it now has to sit down with the player.
Mourinho is waiting for him, but Madrid wants to keep him. Despite being 32 in June, his persistent groin problem, as well as the players brought in and those yet to arrive, Xabi remains indispensible. He wants his new contract to reflect how the club values his contribution on the pitch.

Changing trends: Technological developments in the banking sector

With branchless banking, MNOs have become players in the financial services arena as they tap into the unbanked population and remittance market. DESIGN: MUNIRA ABBAS
LAHORE: 
Technological advances are quickly changing the face of the Pakistani banking industry. Alternative channels are growing quickly and represent a sizable portion of banks’ revenue streams as all banks as well as mobile network operators are jumping on the ‘branchless banking’ bandwagon.
As I discussed in the previous piece about shrinking spreads, published on November 4, the business model utilised by commercial banks of collecting deposits and investing in treasury bills is not sustainable. No single additional revenue stream can completely compensate for the declining interest income, so banks will have to aggressively pursue revenue expansion from several diversified streams.
Competition is also expected to intensify in smaller cities as there are many underserved affluent customers in Hyderabad, Multan, Sukkur, etc. Aggressively growing mid-sized banks such as Bank Alfalah and Meezan Bank are looking to expand their branch network to these cities.
Given the intense competition and increasingly price-sensitive customers, price increase for standard banking services, such as cheque book issuance, is unlikely. To generate additional income, banks will have to develop new and innovative products and cross-sell to increase products per customer.
Data analytics
As mobile network operators (MNOs) have done, banks too need to establish business intelligence units which collect and analyse huge volumes of data to drive decision-making throughout the organisation. In coming days, data and analytics will drive growth, drive better risk behaviour and reduce costs. Analytics can help sales and marketing success by:
*Identifying profitability of customer segments and helping the business prioritise relationships/align channels accordingly
*Identifying propensity to buy amongst various customer profiles for more targeted sales efforts and increased success rate
*Identifying cross-sell opportunities to increase the number of products per customer
*Identifying profitable sub-segments to target with tailoured products/services
*Improving risk management through better credit monitoring and effective early warning systems
Alternative channels
At the moment, alternative distribution (online banking, call centres, ATMs, debit cards) is the happening place in retail banking, taking up a major chunk of investment. Banks need to try and create an ecosystem that captures the customer’s entire financial universe, enabling them to ring-fence customers, making them less susceptible to switching over to competition. This can only be done by providing an integrated multichannel offering, intelligently building alliances and attractive yet viable loyalty programmes.
More and more customers see the value of accessing their money 24/7 instead of being constrained by branch banking hours and locations and are signing up for debit cards and internet banking. As a result, alternative channels are contributing an increasingly higher percentage of fee income to the bottom line.
Seamless multichannel offering will reduce the burden on the branch network, cutting costs and improving service quality. Activities like utility bill payments and mobile phone top-ups through internet or call centres save customers a lot of time and effort while simultaneously reducing traffic in the branches. Successful banks will focus on shifting less profitable customers to low-cost channels.
The importance of branches will not decrease as their role will evolve into a sales and service channel with the bulk of transactions happening through remote channels. This could enable them to reduce the number of staff and also potentially increase the coverage area per branch.
Branchless banking
With high mobile penetration and low banking penetration (130 million mobile phone users vs 20 million bank account holders), it is clear branchless banking will have a huge role to play in the future. The number and value of transactions is growing day by day and agent networks are expanding rapidly. What is less clear is what sort of returns can be forecast for the heavy investments being made in setting up the infrastructure.
With branchless banking, MNOs have become players in the financial services arena as they tap into the unbanked population and remittance market. The partnering of banks with a network of retail outlets (agents) can greatly increase outreach and exponentially increase banking customers, which is why a number of banks have entered or will soon enter this market.
However, managing this scale of agents and customers will be very complicated as it is hard to build a network of agents that fulfill the criteria and, unlike the MNOs, banks have no experience in managing agent networks. Success will depend on the ability to develop and manage an extensive network of retail outlets.
The fewer partners the better, otherwise, the complexity will be difficult to handle. According to the McKinsey Quarterly, the experience from across the world is that most efficient operations involve the partnering of one financial institution with one or few distribution networks.
Currently, the bulk of activity is mostly in CNIC-to-CNIC money transfers. For branchless banking to really take off and bring about financial inclusion, however, providers need to move beyond over-the-counter transactions to products that promote a relationship with the customer and offer mobile wallets, savings products with decent returns and direct deposits (salary/pension credits, etc). Banks are moving towards this, but in my opinion it is still some years from fruition.
The writer works on retail banking strategy for a major commercial bank

Out of order: Power plant crashes, national grid loses

Technicians called in from Italy for repairs which may take up to four months. PHOTO: FILE
SUKKUR: The national grid suffered a loss of 235 megawatts when the Liberty Power Plant situated near Daharki district in Ghotki was compromised after its gas turbine caught fire.
On Sunday night, a fire broke out in the gas turbine following an explosion. The turbine, which runs the power plant, went out of order, causing a shortfall to the national grid. The entire Ghotki district and parts of Khairpur district were plunged into darkness following the incident. Though electricity was restored after a couple of hours, the quantum of load-shedding has increased from four hours to eight in some parts of Upper Sindh.
According to sources at the plant, the facility had suffered a loss of billions of rupees because of the negligence of the operational staff. They added that engineers and technicians had been called in from Italy to repair the plant and it might take up to four months to resume its operations. On the other hand, an operator at the plant’s exchange refuted the news of the fault, claiming that it was a routine shutdown for maintenance purposes.
Meanwhile, Sukkur Electric Power Company’s media manager, Noor Ahmed Soomro, toldThe Express Tribune that a fault in any single power plant does not affect the energy supplied to any particular area. He explained that all power plants are linked to the national grid and power supply to the affected areas is supplied through alternative sources.

Urban governance: ‘Karachi needs to do what LA did’

Los Angeles in many physical, social and environmental ways finds similarity with Karachi. It has a vast landscape, a varied ethnic mix - the only city in the US with a non-native American mayor - and a history of serious ethnic and territorial tensions. If Karachi adopts its model of ‘charter city’, it can also improve its governance structure. PHOTOS: FILE
KARACHI: 
Despite the rapid growth of cities in Pakistan, where the average annual rate of urbanisation exceeds four per cent since 1951 – there is little progress on developing governance systems for cities.
Rather than facilitating cities to act as the country’s engines of growth, governance systems in Pakistan are, in a number of ways, stifling their capacity to do so. What is needed is a radical transformation in the way our cities are governed and legislated.
Karachi – a city of over 18 million inhabitants, a centre of commerce, trade and services with the highest literacy rate in Pakistan – is faced with a serious and rapidly escalating crisis in governance and sustainability.  There are continuing unresolved conflicts between key political and non-state actors over control of land, resources and services that are exhibiting increasing complexity with a growing tendency of violent confrontations for leveraging political and administrative control. It is also unfortunate that the private sector, which has the potential to revitalise urban development, remains unutilised.
Karachi versus Los Angeles
This article aims to offer an alternative model of urban governance for the existing and emerging urban centres in Pakistan. This ‘charter or constitution city’ model potentially has the capacity to effectively respond to the emerging and future challenges by comparing Karachi with Los Angeles (LA), United States.
LA in many physical, social and environmental ways finds similarity with Karachi. It has vast landscape, a varied ethnic mix – the only city in the US with a non-native American mayor – and a history of serious ethnic and territorial tensions.
On June 8, 1999, the voters of LA adopted a new ‘city charter’, the first comprehensive and fundamental revision of the city’s governing document in 75 years. This charter came in response to the threat of the breakup of the city by a strong secessionist movement in several parts of the city, particularly in the San Fernando Valley. In response, LA leaders envisioned that, instead of closed-door political bargaining, better governance might help keep the city together – and it did! This potential needs to be explored and the same can happen in Karachi, as well.
Charter city
A charter city is a city in which the governing system is defined by the city’s own charter document. Such cities may be administered predominantly by citizens or through a third-party management structure, because a charter gives a city the flexibility to choose novel types of government structures. The fundamental document is the ‘city charter’ where no changes can be made without a vote of the people .Whether appointed or elected, all city officials are subject to recall by voters.
Another major challenge is the serious capacity deficit at the planning and technical staff level in city governments. In the case of LA, their city government has the office of the City Administrative Officer (CAO) that is appointed by the mayor with council’s approval, and is exempt from civil services. The CAO office serves as a central research staff for both the mayor and the council and assists both the two in the preparation and administration of the annual city budget. The staff consists of appointed experts in their relevant fields of experience.
Then there are the ‘boards’ and ‘commissions’ that serve as voices of city residents in the local government. The ‘charter’ calls for commissions to reflect the city’s diversity, including but not limited to communities of interest, neighbourhoods, ethnicity, race, gender, age and sexual orientation. The ‘charter’ also requires that some commissioners be chosen from particular geographic areas. These are some considerations that can provide workable solutions in an ethnically and politically divided city, such as Karachi.
Karachi, despite an inherent human resource and financial strength, still has to wait for financial packages from the federation to develop its key infrastructure. Not in the case of LA. The city runs its day-to-day operations using business-like principles, characteristic of large organisations. This can happen in Karachi and has the potential of changing the face of urban Pakistan for the better.

Lamborghini unveils AU$4.67m Veneno Roadster

Lamborghini has unveiled the Veneno Roadster, an AU$4.67 million super sports car limited to just nine production models in 2014.
As part of its 50th anniversary year, Lamborghini has unveiled a beast of a prototype. Next year, the luxury supercar company will be launching on to the market one of its most exclusive models: the Veneno Roadster, a sports racer with an asking price of €3.3 million.
The sleek, carbon-fibre roadster follows the Veneno, unveiled in March and limited to a production run of just three cars. They're named after a famous Spanish fighting bull — the fierce beast that adorns Lamborghini's logo — to signify power, strength and vigour.
With its cutting lines and brilliant red body, the open-topped Veneno Roadster is a stunning embodiment of speed and audacity.

Kickstarter officially opens in Australia and New Zealand

(Credit: Kickstarter)
Australian and New Zealand creators wishing to use Kickstarter can now start using the Kickstarter website, the crowdfunding giant announced today. But backers are going to have to wait — project funding isn't being launched until 13 November.
"We thought the month-long gap would give everyone plenty of time to build and tweak their projects before launching," Kickstarter said. "Beginning 13 November, they can launch and share their projects with the world."
Local projects will appear on the global Kickstarter home page, but backers will be able to search by location to filter them, and all projects will be listed in local currency. According to Kickstarter, the fees will also be similar to what Canada pays — 5 per cent for successfully funded projects and no fee for unsuccessful projects.
For backers, payments will operate a little differently. "The mechanics of Kickstarter (all-or-nothing funding, rewards, etc) are identical for all projects," Kickstarter wrote. "When pledging, however, backers of Australia- and New Zealand-based projects will enter their payment information directly on Kickstarter rather than through Amazon Payments. All pledges will be processed securely through a third-party payments processor."
While creators wait for the launch, they can also attend "Kickstarter School", a workshop program run by the company to help creators launch and run their campaigns. These can be found here for Australia, and New Zealand workshops can be found here.

Google Nexus 5 coming to Telstra

(Screenshot by Michelle Starr/CNET Australia)
The Google Nexus 5 is finally coming to Australia, with Telstra first off the rank to announce that it will be carrying the phone, available in Telstra stores from 26 November.
The 4G Nexus 5 — which is available through Google Play for AU$399 for the 16GB model and AU$449 for the 32GB model — will be available through Telstra on one of four plans.
  • The small plan is a minimum of AU$69 per month for 24 months and comes with AU$600 of talk and MMS, unlimited text and 1GB of data. Minimum cost over 24 months is AU$1656.
  • The medium plan is a minimum of AU$80 per month for 24 months and comes with AU$800 of talk and MMS, unlimited text, 1.5GB of data plus free talk every night from 7pm to 7am. Minimum cost over 24 months is AU$1920.
  • The large plan is a minimum of AU$100 per month for 24 months and comes with AU$900 of talk and MMS, unlimited text, 2GB of data plus free talk every night and on weekends. Minimum cost over 24 months is AU$2400.
  • The extra large plan is a minimum of AU$130 per month for 24 months and comes with unlimited talk and MMS, unlimited text and 3GB of data. Minimum cost over 24 months is AU$3120.
Telstra director of device management Andrew Volard said, "Customers have been waiting eagerly for this phone, which is the first Nexus phone to come with 4G functionality, and it couldn't arrive at a better time. Last week, we switched on our 3000th 4G-compatible base station, bringing our 4G coverage to four times that of any competitor network. That means customers using the Nexus 5 with Telstra will have access to superfast 4G speeds in more places than ever before."
The Nexus 5 can be pre-ordered now via the Telstra website. Customers who pre-order the phone will also receive a free AU$100 Google Play voucher while stocks last.