Wednesday, September 17, 2008


IT stocks hit by global crisis


Mumbai, Sep 16 (PTI) IT stocks continued to fall for the second day today reeling under the impact of global financial crisis with the sectoral index taking a hit of 51.78, points or 1.44 per cent, amid concerns that the country's outsourcing sector will face the heat.
Shares of the country's largest software exporter TCS dropped 1.61 per cent to close at Rs 749.55 after touching an intra-day low of Rs 720, while IT major Infosys closed 0.64 per cent down at Rs 1,564.25.

Another IT major Satyam has an outsourcing deal with Lehman Brothers, wherein less than 100 employees of the domestic firm works for the US financial major.

When contacted, Satyam HR head SV Krishnan said, "The contract continues." However, he added, that he had not received any formal communication from Lehman Brothers.

Satyam scrip dropped 5.57 per cent to an intra-day low of Rs 336.50 on the Bombay Stock Exchange. The scrip settled at Rs 356.35, down 3.21 per cent.

Analysts said the scrip had also been impacted by reports that Satyam would be giving pink slips to 4,500 employees.

On this Krishnan said, "We have not asked anyone to leave the organisation." "The impact of the financial crisis in the US and the huge losses suffered by the global banks may have serious impact on outsourcing firms which mainly focus on the Banking and Financial service and insurance (BFSI) space in the global markets," an analyst with a leading domestic brokerage said. PTI

Thursday, September 11, 2008

If the USA outsources to India for a cost reduction, where does India outsource for a cost reduction?

Outsourcing service, new engine of China's economy

Outsourcing service will be the new engine of China's economy, vice Minister of Commerce Ma Xiuhong said in a seminar for China's Outsource Service Park at Xiamen recently.

Outsourcing service has been another important strategic choice of developing countries to participate in international competition, Ma said.

The preliminary statistics from January to August shows that there were 2,545 outsourcing service companies in China, and 1,907 of them have gained various international certifications; over 390,000 people are doing this job, and nearly 170,000 graduates of universities and colleges are taking the training; the total value of service outsourcing contracts was over 4.8 billion U.S. dollar, a 91.45% increase year-on-year.

By People's Daily Online

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

Published on FiercePharma (http://www.fiercepharma.com)

Outsourcing: Good for what ails pharma

Created Sep 9 2008 - 11:09am

What can save Big Pharma? Outsourcing, says AVOS Life Sciences consultant Neil MacAllister. But that outsourcing has to be well managed to deliver the kind of streamlined, effective operations drugmakers need these days, he says. And therein lies the rub, because pharma always has been a fully integrated kind of business: R&D to marketing and beyond--and everything in between. Execs have mostly been specialists. They'll have to become string-pulling outsourcing managers instead, and that's a tough shift to make.

But some companies are making progress. Consider the recent R&D deal between Eli Lilly and Covance [1]: the drugmaker essentially hired Covance to take over a big chunk of its research operations. And Lilly has outsourced other ops to Quintiles. Drugmakers are farming out computer modeling because they don't want to invest in the necessary technology, MacAllister says.

And, he says, there's still a lot of fat in Big Pharma--even after the thousands of layoffs [2]. He predicts more downsizing to come as drugmakers learn how to contract out more and more of their operations.

Monday, September 8, 2008

What about all that research money?

Outsourcing the Drug Industry

U.S. giants are rushing to partner with Indian and Chinese companies—tapping their brainpower and saving millions of dollars in the search for breakthrough treatments

by Pete Engardio and Arlene Weintraub

In her swank headquarters just blocks from some of Mumbai's worst slums, Swati Piramal is midway through an impassioned pitch about revolutionizing the world of drug discovery. Sanskrit passages of the Bhagavad Gita, the ancient Hindu text that guides her business philosophy, adorn the office walls of her company, Piramal Life Sciences. Its logo is gyan mudra, a finger gesture used in yoga meditation resembling the Western sign for "A-O.K."

Journey now to Bangalore. After a crawl through the city's notorious traffic and a bone-rattling ride over a cratered road that washes away with each rainfall, the four-wheel-drive van arrives at the glistening, ocean liner-shaped headquarters of Jubilant Biosys. The laboratories inside are world-class. But when equipment fails, repairs often take a week, scientist Ajith Kamath explains sheepishly. Lunch is Domino's pizza with toppings that include corn, Indian paneer cheese, and hot spices. Turns out Jubilant is co-owner of India's Domino's franchise.

At first glance, companies such as Jubilant and Piramal may seem too undeveloped—or perhaps just too culturally remote—to rub shoulders with the world's top pharmaceutical makers. But judging from all the deals taking shape in India, they may have a critical role to play in the industry's future. In recent months, Western executives have been flocking to India's hastily built science parks, looking for allies in the never-ending quest to develop blockbuster treatments. With little fanfare, they've started a process that could lead to wide-scale outsourcing of drug research to Asia.

Five Western companies have formed drug discovery partnerships with Jubilant, including Eli Lilly (LLY), Amgen, and Forest Laboratories (FRX). Lilly is also partnering with Piramal, as is Merck (MRK). Every month deals are signed with India's elite pharmaceutical companies. The goal is to take promising compounds discovered by the multinationals, run tests to weed out the weakest candidates, and develop some of the others into marketable drugs. Eventually the Indian partners also hope to rack up scientific breakthroughs that lead to entirely new medicines for diseases such as Alzheimer's, cancer, or diabetes.

Looking beyond India's potholed streets and poverty, Western drug executives say they've forged a powerful model for research collaboration. The timing is no accident. Despite spending billions at home on technologies to turn gene-based discoveries into new medicines, pharmaceutical companies are struggling to come up with revolutionary products that will pull them out of a five-year slump with virtually no revenue growth. In desperation, the drug giants are paying hefty premiums to swallow biotech companies—witness Roche's $44 billion bid to purchase Genentech (DNA) in July.

What the multinationals now seek from India is the same combination of brainpower and cost savings that made the subcontinent a leader in software and computer services. Some Western companies are volunteering to share intellectual-property rights on new discoveries and even divvy up the profits. "It's a transformation of the R&D enterprise," says Robert W. Armstrong, Lilly's vice-president for global external research. "We have to think in a totally different mode."

The rush east, where five PhD chemists can be had for the cost of one in the West, entails risks. At a time when Pfizer (PFE), AstraZeneca (AZN), and others are slashing U.S. R&D jobs by the thousands, the buildup in Asia is bound to set off alarms that America is sacrificing another key industry through radical outsourcing. But if the strategy works, it could save the drug industry billions of dollars, bring down the prices of new drugs, and accelerate breakthroughs.

The impact of research outsourcing will be amplified greatly as China, with an even bigger pool of biochemists, expands its role. Lilly, Sanofi-Aventis (SNY), and others have already struck up partnerships there. China has "extraordinary potential," says Eric J. Topol, former chief cardiologist at the Cleveland Clinic, who advises HUYA Bioscience, a drug licensing venture based in San Diego. China could yield "a flood of potentially important therapies. It's just a matter of time".

The East-West research collaborations are new and have yet to produce a single drug. But many Western executives say they're stunned at how quickly the Indian industry is achieving targets set by the joint ventures. Just a few decades ago, India was a outcast in the pharma business. To the outrage of Western multinationals, New Delhi in the 1970s declared it would cease honoring patents on pharmaceuticals. Thousands of generic drugmakers then sprouted up, reverse-engineering Western medicines and distributing them in India and in other developing countries. The Indian executives argued they were providing a social service, selling antibiotics, say, for a fraction of what Western patent holders demanded. In the 1990s, Indian generics makers Cipla and Ranbaxy Laboratories started selling AIDS cocktails in India and Africa at just $1 per dose.

Even Indian drug executives, however, realized the knockoff business is a dead end. Almost all of India's top pharma managers say their cherished goal is to stamp out diseases in the Third World. That will require breakthrough medicines, not factories full of pirated generics. They also recognize the only way to jump-start a modern industry is through collaboration with Western drug companies. So in 2003, New Delhi reversed course and said it would protect the rights of foreign patent holders.

The first collaborations involved fairly simple lab work, mainly to save on labor costs. The Indians wanted more responsibility. But while India had plenty of good chemists who could crank out drug knockoffs, it lacked biologists with the deep knowledge and experience to develop novel compounds.

When Sandeep Gupta, a former Forest Labs research director, toured Indian pharma companies in 2006, he urged the CEOs to import talent fast. "I told them unless they expanded their biology capability, I couldn't [make deals] with them," he says. Soon, local drugmakers were snatching up thousands of Indian-born biologists who had trained abroad and offering them leadership opportunities. Jubilant nabbed Kamath, a 14-year veteran of Pfizer, to head its nascent structural biology department, and V.N. Balaji, who had worked at Monsanto (MON) and Allergan (AGN), as chief scientific officer. The company quickly expanded its team of 50 chemists and drug discovery experts to an army of 700. "If you told me five years ago this would all be here today, I would have replied 'no way,' " Kamath says.

Over time, the partnerships evolved into co-development arrangements. The turning point was a 2003 collaboration between GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) and Ranbaxy. Glaxo handed over novel compounds thought to have medicinal value and offered its Indian partner a share of the intellectual-property rights and millions in royalties if it could help develop a commercial drug. Western drug companies have announced about $400 million worth of such deals so far, but the total value is probably much higher. BristolMyersSquibb, for example, has expanded a research partnership with Bangalore-based Biocon. It includes a state-of-the-art research facility that will house 400 scientists—the cost of which has not been announced.

For the Western partners, the first objective in these alliances is to cut costs. In the U.S., specialized research outsourcing firms will charge a drug company $250,000 and up for the full-time services of a PhD chemist. With an Indian partner, the same work can be done for roughly one-fifth the cost. But what Western companies long for, more than anything, is to replenish their drug development pipelines. It can cost as much as $100 million to nurture a potential drug from a germ of an idea to the point where it is tested in people. After all that, the odds of any drug winning Food & Drug Administration approval are just 1 in 8. By conducting many experiments in low-cost Asia, the drug companies believe they can run more projects while keeping R&D budgets flat. In other words, they gain "more shots on goal"—a phrase that gets repeated so frequently you'd think it's a quote from a sacred Indian text.

The other catchphrase that comes up constantly is "fail fast, fail cheap." When scientists study potential drugs in the test tube and then in animals, they detect many problems that ultimately cause drugs to fail, such as toxic side effects or inadequate absorption in the body. Killing projects at that stage is essential, because most of the cost to develop a drug—a few hundred million dollars, typically—comes later, during human clinical trials. In effect, Western drugmakers want to front-load the failures through early-stage screening in India, says C.S.N. Murthy, CEO of Bangalore-based Aurigene. "Here, you can get four failures for the price of one."

In the early days, Western executives were suspicious of their Indian partners with their history drug knockoffs. Yet they were also powerfully attracted. Mervyn Turner, a senior research vice-president at Merck, says his first trip to India in November 2007 was "mind-blowing." He was impressed by the local companies' yearning to do world-class research and by their passionate, charismatic leaders. In Mumbai, he met Piramal, the Harvard-educated daughter of a textile mogul, who explained that she chose medicine to find a cure for polio. (What about the Salk vaccine?) She's "a force of nature," he says.

A look inside Forest Lab's partnership with Aurigene shows both the strengths of the new research model and the hurdles it faces. Forest has given Aurigene some prized, proprietary data on how novel drugs might attack metabolic disorders such as diabetes. Aurigene's job is to screen a library of therapeutic chemicals and come up with a drug. Each company has assigned three senior staff to a "joint research council," and parallel teams of chemists and biologists keep in constant touch via teleconferences. Murthy says speed is of the essence. While large U.S. labs struggle with bureaucracy, "in a place like this, a scientist makes some computations in the morning, and by the afternoon he has all the data. He doesn't call a meeting. He walks up to a colleague and stands over him until he gets what he needs." Forest and Aurigene recently designed a drug and started animal tests in just three months—a quick kick-off by U.S. and European standards.

Western drug companies are giving Asian partners more responsibilities than they ever imagined. Suven Life Sciences, an Indian startup in Hyderabad, is co-developing drugs for brain diseases with Lilly. As part of the deal, Suven can work on its own drugs for Alzheimer's, obesity, and Parkinson's disease, provided they don't compete with jointly developed products. Early on, Lilly sought to impose restrictions on Suven's own research. "We didn't have any flexibility," says CEO Venkat Jasti. But as the relationship evolved, Jasti prevailed on his U.S. partners to toss that paperwork in the trash. "We can't do it the Lilly way," Jasti says. "Innovation comes from freedom."

Links

Taming the Drug Research Monster

In the May 2008 issue of Harvard Business Review, retired GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) CEO Jean-Pierre Garnier says drug companies should bust up their research models. Many still operate under a "pyramid" setup, with scientists cubbyholed in their areas of expertise. "Something happened on the way to the new century," Garnier writes. "Employment multiplied by 20. The pyramid became a monster, and everything suffered." Instead of resorting to radical outsourcing, Garnier suggests building "constellations" of small, independent research units. Glaxo now has 12 research centers focused on disease areas, each with its own CEO, and there are no more than three management layers between the chief and key scientists.

Engardio is an international senior writer for BusinessWeek. Weintraub is a senior writer for BusinessWeek's science and technology department.

With Nandini Lakshman in Mumbai

Thursday, September 4, 2008

Printed from

India not immune to global tremors, says RBI
30 Aug, 2008, 0845 hrs IST, ET Bureau


MUMBAI: Even as analysts talk about India continuing to be the second-fastest-growing economy, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has sought to inject some caution. The central bank has said the resilience of India and other emerging markets cannot be guaranteed and has warned about moderation in growth. In its annual report for 2007-08, the central bank also pointed out that there's uncertainty on how long the divergence between growth of advanced and emerging economies will continue.

The annual report said outlook on capital flows to the emerging markets remains uncertain. On one hand, a massive injection of liquidity by central banks of developed economies has lead to large capital inflows to emerging markets. On the other hand, a change in global sentiments or monetary policy actions. "While emerging markets have remained resilient so far, there is uncertainty as to how long and to what extent the divergence of growth performance between advanced economies and emerging economy will persist in the future," said the report.

The central bank has also pointed out that the global slowdown could have its impact on services sector since Indian BPO and IT-enabled services are mainly dependent on external market conditions. On one hand, cost-cutting measures in developed countries might increase outsourcing to India but on the other hand, a reduction in IT spending in these economies might work against BPO and IT-enabled services.


Also Read
 → It may be too soon to exit oil-dollar bet
 → GDP hits 7.9 pc in Q1, slowest in three years
 → RBI hints at stringent steps to rein in inflation
 → No conclusion from one week's inflation: FM


"As the global economy slows down, companies largely from developed economies, in their quest for reducing cost, might outsource a part of their operations to cheaper and efficient markets as India... As global slowdown has hit the financial services industry the most, outsourcing activities to India may decline as the financial services companies reduce their geographical operations," said RBI in its report.

The central bank has said although the inflation risk continues, given that services constitute the predominant share of GDP, the adverse impact of fuel price pass through on the GDP may be somewhat lower, relative to other emerging markets. Unlike the global economy, which is expected to slowdown significantly, the Indian economy is expected to see slight moderation in growth.

Monetary policy may be tightened to modulate demand due to increasing global concerns on account of inflation and inflationary expectations. But conducting monetary policy is getting complicated by global developments and domestic demand pressures. The central bank has also highlighted the importance of fiscal policy in pushing the demand in the economy. Fiscal concessions in the form of higher tax exemption limits and adjustment of slabs may enhance disposable limits and adjustment of tax slab could enhance spending power.

This may have a positive impact on consumption demand, it said.

chicagotribune.com

Ford cuts shift at area plant, resulting in 600 fewer jobs

By Wailin Wong

Chicago Tribune reporter

September 4, 2008

Ford Motor Co. will drop one of the two shifts at its Chicago assembly plant by Nov. 3, a move that will result in the loss of jobs for about 600 temporary part-time workers.

Ford spokeswoman Anne Marie Gattari said Wednesday that the company is still "working through what the impact would be" on other employees. About 2,200 people work at the plant at 130th Street and Torrence Avenue.

The future of at least one shift has been uncertain over the past year. In March, as part of a cost-cutting effort, Ford said it would eliminate one shift at the Chicago plant and others elsewhere.

But in June, the company said two shifts would continue because United Auto Workers Local 551 approved a contract that included altering the production schedule to four 10-hour shifts a week instead of five eight-hour shifts.

The plant makes the Ford Taurus, the Ford Taurus X crossover and the Mercury Sable. It also started producing the Lincoln MKS sedan over the summer, Gattari said. Production at the plant fell 15 percent last year, to 131,646, roughly half of the facility's capacity for two shifts.

On Wednesday, Ford said sales of its Ford, Lincoln and Mercury cars tumbled almost 9 percent in August from a year ago. Ford's overall U.S. sales were down 26.5 percent compared with a year earlier.

Officials of United Auto Workers Local 551 could not be reached for comment. Employees were informed of the decision last week.

Tribune news services contributed to this report.

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Poor IT crippling outsourcing, say software firms

Students look for employment information at the 2008 IT Job Day held in Ho Chi Minh City by NIIT University and Quang Trung Software City Co. in March.
Software companies with Vietnamese outsourcing contracts have to retrain even graduates of the country's top institutions as they lack foreign language skills, math abilities and even technical knowledge.

The low quality of Vietnamese IT workers is posing a threat to the growing local software outsourcing market, which the government aims to expand into one of the world's largest.

The number of information technology (IT) graduates increases every year in Vietnam, but the quality of training is still poor, reported the Ho Chi Minh City Computer Association (HCA).

Vietnam has 390 universities, colleges and training centers specializing in IT education, 43 of which opened in the last 12 months, according to HCA.

More than 50,000 new students were admitted into these establishments in 2008, 11,000 more than over the last year.

Despite the high numbers, the competence of human resources in the software sector is much lower than other countries, said Nguyen Quoc Hung, director of the Ho Chi Minh City-based LogiGear Vietnam Company.

"I'm worried about the quality of IT master's degree holders and engineers, even those that graduate from the country's most renowned universities," said Dong Thi Bich Thuy, director of the University of Natural Sciences HCMC's computer skills training center.

Only 10 percent of IT graduates meet the requirements of software companies, Thuy said.

People not price

Principal of the University of Information Technology in HCMC, Hoang Kiem, said most graduates from IT institutions, including the country's best schools, have two weak points: foreign language skills and the ability to understand new technology.

"To become good programmers, students must be good at mathematics and logical thinking, but many of our programming students lack both skills," said director of Nang Dong Communications Company Nguyen Minh Hung.

Most companies have to spend between three and six months at least to train fresh graduates to meet company requirements, Hung said.

Due to the shortage of qualified human resources, software companies have to poach staff from other businesses.

"To make Vietnam the world's largest software outsourcing market, Vietnamese workers have to meet international standards… the cheap price is not a competitive edge anymore," said Phi Anh Tuan, director of the HCMC-based branch of CMC Corporation, a software company, and vice chairman of HCA.

Where is Vietnam?

Vietnam was the first choice of Japanese companies seeking foreign partners for software outsourcing orders, according to a survey by the Japan Information Technology Services Industry Association last year.

The country has also been listed as one of the world's 20 most attractive markets for software outsourcing, according to a recent survey by the US-based consulting firm A.T Kearney.

Vo Hong Ky, director of HCMC's HPT Software Center, said local software businesses perform all software outsourcing services, but most orders they receive are related to software testing and data entry.

Testing is just a small procedure, according to Dang Quang Minh, director of VnPro Networking Training Center.

"We all want high-level orders, but our current capacity does not allow us that," Tuan said.

On a scale where one is the easiest task and five is the most complicated service, said director of iNet Solutions Corporation Nguyen Van Hien, Vietnamese outsourcing contractors generally perform level 2.5 services.

According to the government's software outsourcing industry development goals, the industry must achieve a 35-40 percent growth rate with sales of US$800 million per year by 2010.

The goal aims to make Vietnam one of the 15 most developed software outsourcing industries in the world.

Source: SGTT

 
Story from Thanh Nien News
Published: 03 September, 2008, 11:24:20 (GMT+7)
Copyright Thanh Nien News