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More mirchi for pakis

Posted: Sep 6, 2007 Thu 05:52 am     Views: 217    Interacts: 0

FV and kuldip-nayyar wannabes will be greatly saddened by this..

Indian firms outshine others in Forbes' Fabulous 50

Anil K Joseph in Dalian | September 06, 2007 13:22 IST
Last Updated: September 06, 2007 13:41 IST

China may be the 'world's factory,' but Indian companies, led by software giants TCS [Get Quote] and Infosys [Get Quote], continue to outshine and dominate the annual ranking of big-cap, profitable companies in Asia.

A total of 12 Indian companies made it to the third annual Forbes Asia Fabulous 50 List, followed by Taiwan with 10 and China with seven, Forbes Asia said.

Four of India's IT outsourcing companies made the cut including the biggest, Tata Consultancy Services that writes software for leading American firms.

Its revenues leapt 45 per cent in the last year and its market capitalisation has doubled since listing three years ago to cross the $27 billion mark, the release said.

Tata earns nearly all of its revenues overseas but will move some of its work back to India, it said.

The 12 Indian companies on the Forbes Asia 'Fabulous 50' list are: Bharat Heavy Electricals [Get Quote], Bharti Airtel [Get Quote], Grasim Industries [Get Quote], HDFC Bank [Get Quote], ICICI Bank [Get Quote], Infosys Technologies, Larsen & Toubro, Reliance Industries [Get Quote], Satyam Computer Services [Get Quote], Tata Consultancy Services, Tata Steel [Get Quote] and Wipro [Get Quote].

Most of the Indian firms on the list, however, did not have to leave home to find success, the release noted.

With a relatively young population of 1.1 billion, India has its own huge market.

Companies such as ICICI Bank, HDFC Bank and Bharti Airtel are growing fast by reaching out to the country's rural customers, not to Western markets. Others, such as Grasim, Larsen & Toubro and Reliance, are shoring up the country's infrastructure at a furious pace.

Only companies with revenues or market capitalisation of at least $5 billion and a five-year record of operating profitability and return on equity are covered.

Other criteria include long-term profitability, sales and earnings growth, stock price appreciation and projected earnings.

The Fabulous 50 List appears in the September 17 issue of Forbes Asia.

China may be the world's factory, but all seven of the mainland's companies featured this year also rely on customers within its border.

They include China Mobile and the Lenovo Group. More Chinese companies would have made the list but transparency remains an issue, even at the biggest of the old state-owned enterprises, the release said.

Companies on the list are also supplementing organic growth with acquisitions. Tata Steel bought Britain's Corus Group to a chorus of cheers back home, despite the $13 billion price tag.

Close on the heels of India is Taiwan with ten companies on the list this year. Most of the firms represented are from the island's low-profile tech industry and include Hon Hai Precision Industry, which churns out iPhones, PCs and PlayStations.

Also doing well in the IT sector are Acer, Compal Electronics and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing which jave made a comeback on the list after dropping off last year.



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