Valuation Services Director
Weaver is hiring a Director for their Valuation Services practice in India to manage client engagements and lead internal teams. The role involves executing valuations for financial reporting and tax purposes, ensuring compliance with US GAAP and IFRS standards. Candidates must possess significant experience in public accounting or consulting, along with relevant professional certifications. The position requires strong expertise in valuation modeling and research tools while supporting U.S. clients.
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Experience
8+ years
Function
Finance
Work mode
Hybrid, India
Company
Tier 2
What you will work on
Weaver is hiring a Director for their Valuation Services practice in India to manage client engagements and lead internal teams. The role involves executing valuations for financial reporting and tax purposes, ensuring compliance with US GAAP and IFRS standards. Candidates must possess significant experience in public accounting or consulting, along with relevant professional certifications. The position requires strong expertise in valuation modeling and research tools while supporting U.S. clients.
TAL's take
Solid director-level role in a professional services firm with clearly defined technical requirements and expectations.
The JD is highly specific regarding technical standards, certification requirements, and scope of responsibilities.
Must haves
- Bachelor's or Master's in Finance, Economics, Accounting, or Business
- Relevant professional certifications (ASA, CPA/ABV, CVA, CFA, CEIV)
- 8+ years of experience in public accounting or consulting
- Expertise in US GAAP, IFRS, and specific ASC standards
- Proficiency in valuation research tools like Capital IQ
- Experience managing teams and client engagements
Tools and skills
About the company
Established accounting and advisory firm, but lacks the global brand visibility of Tier 1 firms.
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Consider that there was no Himalaya between India and China or India and Tibet. Then what will be the average temperature during summer
If the Himalayas did not exist, India’s climate — especially in northern and central India — would be dramatically different. The Himalayas are the single biggest geographical factor that keep India warm in winter and extremely hot in summer. Below is a clear, science-based breakdown of the impact: --- 🌡️ 1. Summer Temperature in India Without the Himalayas Without the Himalayas: A) Northern India (Delhi, Punjab, UP, Bihar) Currently: 40–48°C in peak summer. Without Himalayas: 25–32°C (much cooler!) Reason: The Himalayas block cold continental winds from Siberia and Central Asia. If those cold winds entered freely, they would moderate the extreme heat. So North India would have: Shorter summer Much milder heat Possibly spring-like temperatures even in May–June --- B) Central India (MP, Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, Maharashtra) Currently: 35–44°C Without Himalayas: 25–30°C Cold air masses from the north would penetrate deep into the subcontinent, keeping central India cool. --- C) South India (Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Kerala) Temperatures would remain 30–35°C Himalayas don’t influence the south directly, but overall continental cooling would reduce heat slightly: Expected: 28–33°C --- 🧊 2. How Siberian Winds Would Affect Indian Summer Siberian winds are: Cold Dry High-pressure winds With no Himalayas, these winds would enter India like this: Move through Tibet/China → Enter the Indo-Gangetic plains → Spread to central India. This would lead to: ✔ Cooler summers North India would never touch 45°C. The entire region would have temperatures more like Europe or Northern China. ✔ Dry, less humid summer Humidity would be low, more like Central Asian countries (Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan). ✔ Delay or weaken Indian monsoon Because: Cold, dry winds suppress rising warm air currents. Monsoon depends on strong heating of the Indian subcontinent. So: The monsoon would be weaker, maybe even unpredictable. Rainfall in India might reduce by 30–60%. --- ❄️ 3. More Extreme Seasonal Variation Without the Himalayas, India would experience continental climate like Russia/China: Summers: Cooler (20–32°C) Winters: Much colder (-5°C to 10°C in North India) North India may receive snowfall in winter, similar to Beijing or Central Asia. --- 🌍 Summary Table Region Current Summer Temp Without Himalayas Reason North India 40–48°C 25–32°C Siberian cold winds moderate heat Central India 35–44°C 25–30°C Cold continental air reaches deeper South India 30–38°C 28–33°C Slight moderation but still tropical Monsoon Strong Weak/Delayed No strong heating due to cooler land --- 🧠 Final Answer (Short Version) If the Himalayas didn’t exist: 🌡️ Indian summers would be 10–20°C cooler than today. 🌬️ Siberian winds would freely enter India, creating cool, dry summers similar to Central Asia.
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