10 Indian's in Forbes 30 Under 30 List of "tomorrow's brightest stars" who are "reinventing the world
From a 29-year-old Goldman Sachs director to a graduate student developing energy conserving sensors, about 10 Indian-origin young turks have been named in a Forbes list of "tomorrow's brightest stars" who are "reinventing the world".
The Forbes' '30 under 30' list profiles about 360young "ultra impressive up-and-comers" that the companies shouldeither "hire today" or would be working for them in the future asthey are the young people of today "who matter".
The magazine has selected the young turks from 12diverse fields including energy, finance, media, law, entertainment, science,design and technology.Among the Indian-origin people on the list is 17year old Param Jaggi, a student and inventor at Austin College.An "award-winning high schooler", Jaggicreated algae-filled device that fits over a car's tailpipe and turns carbondioxide into oxygen.
Next is 23-year-old Vivek Nair, Chief Executive ofDamascus Fortune, who is developing a technology that transforms industrialcarbon emissions into carbon nanotubes.
In the finance sector is featured Vikas Mohindra,Financial Advisor at the Bank of America Merrill Lynch. The 25-year-old broker gathered $38 million inthree years from scratch, including a $5 million retirement savings plan.
Next is Manvir Nijhar, Co-Head of European EquityDerivatives Sales at Citigroup. The 28-year-old London School of Economics graduateleft BNP Paribas after a four-year stint to give "Citi's derivativesbusiness a jolt."
Following him is Kunal Shah, a 29-year-old ManagingDirector at Goldman Sachs. The youngest managing director the global financialgiant has ever seen, Shah was promoted at 27 and is the "Cambridge mathgrad turned rock star emerging markets trader," Forbes writes.
Making a mark in the field of science is29-year-old Raj Krishnan, Chief Executive of Biological Dynamics who isdeveloping blood tests that use electric fields to detect key signals that apatient has cancer from the blood.
At 27, Sidhant Gupta, a graduate student at theUniversity of Washington, is developing new sensors and software for the homethat conserve electricity, heat and gas.
Others featured in the list are 24-year-old NikhilArora, co-Founder of a business that sells 'grow-your-own- mushroom' kits using1 million lbs of recycled coffee grounds and 27-year-old Maneet Ahuja, aproducer at CNBC and a hedge fund expert who has been on Wall Street since shewas 17.
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