AJAN | BSE | Amrutanjan Health Care Ltd | Continuation Wedge (Bullish) | 465.45 | 638.00 - 678.00 | Intermediate-Term Bullish |
ANLP | BSE | Anil Products Ltd | Continuation Wedge (Bullish) | 130.00 | 150.00 - 155.00 | Intermediate-Term Bullish |
CBI | NSE | Central Bank Of India | Continuation Wedge (Bullish) | 135.60 | 172.00 - 180.00 | Intermediate-Term Bullish |
HYDI | NSE | Hyderabad Industries Ltd | Continuation Diamond (Bullish) | 408.00 | 501.00 - 522.00 | Intermediate-Term Bullish |
NAFT | NSE | National Fertilisers Ltd | Symmetrical Continuation Triangle (Bullish) | 60.70 | 96.00 - 104.00 | Long-Term Bullish |
UTVS | BSE | UTV Software Communications Ltd | Continuation Wedge (Bullish) | 440.20 | 566.00 - 596.00 | Intermediate-Term Bullish |
VYPR | BSE | Vyapar Industries Ltd | Double BottomW | 46.10 | 84.00 - 94.00 | Long-Term Bullish |
Get Daily Updated Indian share market News,stock's Buying & Selling tips,Top Five Sensex,Nifty Gainer's & Loser's in the share market. From both Bse (Bombay Stock Exchange) & Nse (National Stock Exchange). Share Market Tips & Information will always be Free on our site.
Sunday, November 8, 2009
Technical Event® Alerts at Close of Business November 06, 2009
Accumulate Bharti Airtel, target of Rs 358
Angel Broking has come out with a research report on Bharti Airtel's Q2FY10 earnings. The research firm has maintained an accumulate rating on the stock, with a target price of Rs 358, including Rs 56 being the value of its Towerco business, in its report dated November 6, 2009.
"Going ahead, we expect Bharti to record a CAGR of 8.8% and 2% in its topline and bottomline, respectively, over FY2009-11E. At the CMP, the stock is trading at 13.8x FY2011E EPS, at an EV/EBITDA of 7x FY2011E EBITDA and at an EV/subscriber of US $115 on our FY2011E subscriber base. However, considering: 1) The specific nature of the telecom sector, wherein new players are at a material cost disadvantage to incumbents who are enjoying huge economies of scale, 2) Established brands, comprehensive network coverage and widespread distribution also bring down customer acquisition costs for the incumbents, and 3) In the medium-term, we believe that the customer base that the new entrants acquire will have value in the hands of incumbents and consolidation appears the most likely scenario, which will be beneficial for Bharti, we maintain an Accumulate on the stock, with a target price of Rs 358, including Rs 56 being the value of its Towerco business", says Angel Broking.
Angel Broking has come out with a research report on Lloyd Electric's Q2FY10 earnings. The research firm has upgraded recommendation on the stock from
Angel Broking has come out with a research report on Lloyd Electric's Q2FY10 earnings. The research firm has upgraded recommendation on the stock from neutral to buy, with a target price of Rs 76, in its report dated November 6, 2009.
"Lloyd is the largest manufacturer of AC coils in India and also manufactures completely built units of ACs on a contract basis. Most of the AC manufacturers in India feature in the client list of Lloyd. The penetration of ACs is very low in India, at approximately 1.5 - 2%, compared to approximately 20% in developed countries, which will continue to drive the Sales of ACs in India. Further, during FY2009, the company has acquired a plant in Czechoslovakia, from Luvata, which would give Lloyd a foothold in Europe and add to its top-line and bottom-line. At the CMP, the stock trades at 3.4x its FY2011E EPS of Rs 15.1. The company enjoys excellent positioning in the AC market in India and, we believe, that the stock has a limited downside from its current level. In light of the changed business dynamics and consequently revised estimates, we upgrade our recommendation from neutral to buy, with a target price of Rs76", says Angel Broking.
Monday, April 27, 2009
Stock Market Trading Tips

2) Growth is good and welcome at a young age. A child will be thrilled for growing-up. Growth is not so welcome at a middle age and old age. Middle & Old-aged people are scared of growing up and ageing. Before paying a fancy price for any stock for growth, you should consider this rustic rule. Only if the sector is in a nascent stage of growth and the child (company) is healthy, then only you should pay a high price for any growth stock.
3) Even if the tomatoes are fresh, cheap and plentily available in the season, we buy maximum a week's requirement or fortnight's appetite. If you buy more than your appetite (requirement) , they will rot away. Similarly, in the stock market also, even if the shares are available cheap, you should not buy more than your appetite (pocket), by heavily leveraging. Otherwise, you will rot away.
4) While selecting a groom, the parents not only see the boy's earnings, but also his lineage, education, honesty etc., Similarly, while selecting a company for equity investment, we have to not only see its earnings (P/E ratio) but also see its lineage (promoters), its education (corporate governance) and its honesty (fair sharing of riches with all the stakeholders) etc.,
Saturday, March 8, 2008
I remember the first time several years ago when I witnessed a stock market correction, my portfolio was down by over 50% and I too had entered panic mode. But thankfully after reading books on investing and listening to more experienced investors, I decided not to panic and hold my quality stocks. I am a much happier person today thanks to that decision.
Here are seven simple ways to survive a stock market correction as an investor:
1. Stop Listening To Analysts
Most analysts in the media instead of providing you with a solution will just confuse you. Somebody will say everything is doomed while others will say things are great in the long term. Forget listening to analysts- most of them won’t be of any help. The reason people listen to analysts is because they are looking for peace and hope. Trust me you will get none of that by listening to somebody else. Peace and hope are all within you.
2. Stop Staring At Your Portfolio Every Thirty Minutes
Another mistake people make is that they get up every morning and wait for the markets to open. Once markets open they start staring at their stock prices. A fall makes you feel worse and small rise makes you feel a little better. This won’t help either. Instead keep track of the fundamentals of your company every time the results are out. If your company is profitable and growing - be happy. If it isn’t, find out if you need to exit. The stock price will catch up in the near future if business is growing. Do you stare at your money kept in a bank FD everyday? Most probably not. Use the same principle when you invest in stocks or mutual funds.
3. Be Patient
Many of you might not have a lot of cash to buy cheap now; however please be patient with whatever you have bought. Even the youngest billionaire on Earth today is 23 years old. It took him 23 years to be a billionaire and he didn’t do it in few days or weeks. The youngest billionaire probably in history is 23-year-old Mark Zuckerberg - the founder of the social networking site-Facebook.
4. Speak To Actual Investors With Experience
Instead of interacting with analysts or your broker, speak with people who are actual investors and who have been in the market for longer periods of time than you. They will tell you how they have survived various stock market corrections and what has made them richer. Read and learn more about people who have actually created wealth and sustained it over a long period of time.
5. Stop Following Crazy Tips
Please for heaven’s sake stop following ‘hot’ tips which promise to make you a millionaire in a matter of months. Maybe the ‘hot’ tip is only meant for billionaires who would end up as millionaires in case they do follow the tip. If it seems to good to be true, it is probably just a scam, which hopes to take money away from retail investors and put them in the hands of greedy manipulators. Similarly stop following rumours about how fundamentally strong companies are going to be shut down and go bankrupt in the next few months. Use your own head and trust yourself.
6. Understand Market Cycles
Every asset class has a cycle. Stock markets, mutual funds, real estate all move in cycles. Please realize that nothing can keep going up forever in a single direction. There will be phases when prices will come down and again move up. If you go back into history you will see several instances when stock prices came down, however over a period of time quality companies always reward investors. Understand market cycles, and don’t become a slave to them.
7. Follow The Guru
Today the richest man on earth, Warren Buffett, is an investor who has created wealth because he has stayed away from what everybody else is doing and has simply invested in quality companies for the long term. He invested in Gillette, for the simple reason that he believed that men won’t stop shaving. It makes sense to follow, as I call him, “The Guru” and think long term and remember people who create wealth do things that others don’t.
I’m sure if you follow the simple techniques above you will be a much happier and a calmer investor. Investing is about controlling your emotions and being disciplined about what you do.
Wednesday, February 6, 2008
JSW Energy filed papers for IPO
JSW Energy is part of the Sajjan Jindal-led JSW group, which has presence in steel, power, cement, aluminium, software, and infrastructure sectors. JM Financial, Kotak Mahindra Capital and ICICI Securities are book running lead managers to the issue.
Reliance Infratel to mop up Rs 6,000 cr via IPO
The Anil Ambani group company has proposed to offload 10.05 per cent stake to the public, which puts the valuation of the company at around Rs 60,000 crore. The IPO follows that of another group company, Reliance Power, which is to be listed on February 11. According to the DRHP, Reliance Infratel has proposed to offload 8,91,64,100 equity shares of Rs 5 each at a price that will be decided through the book building process. Around 60 per cent of the issue will be allocated to Qualified Institutional Buyers (QIBs), with 5 per cent for mutual funds, and 30 per cent to be allocated on a proportionate basis to retail individual bidders.