ON 15.12.11 WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY SILVER AT CMP OF $28.66 WITH A STOPLOSS OF $28.15 FOR A TARGET OF $29.48, $29.66 AND $29.98. OUR THIRD TARGET OF $29.98 ACHIEVED ON 17.12.11. SILVER NOW HAS TARGETS OF $30.28, $30.53 AND $30.88.
Wednesday, December 21, 2011
2ND BINGO! GOLD REACHED OUR THIRD TARGET OF $1628
ON 15.12.11 WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY GOLD AT CMP OF $1564 WITH A STOPLOSS OF $1535 FOR A TARGET OF $1588, $1613 AND $1628. OUR FIRST TARGET OF $1588 ACHIEVED TODAY. BINGO! NOW NEXT TARGETS R $1643, $1658 AND $1673.
1ST BINGO! GOLD REACHED OUR SECOND TARGET OF $1613
ON 15.12.11 WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY GOLD AT CMP OF $1564 WITH A STOPLOSS OF $1535 FOR A TARGET OF $1588, $1613 AND $1628. OUR SECOND TARGET OF $1613 ACHIEVED TODAY. BINGO!
Saturday, December 17, 2011
2ND BINGO! SILVER REACHED OUR THIRD TARGET OF $29.98
ON 15.12.11 WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY SILVER AT CMP OF $28.66 WITH A STOPLOSS OF $28.15 FOR A TARGET OF $29.48, $29.66 AND $29.98. OUR THIRD TARGET OF $29.98 ACHIEVED TODAY. BINGO!
1ST BINGO! SILVER REACHED OUR SECOND TARGET OF $29.66
ON 15.12.11 WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY SILVER AT CMP OF $28.66 WITH A STOPLOSS OF $28.15 FOR A TARGET OF $29.48, $29.66 AND $29.98. OUR SECOND TARGET OF $29.66 ACHIEVED TODAY. BINGO!
Friday, December 16, 2011
2ND BINGO! SILVER REACHED OUR FIRST TARGET OF $29.48
ON 15.12.11 WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY SILVER AT CMP OF $28.66 WITH A STOPLOSS OF $28.15 FOR A TARGET OF $29.48, $29.66 AND $29.98. OUR FIRST TARGET OF $29.48 ACHIEVED TODAY. BINGO!
1ST BINGO! GOLD REACHED OUR FIRST TARGET OF $1588
ON 15.12.11 WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY GOLD AT CMP OF $1564 WITH A STOPLOSS OF $1535 FOR A TARGET OF $1588, $1613 AND $1628. OUR FIRST TARGET OF $1588 ACHIEVED TODAY. BINGO!
Thursday, December 15, 2011
BUY SILVER AT CMP OF $28.66 WITH A STOPLOSS OF $28.15
WE RECOMMEND TO BUY SILVER AT CMP OF $28.66 WITH A STOPLOSS OF $28.15 FOR A TARGET OF $29.48, $29.66 AND $29.98.
BUY GOLD AT CMP OF $1564 WITH A STOPLOSS OF $1535
WE RECOMMEND TO BUY GOLD AT CMP OF $1564 WITH A STOPLOSS OF $1535 FOR A TARGET OF $1588, $1613 AND $1628.
3RD BINGO! NIFTY FUTURES REACHED OUR THIRD TARGET OF 4783
TODAY WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY NIFTY FUTURES AT CMP OF 4710 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 4668 FOR A TARGET OF 4743, 4768 AND 4783. OUR THIRD TARGET OF 4783 ACHIEVED TODAY ITSELF. BINGO!
2ND BINGO! NIFTY FUTURES REACHED OUR SECOND TARGET OF 4768
TODAY WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY NIFTY FUTURES AT CMP OF 4710 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 4668 FOR A TARGET OF 4743, 4768 AND 4783. OUR SECOND TARGET OF 4768 ACHIEVED TODAY ITSELF. BINGO!
1ST BINGO! NIFTY FUTURES REACHED OUR FIRST TARGET OF 4743
TODAY WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY NIFTY FUTURES AT CMP OF 4710 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 4668 FOR A TARGET OF 4743, 4768 AND 4783. OUR FIRST TARGET OF 4743 ACHIEVED TODAY ITSELF. BINGO!
BUY NIFTY FUTURES AT CMP OF 4710 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 4668
WE RECOMMEND TO BUY NIFTY FUTURES AT CMP OF 4710 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 4668 FOR A TARGET OF 4743, 4768 AND 4783.
Thursday, December 08, 2011
1ST BINGO! AUTOLINE IND REACHED OUR NINETH TARGET OF 128.80
ON 08.12.11 WE RECOMMENDED OUR PAID SUBSCRIBERS TO BUY AUTOLINE AT CMP OF 108 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 106 FOR A TARGET OF 113.80, 115.40, 116.80, 118.40, 119.80, 122.80, 124.40, 126.80 AND 128.80. OUR NINETH TARGET OF 128.80 ACHIEVED TODAY. BINGO!
Monday, December 05, 2011
2ND BINGO! ORCHID CHEM REACHED OUR TWELFTH TARGET OF 169.80
ON 25.11.11 WE RECOMMENDED OUR PAID SUBSCRIBERS TO BUY ORCHID CHEM AT CMP OF 148.50 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 146 FOR A TARGET OF 152.80, 154.40, 155.80, 157.40, 158.80, 160.40, 161.80, 163.40, 165.80, 167.40, 168.80 AND 169.80. OUR TWELFTH TARGET OF 169.80 ACHIEVED TODAY. BINGO AGAIN!
1ST BINGO! SATYAM COMPUTER REACHED OUR FOURTH TARGET OF 73.40
ON 28.11.11 WE RECOMMENDED OUR PAID SUBSCRIBERS TO BUY SATYAM COMP AT CMP 66 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 64 FOR A TARGET OF 68.80, 70.40, 71.80, 73.40, 74.80 AND 76.40. OUR FOURTH TARGET OF 73.40 ACHIEVED TODAY. BINGO AGAIN!
Tuesday, November 29, 2011
4TH BINGO! TTK PRESTIGE REACHED NINETH TARGET OF 2693
ON 25.11.11 WE RECOMMENDED OUR PAID SUBSCRIBERS TO BUY TTK PRESTIGE AT CMP OF 2520 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 2496 FOR A TARGET OF 2548, 2563, 2588, 2613, 2628, 2643, 2663, 2678 AND 2693. OUR NINETH TARGET OF 2693 ACHIEVED TODAY. BINGO!
3RD BINGO! VIP IND REACHED OUR SIXTH TARGET OF 128.40
ON 22.11.11 WE RECOMMENDED OUR PAID SUBSCRIBERS TO BUY VIP IND AT CMP OF 114 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 111 FOR A TARGET OF 117.80, 119.40, 123.80, 125.40, 126.80 AND 128.40. OUR SIXTH TARGET OF 128.40 ACHIEVED TODAY. BINGO!
2ND BINGO! NIFTY F&O REACHED OUR EIGHTH TARGET OF 4873
ON 25.11.11 WE RECOMMENDED OUR PAID SUBSCRIBERS TO BUY NIFTY FUTURES AT CMP OF 4716 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 4680 FOR A TARGET OF 4748, 4763, 4788, 4813, 4828, 4843, 4858, 4873 AND 4888. OUR EIGHTH TARGET OF 4873 ACHIEVED TODAY. BINGO!
1ST BINGO! ORCHID CHEM REACHED OUR SIXTH TARGET OF 160.40
ON 25.11.11 WE RECOMMENDED OUR PAID SUBSCRIBERS TO BUY ORCHID CHEM AT CMP OF 148.50 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 146 FOR A TARGET OF 152.80, 154.40, 155.80, 157.40, 158.80 AND 160.40. OUR SIXTH TARGET OF 160.40 ACHIEVED TODAY ITSELF. BINGO!
Monday, November 28, 2011
3RD BINGO! ORCHID CHEM REACHED OUR FOURTH TARGET OF 157.40
ON 25.11.11 WE RECOMMENDED OUR PAID SUBSCRIBERS TO BUY ORCHID CHEM AT CMP OF 148.50 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 146 FOR A TARGET OF 152.80, 154.40, 155.80, 157.40, 158.80 AND 160.40. OUR FOURTH TARGET OF 157.40 ACHIEVED TODAY. BINGO AGAIN!
2ND BINGO! TTK PRESTIGE REACHED OUR EIGHTH TARGET OF 2678
ON 25.11.11 WE RECOMMENDED OUR PAID SUBSCRIBERS TO BUY TTK PRESTIGE AT CMP OF 2520 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 2496 FOR A TARGET OF 2548, 2563, 2588, 2613, 2628, 2643, 2663, 2678 AND 2693. OUR EIGHTH TARGET OF 2678 ACHIEVED TODAY. BINGO!
3RD BINGO! LOVABLE LINGEIRE REACHED OUR FIFTEENTH TARGET OF 398
ON 25.11.11 WE RECOMMENDED OUR PAID SUBSCRIBERS TO BUY LOVABLE LINGERIE AT CMP OF 316 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 308 FOR A TARGET OF 323, 328, 333, 338, 343, 348, 353, 358, 363, 368, 373, 378, 383, 388 AND 398. OUR FIFTEENTH TARGET OF 398 TODAY. BINGO AGAIN!
1ST BINGO! NIFTY F&O REACHED OUR EIGHTH TARGET OF 4873
ON 25.11.11 WE RECOMMENDED OUR PAID SUBSCRIBERS TO BUY NIFTY FUTURES AT CMP OF 4716 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 4680 FOR A TARGET OF 4748, 4763, 4788, 4813, 4828, 4843, 4858, 4873 AND 4888. OUR EIGHTH TARGET OF 4873 ACHIEVED TODAY. BINGO AGAIN!
Saturday, November 26, 2011
5 TIPS FOR A PROFITABLE TRADE
5 TIPS FOR A PROFITABLE TRADE:
1. Plan the entire trade before you enter the trade. Have an entry strategy, and an exit point (both a winning exit point and a non-winning exit point). This will inherently force you to look at your risk/reward ratio. Write these entries and exits down in a journal.
2. Eliminate distractions. It's difficult enough to find trading time at all if it's not your regular job. If you're a part-time trader who trades at work between meetings and phone calls, think about this: there are full-time professional traders who are concentrating on nothing other than taking your money. It's not that they're better or smarter than you – they just have the time to focus. If you must trade, set aside blocks of time to study or trade without distraction. Or it may be more feasible to do your trading on an end-of day basis, meaning you
place your orders and do your 'homework' the night before when you can
focus on it.
place your orders and do your 'homework' the night before when you can
focus on it.
3. Choose a method or a small group of methods, and stick to them. Far too often we see a trader adopt a new indicator or signal only to see it backfire. Become a master of your favorite signals, rather than a slave to any and every signal. Understand that an indicator will fail sometimes. That's ok. The sizable winning trades should more than offset the small losing trades initiated by an errant signal. This trading method is designed to eliminate the emotional bias of trading.
4. Choosing not to trade can also be a prudent choice. You'll frequently hear 'don't fight the tape'. The same idea also applies to a flat market – you can't make stocks do something they're just not going to do. Wait for good entries into a developing trend rather than force a bad entry into an unclear trend.
4. Choosing not to trade can also be a prudent choice. You'll frequently hear 'don't fight the tape'. The same idea also applies to a flat market – you can't make stocks do something they're just not going to do. Wait for good entries into a developing trend rather than force a bad entry into an unclear trend.
5. Take responsibility for your trades – all of them. Examine why the losing trades failed, and why the winners were successful. The reality is that you chose to enter each and every trade. This can be painful, at least initially, since the ego is built to deflect blame yet accept praise. That's a trap. If you find yourself saying "that was a good trade entry but….." then stop yourself immediately. Either everything before 'but' or after 'but' is inaccurate. If you rationalize or justify poor trades, then you'll never learn from them. This may be the most important idea of the five – the ego can prevent real learning. If you can learn to accept some failure without being emotionally devastated, then you'll be a good trader.
The only advice I would add to this list is simply to keep a daily trading journal. This can be a journal of trades, signals, ideas, and emotions about your trading. The more you put in the journal, the more you'll get out of it. It will also help you in applying and tracking these five concepts above.
Friday, November 25, 2011
6TH BINGO! TTK PRESTIGE REACHED OUR THIRD TARGET OF 2588
TODAY WE RECOMMENDED OUR PAID SUBSCRIBERS TO BUY TTK PRESTIGE AT CMP OF 2520 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 2496 FOR A TARGET OF 2548, 2563 AND 2588. OUR THIRD TARGET OF 2588 ACHIEVED TODAY ITSELF. BINGO AGAIN! NOW NEXT TARGETS R 2613, 2628 AND 2643.
5TH BINGO! LOVABLE LINGEIRE REACHED OUR FIFTH TARGET OF 343
TODAY WE RECOMMENDED OUR PAID SUBSCRIBERS TO BUY LOVABLE LINGERIE AT CMP OF 316 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 308 FOR A TARGET OF 323, 328, 333, 338, 343 AND 348. OUR FIFTH TARGET OF 343 TODAY ITSELF. BINGO AGAIN!
4TH BINGO! PARSVNATH DEVELOPERS REACHED OUR THIRD TARGET OF 35.80
TODAY WE RECOMMENDED OUR PAID SUBSCRIBERS TO BUY PARSVNATH DEVELOPERS AT CMP OF 33.25 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 32.40 FOR A TARGET OF 34.80, 35.40 AND 35.80. OUR THIRD TARGET OF 35.80 ACHIEVED TODAY ITSELF. BINGO AGAIN!
3RD BINGO! VIP IND REACHED OUR THIRD TARGET OF 123.80
ON 22.11.11 WE RECOMMENDED OUR PAID SUBSCRIBERS TO BUY VIP IND AT CMP OF 114 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 111 FOR A TARGET OF 117.80, 119.40 AND 123.80. OUR THIRD TARGET OF 123.80 ACHIEVED TODAY. BINGO!
2ND BINGO! TITAN REACHED OUR THIRD TARGET OF 196.80
TODAY WE RECOMMENDED OUR PAID SUBSCRIBERS TO BUY TITAN AT CMP OF 188 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 186 FOR A TARGET OF 193.80, 195.40 AND 196.80. OUR THIRD TARGET OF 196.80 ACHIEVED TODAY ITSELF. BINGO!
1ST BINGO! JINDALPOLY REACHED OUR THIRD TARGET OF 191.80
TODAY WE RECOMMENDED OUR PAID SUBSCRIBERS TO BUY JINDAL POLY AT CMP OF 184 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 181 FOR A TARGET OF 188.80, 190.40 AND 191.80. OUR THIRD TARGET OF 191.80 ACHIEVED TODAY ITSELF. BINGO!
Thursday, November 24, 2011
2ND BINGO! BATA INDIA REACHED OUR THIRD TARGET OF 623
TODAY WE RECOMMENDED OUR PAID SUBSCRIBERS TO BUY BATA AT CMP OF 616 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 610 FOR A TARGET OF 623, 628 AND 633. OUR THIRD TARGET OF 633 ACHIEVED TODAY ITSELF. BINGO!
1ST BINGO! ADANI ENTERPRISES REACHED OUR THIRD TARGET OF 323
TODAY WE RECOMMENDED TO OUR PAID SUBSCRIBERS TO BUY ADANI ENTERPRISES AT CMP OF 301 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 288 FOR A TARGET OF 313, 318 AND 323. OUR THIRD TARGET OF 323 ACHIEVED TODAY ITSELF. BINGO!
Monday, November 21, 2011
BE CONTENT WITH WHAT IS POSSIBLE
BY CARL FUTIA:
This post is about the frustrations that market fluctuations generate for a trader and how to deal with them. My message is a simple one: be content with what is possible.
What does this mean for you? It means that you should be focused on one thing and one thing only when evaluating your trading record.Have you been making consistent profits or not? Forget about how much you might have made - those sort of calculations are not in the realm of what's possible. What's possible is steady, month-by-month, quarter-by quarter profitability. Some people can achieve higher rates of return on their capital than others, but so what? Don't worry about what other people do. Focus only on what you can do based on your market knowledge and trading skills.
I had a friend who was a member of the Chicago Board of Trade and later a member of the Singapore exchange. He had a profit goal he aimed for each year. When he reached it he stopped trading for the rest of the year. It didn't matter whether it took him two months or six months or eleven months to reach his goal. When he reached it he stopped.
For him trading was just a way to make a good living, not a test of his value as a person or an affirmation that he was smarter than everyone else. This is an example of sane behavior in a business where various forms of insanity are the rule, not the exception.
This post is about the frustrations that market fluctuations generate for a trader and how to deal with them. My message is a simple one: be content with what is possible.
I have been in this business full time for nearly 30 years now. I have known many traders. The majority of them were only in the business a relatively brief time. Most of these left because they lost money but some left because, even thought they were making money trading, they couldn't stand the constant frustration traders experience.
Markets move up and down, sometimes quite violently. People tend to evaluate their trading performance not simply in terms of profit and loss but also in terms of how much money they could have made had they been able to catch a substantial part of most of the market's up and down swings. In fact, I have known profitable traders who were constantly frustrated and unhappy because they felt that they had left so much money on the table.
Put simply, this is crazy behavior. What basis do you have for thinking you can catch a substantial part of the market's many swings? Sure, in hindsight everything is obvious and we can see how we might have become gazillionaires.
But we cannot trade the past. We can only make profits betting on the future. And people who bet on future price fluctuations must necessarily rely on very, very cloudy crystal balls. So as a practical matter you should count yourself fortunate indeed if you consistently capture a small part of any given market swing.What does this mean for you? It means that you should be focused on one thing and one thing only when evaluating your trading record.Have you been making consistent profits or not? Forget about how much you might have made - those sort of calculations are not in the realm of what's possible. What's possible is steady, month-by-month, quarter-by quarter profitability. Some people can achieve higher rates of return on their capital than others, but so what? Don't worry about what other people do. Focus only on what you can do based on your market knowledge and trading skills.
I had a friend who was a member of the Chicago Board of Trade and later a member of the Singapore exchange. He had a profit goal he aimed for each year. When he reached it he stopped trading for the rest of the year. It didn't matter whether it took him two months or six months or eleven months to reach his goal. When he reached it he stopped.
For him trading was just a way to make a good living, not a test of his value as a person or an affirmation that he was smarter than everyone else. This is an example of sane behavior in a business where various forms of insanity are the rule, not the exception.
Friday, November 18, 2011
2ND BINGO! PIPAPAV SHIPYARD REACHED OUR THIRD TARGET OF 61.80
TODAY WE RECOMMENDED TO OUR PAID CLIENTS TO BUY PIPAPAV SHIPYARD AT CMP OF 56.50 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 55.65 FOR A TARGET OF 58.80, 60.40 AND 61.80. OUR THIRD TARGET OF 61.80 ACHIEVED TODAY ITSELF. BINGO AGAIN!
1ST BINGO! NIFTY REACHED OUR FIRST TARGET OF 4898
TODAY WE RECOMMEND TO BUY NIFTY AT CMP OF 4865 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 4830 FOR A TARGET OF 4898, 4923 AND 4948. OUR FIRST TARGET OF 4898 ACHIEVED TODAY ITSELF. BINGO!
BUY NIFTY AT CMP OF 4865 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 4830
WE RECOMMEND TO BUY NIFTY AT CMP OF 4865 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 4830 FOR A TARGET OF 4898, 4923 AND 4948.
Wednesday, November 16, 2011
5TH BINGO! VIP IND REACHED OUR SECOND TARGET OF 123.40
TODAY WE RECOMMENDED OUR PAID CLIENTS TO BUY VIP IND AT CMP OF 114 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 108 FOR A TARGET OF 119.80, 123.40 AND 125.80. OUR SECOND TARGET OF 123.40 ACHIEVED TODAY ITSELF. BINGO AGAIN!
4TH BINGO! BATA INDIA REACHED OUR THIRD TARGET OF 668
TODAY WE RECOMMENDED TO OUR PAID CLIENTS TO BUY BATA AT CMP OF 646 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 633 FOR A TARGET OF 658, 663 AND 668. OUR THIRD TARGET OF 668 ACHIEVED TODAY ITSELF. BINGO AGAIN!
3RD BINGO! NIFTY OPTIONS STRATEGY GIVES RS. 11500 PER LOT
ON 09.11.11 WE RECOMMENDED OUR PAID CLIENTS TO SELL NOV NIFTY FUT @ 5300 AND BUY NIFTY NOV 5300 CALL @ 85. MAXIMUM LOSS POSSIBLE IN THIS STRATEGY IS JUST RS. 4250 PER LOT AND MAXIMUM PROFIT IS UNLIMITED. TODAY COVER NIFTY FUTURE @ 5050 AND SELL 5300 CALL @ 65. TOTAL PROFIT EARNED IS RS.11500 PER LOT.
2ND BINGO! NIFTY REACHED OUR SECOND TARGET OF 5048
TODAY WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY NIFTY AT CMP OF 5002 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 4980 FOR A TARGET OF 5033, 5048 AND 5068. NIFTY HAS TAKEN SUPPORT NEAR 4984 WHICH IS 61.80% RETRACEMENT OF THE LOW OF 4725.55 AND HIGH OF 5341.25. OUR SECOND TARGET OF 5048 ACHIEVED TODAY ITSELF. BINGO!
1ST BINGO! NIFTY REACHED OUR FIRST TARGET OF 5033
TODAY WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY NIFTY AT CMP OF 5002 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 4980 FOR A TARGET OF 5033, 5048 AND 5068. NIFTY HAS TAKEN SUPPORT NEAR 4984 WHICH IS 61.80% RETRACEMENT OF THE LOW OF 4725.55 AND HIGH OF 5341.25. OUR FIRST TARGET OF 5033 ACHIEVED TODAY ITSELF. BINGO!
BUY NIFTY AT CMP OF 5002 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 4980
WE RECOMMEND TO BUY NIFTY AT CMP OF 5002 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 4980 FOR A TARGET OF 5033, 5048 AND 5068. NIFTY HAS TAKEN SUPPORT NEAR 4984 WHICH IS 61.80% RETRACEMENT OF THE LOW OF 4725.55 AND HIGH OF 5341.25.
Wednesday, November 09, 2011
OPTION STRATEGY FOR ALL TIME BULLISH TRADERS
WE R NOW IN THE PROCESS OF STARTING OPTIONS STRATEGY. HERE IS THE FIRST CALL FROM SGRG.
BUY NOV NIFTY FUT @ 5300 AND BUY NIFTY 5300 NOV PUT @ 85. MAXIMUM LOSS POSSIBLE IN THIS STRATEGY IS JUST RS. 4250 PER LOT AND MAXIMUM PROFIT IS UNLIMITED.
BUY NOV NIFTY FUT @ 5300 AND BUY NIFTY 5300 NOV PUT @ 85. MAXIMUM LOSS POSSIBLE IN THIS STRATEGY IS JUST RS. 4250 PER LOT AND MAXIMUM PROFIT IS UNLIMITED.
Saturday, November 05, 2011
SGRG-S.I.P.- BE MASTER OF YOUR OWN DESTINY
SGRG–SIP: BE THE MASTER OF YOUR OWN DESTINY
Welcome to the World of S.I.P. (Systematic investment Plan).
Thanks to the massive amount of time, money and efforts put in by the Mutual Fund Industry over the years, investors are now very much aware of this technique of investing.
Welcome to the world of SIP. In a SIP you invest a fixed sum at a particular interval ( say a month) in a security over a given period of time.
Lets revisit the logic of SIP. We call it SGRG-SIP.
In a SIP you invest a fixed sum at a particular interval ( say a month) in a security over a given period of time. In a SGRG-SIP, instead of choosing a regular MF scheme, we decide an Index Benchmark, which can be NIFTYBEeS, JUNIORBEeS, GOLDBeS, BANKBEeS depending upon your risk profile.
Disciplined Approach
The first benefit of a SGRG-SIP is that you imbibe discipline in your investments. On a given date of every month you buy the pre-decided index Benchmark. However, the amount to be invested every month keeps on changing i.e. It will be communicated by us every month. You don’t really apply your mind whether to buy or not. Just go ahead and do it.
Don’t worry about the timing
Say you like Reliance a lot. The price of Reliance on 01.01.08 was 1445 and on 01.01.11 it was 1065 down -26.30% over a period of 3 years. What we mean to say is since, we cannot track the working and performance of each and every scrip, therefore, we have decided to invest in Index Benchmark. Even if a company does badly in an economic downturn the component of other stocks in the Index Benchmark will take care of it.
When you fundamentally like a stock, you should like the stock more if the price falls, other things being same. But human psychology will ensure that you get jitters when the price falls. And expecting that the price will fall further you don’t buy. A further fall in price will validate your fears and you would wait for a still larger dip. One fine day the stock will bounce back, leaving you in a frown.
But a SGRG-SIP will ensure that your fear does not come in the way of your investment. This ability of SGRG-SIP to systematically buy at all levels ensures good returns in a volatile market. So honour the sanctity of a SIP.
A giant small step
The power of compounding will ensure that even small investments in early part of life will leave a giant footprint over a longer period of time. You don’t really have to save big. Small amounts every month will ensure that your dreams will realised with least efforts.
The stress is not on the amount, but on the need to start early. And even if you have lost considerable time, don’t worry. Today is a good day to begin !
Let us also dispel a myth that SGRG-SIP is only for beginners or for small investors. Nothing stops you from allocating even large sums for SGRG-SIP. In fact experienced investors would find it more useful.
Sculpt your returns
Become the master of your own fortunes. Write your own success story. Choose your own Index Benchmark, which you will be investing over a period of time.
It could even be the NiftyBEes, JUNIORBEeS, BANKBEeS or the GOLDBEeS. Or a combination of all of these. Since your returns will be function of what asset class you choose, ensure that you put in serious efforts in terms of understanding what you are investing in. Ensure that the Index Benchmark you choose match your risk stance and return expectations.
The common fear
One anxiety that an investor faces when he begins the SGRG-SIP is am I starting at the wrong time? Is it not the peak? Will it be fruitful?
In order to answer this most common query and placate any fears that investors may have , let me actually do some back testing.
Let me choose the worst possible month in recent history – January 2008 I Hope everybody remember this month.
So we baptize you with fire, by making you begin investing from 26th December, 2007, a sum of Rs 10,000 every month on the last day of the month. This you religiously do every month for 36 months i.e. 25th Decemeber, 2011.
Lets see how the Nifty faired. The Nifty that was 6070 on 26th December 2007 closed on December 26th 2011 at 6013. This is a fall of 0.94%.
Whereas the Normal SIP in the NIFTYBEeS might have given you the return of 26% on Total Investment but our’s SGRG-SIP actually gave A WHOPPING return of 50.68% on Total Investment basis. An Annualised Return of over 36%p.a. and a Compounded Return of over 28% p.a.
That should set at rest any apprehensions you may have on the subject.
So sign up for SGRG-SIP, choose what you want to buy (Nifty Bees, Gold Bees, Junior BEes or BankBEes) and take the first but meaningful step towards investing.
Be the master of your own fortunes.
Thursday, November 03, 2011
SGRG–SIP: A COMPOUNDED RETURN OF OVER 60% P.A.
RETURN FROM SGRG-S.I.P.:
BEeS COMPOUNDED RETURN ANNUAL RETURN
BANK BEeS 64% P.A. 468%P.A.
JUNIOR BEeS 100% P.A. 5000%P.A.
NIFTY BEeS 100% P.A. 5000%P.A.
A COMPOUNDED RETURN OF OVER 60% P.A. IN BANK BEeS SINCE JUN'2004 AND A COMPOUNDED RETURN OF OVER 100% P.A. IN JUNIOR BEeS SINCE MAR'2003 AND OVER 100% P.A. IN NIFTY BEeS SINCE JAN'2002. WE WOULD LIKE TO KNOW FROM U PEOPLE, WHICH S.I.P. IN THE MUTUAL FUND INDUSTRY HAS GIVEN SUCH A TREMENDOUS AMOUNT OF RETURN. THE BEST MUTUAL FUND IN THE INDUSTRY IS HDFC TOP200 EQUITY AND THAT TOO HAS GIVEN A COMPOUNDED RETURN OF JUST 23%P.A. SINCE LAUNCH IN SEP'1996 WITHOUT ENTRY AND EXIT LOAD. WITH ENTRY AND EXIT LOAD RETURN COMES DOWN TO 18% P.A.
SO WHAT R U WAITING FOR, START UR SGRG-S.I.P. NOW AND ENJOY EXTRAORDINARY RETURNS. BUT TO GET EXTRAORDINARY RETURN UR TIME HORIZON SHOULD BE MINIMUM OF 3-5 YEARS. LONGER THE TIME PERIOD HIGHER WILL BE THE RETURNS.
WITH SGRG-SIP U CAN EASILY PLAN THE REQUIREMENT OF FUNDS AT THE TIME OF UR RETIREMENT, CHILD'S HIGHER EDUCATION, CHILD'S MARRIAGE ETC.
BEeS COMPOUNDED RETURN ANNUAL RETURN
BANK BEeS 64% P.A. 468%P.A.
JUNIOR BEeS 100% P.A. 5000%P.A.
NIFTY BEeS 100% P.A. 5000%P.A.
A COMPOUNDED RETURN OF OVER 60% P.A. IN BANK BEeS SINCE JUN'2004 AND A COMPOUNDED RETURN OF OVER 100% P.A. IN JUNIOR BEeS SINCE MAR'2003 AND OVER 100% P.A. IN NIFTY BEeS SINCE JAN'2002. WE WOULD LIKE TO KNOW FROM U PEOPLE, WHICH S.I.P. IN THE MUTUAL FUND INDUSTRY HAS GIVEN SUCH A TREMENDOUS AMOUNT OF RETURN. THE BEST MUTUAL FUND IN THE INDUSTRY IS HDFC TOP200 EQUITY AND THAT TOO HAS GIVEN A COMPOUNDED RETURN OF JUST 23%P.A. SINCE LAUNCH IN SEP'1996 WITHOUT ENTRY AND EXIT LOAD. WITH ENTRY AND EXIT LOAD RETURN COMES DOWN TO 18% P.A.
SO WHAT R U WAITING FOR, START UR SGRG-S.I.P. NOW AND ENJOY EXTRAORDINARY RETURNS. BUT TO GET EXTRAORDINARY RETURN UR TIME HORIZON SHOULD BE MINIMUM OF 3-5 YEARS. LONGER THE TIME PERIOD HIGHER WILL BE THE RETURNS.
WITH SGRG-SIP U CAN EASILY PLAN THE REQUIREMENT OF FUNDS AT THE TIME OF UR RETIREMENT, CHILD'S HIGHER EDUCATION, CHILD'S MARRIAGE ETC.
Tuesday, November 01, 2011
SEVENTH TARGET MET IN ORCHID CHEMICALS
TODAY WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY ORCHID CHEM AT CMP OF 159.50 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 156 FOR A TARGET OF 164.80, 166.40, 168.80, 170.40, 172.80, 174.40, 176.80, 178.40 AND 180.80. OUR SEVENTH TARGET OF 176.80 ACHIEVED TODAY ITSELF. BINGO AGAIN!
SO WHAT R U WAITING FOR? SUBSCRIBE NOW.
SO WHAT R U WAITING FOR? SUBSCRIBE NOW.
TEN RULES OF LONG TERM TERM INVESTING
Rule No. 1: Margin Of Safety – Buy Shares “Cheap” – Keep Capital Intact:
Q. How To Determine That The Price You Are Paying Is “Cheap”?
There are two practical ways to determine whether you are paying a reasonable price or an exorbitant one for a stock.
The first is to try and visualize the next five years earnings of the stock. If the total earnings of the stock in the next five years is lesser than the total purchase price of the stock, it is “cheap” and you can go ahead and buy it confidently.
The second is to compare the purchase price of the stock with the market capitalization of the company. & give a practical example of what they mean. In 2003, bought shares of Bharti Tele at Rs 25 per share. At that time, Bharti Telecom’s shares were quoting at a price equal to its book value. Its profits were about Rs. 1,000 crore and its market capitalization was Rs. 5,000 crores. says that he conjectured how the profits were going to move and thought Bharti Telecom would make about Rs 26,000-27,000 crores profit in next five years. At this rate, the price that was paying for Bharti Telecom was obviously “cheap”.‘s hypothesis was vindicated and Bharti Telecom actually made about Rs 30,000 crores giving his multibagger.
Rule No. 2: Keep the “Long Term” In Mind:
It is implicit in & ‘s technique that they are only looking at the long-term prospects of the stock. Both & make it clear that the question whether you have bought the share “cheap” or not has to be decided today with regard to the future 5 year earnings or market cap of the stock. made this quite clear when he announced his purchase of Central Bank of India that while the stock may under-perform its peers in the short-term, he was confident that it would become a multibagger in 10 years time.
In this, one is reminded of the priceless advice given by Warren Buffett that “Your goal as an investor should simply be to purchase, at a rational price, a part interest in an easily-understandable business whose earnings are virtually certain to be materially higher five, ten and twenty years from now. If you aren’t willing to own a stock for 10 years, don’t even think about owning it for ten minutes.”
Rule No. 3: Reappraise periodically the validity of the investment hypothesis:
That investors should not get unduly perturbed by short-term downward price movements in the stock. Quotational losses are notional losses and the investor should not lose any sleep over it, emphasize the investment gurus, so long as the underlying business prospects of the stock remains unimpaired.
But, that doesn’t mean that the investor should not reappraise matters and see whether the quotation loss is going to be a permanent feature say & gives the example of the investment he made in Float Glass. bought the shares at Rs. 40 and then it plummeted to Rs. 4. was forced to book his loss because certain events had happened in the company which changed the investment prospects of the company. calls booking the loss “such a gruesome business” but emphasizes that it has to be done periodically to spring-clean ones’ portfolio.
Rule No. 4: Focus On The Business – Buy A “Predictable” Business:
That the investor must be very careful of the business that he buys. If the investor is right about the business, then the other things don’t matter so much. Even if the price paid for the stock is high, a good business will ultimately bail out the investor emphasize &
Q: What is a “Good” & “Predictable” Business?
That a “good business” is one which is able to consistently generate more cash than it’s ever likely to need, but more importantly, it’s so scalable and the external opportunity is so large that it can actually consume that cash and continue to grow the volume of cash that it is generating.
With regard to “predictability”, the four investment gurus point A practical example is provided by Central Bank and Bharti Telecom where it is possible to have a sense of where the company will be in the foreseeable future.
On the point of “predictibility”, the three investment gurus , and give the example of Sun Pharma. Sun Pharma is a profitable generic company and it is run by Dilip Shanghvi, a competent manager. Given the nature of business that Sun Pharma is engaged in and the the level of competence in its management, there is the element of “predictability” that whatever the economic problems that the World may face, there will continue to be demand for the products such as chronic therapies, cardio vascular, anti epileptic drugs that Sun Pharma is engaged in.Sun Pharma is in a stage today where the products that it launched more than five years ago are generating two-thirds of its sales and these products are actually growing faster than the industry and faster than the Company’s entire core business.
For some businesses, don’t set your expectations too high:
A very important point about how investors must be wary of certain businesses and not set their sights too high. The textile business is one that the investment gurus warn about as being one where money is structurally sucked in from the investor for the reason that the cotton inventory that an average company has to maintain is over six months and the asset turns are probably struggling to beat one-month. The result is that the fixed capital deployment is equivalent of sales; margins are always highly competitive and yet you have to consistently put in money into capex to remain at the same level of production.
The Airline business is also another sector with high capital investment, intense competition and cyclical trend that one must be wary about.
Competition
On the question as to how to factor in competition when selecting a stock for investment, & point out that what the investor has to be careful about is that the business has a “moat” around it (such as a powerful brand e.g. Apple), and operating economics which are in its favor (such as a demand for its products). The company must have the technology to power its business. The trioka gives the example of Nokia which despite a great brand name and business prospects, lost out to Apple only because the latter had better technology at its disposal.
On the concept of “Good Businesses” one cannot do better than to echo what Warren Buffett said:
“We look for companies that have a) a business we understand; b) favorable long-term economics; c) able and trustworthy management; and d) a sensible price tag.
A truly great business must have an enduring “moat” that protects excellent returns on invested capital. The dynamics of capitalism guarantee that competitors will repeatedly assault any business “castle” that is earning high returns. Therefore a formidable barrier such as a company’s being the low cost producer (GEICO, Costco) or possessing a powerful world-wide brand (Coca-Cola, Gillette, American Express) is essential for sustained success. Business history is filled with “Roman Candles,” companies whose moats proved illusory and were soon crossed.
Our criterion of “enduring” causes us to rule out companies in industries prone to rapid and continuous change. Though capitalism’s “creative destruction” is highly beneficial for society, it precludes investment certainty. A moat that must be continuously rebuilt will eventually be no moat at all.
Additionally, this criterion eliminates the business whose success depends on having a great manager. Of course, a terrific CEO is a huge asset for any enterprise, and at Berkshire we have an abundance of these managers. Their abilities have created billions of dollars of value that would never have materialized if typical CEOs had been running their businesses.
But if a business requires a superstar to produce great results, the business itself cannot be deemed great. A medical partnership led by your area’s premier brain surgeon may enjoy outsized and growing earnings, but that tells little about its future. The partnership’s moat will go when the surgeon goes. You can count, though, on the moat of the Mayo Clinic to endure, even though you can’t name its CEO.
Long-term competitive advantage in a stable industry is what we seek in a business. If that comes with rapid organic growth, great. But even without organic growth, such a business is rewarding. We will simply take the lush earnings of the business and use them to buy similar businesses elsewhere. There’s no rule that you have to invest money where you’ve earned it. Indeed, it’s often a mistake to do so: Truly great businesses, earning huge returns on tangible assets, can’t for any extended period reinvest a large portion of their earnings internally at high rates of return.”
Rule No. 5: Invest According To Your Temperament and Act Within Your Circle Of Competence:
That investing is a test of psychology and character and of intellect and that an investor has to invest depending on his particular temperament and should not forcefully copy a style of investment only because someone he admires adopts that style.
The investment legends give the example of Warren Buffett for whom the investment mantra was a “concentrated portfolio” and “Buy and Hold Forever”. Warren Buffett was immensely successful in that strategy. However, Peter Lynch, also a successful investor openly declared that “he never saw a stock he didn’t like” and had as many as 1,400 stocks in the Magellan Fund which he managed. Similarly, as against Warren Buffett‘s “Our Holding Period Is Forever”, George Soros philosophy was “Everything is a buy or a sell depending on the price.”
So, what & point out is that the investor must invest in the way that he understands best depending on his temperament. The investment gurus also point out that there are certain businesses or industries where one may either instinctively have a better understanding or where one may have absolutely no idea. An example is that of Warren Buffett who did not invest in Google because he did not understand the nature of the business and where Google would be in ten or twenty years. Warren Buffett lost out on a fabulous multi-bagger but that is no reason to regret. As a principle, one should not venture into businesses that one has no understanding about emphasize & .
Rule No. 6: Don’t Get Carried Away By Public Euphoria – Never Buy A Stock Only Because It Is Popular & Everybody Is Buying It:
This is probably the single most important piece of advise given by & . & caution that markets sometimes take a fancy for a certain type of stock or a certain sector and investors get carried away. gives the example of dotcom stocks in the 1990s when the public euphoria was so great that there were many companies trading at Rs 70,000-90,000 crore kind of market cap. points out that even Infosys, whose profit then was Rs. 500 crores was trading at a market capitalization of Rs 130,000 crores. It is only after the bubble burst that investors realized that they were paying for Infosys about 5-6 times more than what was its correct valuation.
That while Infosys continued to be a great company even after 10 years of the euphoria, a number of other stocks like Global Tele and Himachal Futuristicwent to absurd valuations and today they are literally penny stocks.
A more contemporary example of how getting carried away with public euphoria can ruin an investor. They point out that in the recent real estate boom a number of real estate companies such as DLF and Unitech spun plans on how they would be selling 15-25-30 million square feet and making a lot of profits. Their story was very plausible and easy to believe selling. They claimed that they were like FMCG companies and that the Country had the ability to absord such high priced real estate.
Unfortunately, when the bubble burst, the investors were left holding the shares of real estate companies at completely extravagant valuations. & forcefully bring home the point that when the crowd gets charged, it becomes completely irrational.
Rule No. 7: Never Hesitate To Buy A Stock Only Because It Is Unpopular & No one Is Buying It:
This Rule is the converse of the earlier Rule. In the earlier Rule, & cautioned investors against buying a share only because it was popular and everyone was buying it. In this Rule, & caution investors against hesitating to buy a stock which meets all the criteria only on the ground that nobody else is buying it.
The priceless advice given by , India’s greatest investor, who candidly says “Never in my life have I not made an investment because the stock is not popular. In fact I like to make the investment when the stock is not popular.”
There are several examples that , and give in support of their proposition. The first is public sector banking stocks that at one time were totally ignored by the public at large. These stocks, though of fundamentally strong companies, were ignored by the investor community in the misconception that these PSU companies were inefficient and no match for their private sector counterparts.
He took advantage of this misconception in the public’s mind and bought huge quantities of PSU stocks like Shipping Corporation of India, Bharat Electronics, CMC, BEML etc. Likewise, bought huge quantities of PSU Bank State Bank of India. Both and bought the PSU stocks at a fraction of their fundamental value. When the inesting public realized that the PSU companies were quite efficient as well and started paying a premium for the shares, and got their multibaggers.
Other examples of stocks that are undervalued by the market because nobody likes these shares even though there is nothing fundamentally wrong with them. VIP Industries is one example that is never tired of giving. The stock of VIP Industries was quoting at Rs. 65 15 months ago when bought it (see & VIP Industries: Best Stock Pick!). Today, VIP Industries is quoting at Rs. 650 and that means has got himself a ten-bagger!
Another example that & like to give is that of United Brewerieswhich was languishing at a market cap of USD 40 million or Rs. 160 crores even though it had 50% share in the Indian liquor market and a great brand name. Similarly, McDowell was available at a market cap of Rs 200 crore. United Breweries held 40% of McDowell at that time. So it was clear as rain that United Breweries was grossly undervalued but somehow the company was not fancied by the investor public.
The example of Bharti Telecom which was langusihing at Rs. 25. recalls that all his well-wishers were so convinced that he had made a mistake in buying Bharti Telecom that they virtually forced him to sell a large part of his shares. However, such was ‘s conviction in Bharti Airtel that even after he succumbed to the advice of his well-wishers and sold out, he bought back a large quantity. The rest is history because made a huge fortune from the multi-bagger that Bharti Airtel became shortly thereafter.
Rule No. 8: Never Accept Anything At Face Value – Do Your Homework:
In formulating this Rule, & have been inspired by Warren Buffett‘s timeless maxim “Only when the tide goes out, you discover who is been swimming naked.”
The example of Satyam to highlight this Rule. At the peak of the scam, Satyam was seen to have several big marquee clients like GE and State Farm. Satyam‘s founder Ramalinga Raju was even awarded the “Businessman of the Year” prize by Ernst & Young. However, it soon turned out that everything was a fraud. The clients disappeared, the employees were non-existent and the business was just a bubble.
There are several other examples like Enron and World Com that should caution the investor that what he sees and what he gets may be two different things say & .
Rule No. 9: Buy What Is. Not What Will Be:
Be cautious against getting carried away with forecasts and projections of future profitability. This happened at the time of the Dot-com boom and again at the time of the Realty Boom when euphoric investors started making irrational and unrealistic assumptions about where profits were headed and where share prices would go.
Investors must have their feet firmly planted on the ground and err on the side of caution emphasize & . This makes sense, when read with the other Rule regarding preservation of capital.
Rule No. 10: Better To Have A Small Holding In An Excellent Company Than A Large Holding In A Mediocre Company:
For those investors who are constantly scouring for penny stocks in the hope that they will turn into multi-baggers overnight by some mysterious process. & advice that the investor is better off in investing in quality companies rather than in mediocre companies. This way, not only is the capital safe but the investor is assured of a reasonable return.
If one thinks about it, there is a lot of merit in the advice that & are handing out. If a company’s earnings are growing at say 25% p.a. (not an unreasonable assumption) and the share price grows at the same pace, in five year’s time, the investors investment would have tripled. In 10 years time, the investment would have grown 9.31 times. At the end of 20 years, the investment has grown 86.73 times. In other words, if Rs. 10,000 is invested in year one and allowed to compound at 25%, at the end of 10 years, the investor has Rs. 93,100 and at the end of 20 years, the investor has Rs. 867,300. You have your own “multi-bagger”! Of course, the income by way of dividends is extra!
Q. How To Determine That The Price You Are Paying Is “Cheap”?
There are two practical ways to determine whether you are paying a reasonable price or an exorbitant one for a stock.
The first is to try and visualize the next five years earnings of the stock. If the total earnings of the stock in the next five years is lesser than the total purchase price of the stock, it is “cheap” and you can go ahead and buy it confidently.
The second is to compare the purchase price of the stock with the market capitalization of the company. & give a practical example of what they mean. In 2003, bought shares of Bharti Tele at Rs 25 per share. At that time, Bharti Telecom’s shares were quoting at a price equal to its book value. Its profits were about Rs. 1,000 crore and its market capitalization was Rs. 5,000 crores. says that he conjectured how the profits were going to move and thought Bharti Telecom would make about Rs 26,000-27,000 crores profit in next five years. At this rate, the price that was paying for Bharti Telecom was obviously “cheap”.‘s hypothesis was vindicated and Bharti Telecom actually made about Rs 30,000 crores giving his multibagger.
Rule No. 2: Keep the “Long Term” In Mind:
It is implicit in & ‘s technique that they are only looking at the long-term prospects of the stock. Both & make it clear that the question whether you have bought the share “cheap” or not has to be decided today with regard to the future 5 year earnings or market cap of the stock. made this quite clear when he announced his purchase of Central Bank of India that while the stock may under-perform its peers in the short-term, he was confident that it would become a multibagger in 10 years time.
In this, one is reminded of the priceless advice given by Warren Buffett that “Your goal as an investor should simply be to purchase, at a rational price, a part interest in an easily-understandable business whose earnings are virtually certain to be materially higher five, ten and twenty years from now. If you aren’t willing to own a stock for 10 years, don’t even think about owning it for ten minutes.”
Rule No. 3: Reappraise periodically the validity of the investment hypothesis:
That investors should not get unduly perturbed by short-term downward price movements in the stock. Quotational losses are notional losses and the investor should not lose any sleep over it, emphasize the investment gurus, so long as the underlying business prospects of the stock remains unimpaired.
But, that doesn’t mean that the investor should not reappraise matters and see whether the quotation loss is going to be a permanent feature say & gives the example of the investment he made in Float Glass. bought the shares at Rs. 40 and then it plummeted to Rs. 4. was forced to book his loss because certain events had happened in the company which changed the investment prospects of the company. calls booking the loss “such a gruesome business” but emphasizes that it has to be done periodically to spring-clean ones’ portfolio.
Rule No. 4: Focus On The Business – Buy A “Predictable” Business:
That the investor must be very careful of the business that he buys. If the investor is right about the business, then the other things don’t matter so much. Even if the price paid for the stock is high, a good business will ultimately bail out the investor emphasize &
Q: What is a “Good” & “Predictable” Business?
That a “good business” is one which is able to consistently generate more cash than it’s ever likely to need, but more importantly, it’s so scalable and the external opportunity is so large that it can actually consume that cash and continue to grow the volume of cash that it is generating.
With regard to “predictability”, the four investment gurus point A practical example is provided by Central Bank and Bharti Telecom where it is possible to have a sense of where the company will be in the foreseeable future.
On the point of “predictibility”, the three investment gurus , and give the example of Sun Pharma. Sun Pharma is a profitable generic company and it is run by Dilip Shanghvi, a competent manager. Given the nature of business that Sun Pharma is engaged in and the the level of competence in its management, there is the element of “predictability” that whatever the economic problems that the World may face, there will continue to be demand for the products such as chronic therapies, cardio vascular, anti epileptic drugs that Sun Pharma is engaged in.Sun Pharma is in a stage today where the products that it launched more than five years ago are generating two-thirds of its sales and these products are actually growing faster than the industry and faster than the Company’s entire core business.
For some businesses, don’t set your expectations too high:
A very important point about how investors must be wary of certain businesses and not set their sights too high. The textile business is one that the investment gurus warn about as being one where money is structurally sucked in from the investor for the reason that the cotton inventory that an average company has to maintain is over six months and the asset turns are probably struggling to beat one-month. The result is that the fixed capital deployment is equivalent of sales; margins are always highly competitive and yet you have to consistently put in money into capex to remain at the same level of production.
The Airline business is also another sector with high capital investment, intense competition and cyclical trend that one must be wary about.
Competition
On the question as to how to factor in competition when selecting a stock for investment, & point out that what the investor has to be careful about is that the business has a “moat” around it (such as a powerful brand e.g. Apple), and operating economics which are in its favor (such as a demand for its products). The company must have the technology to power its business. The trioka gives the example of Nokia which despite a great brand name and business prospects, lost out to Apple only because the latter had better technology at its disposal.
On the concept of “Good Businesses” one cannot do better than to echo what Warren Buffett said:
“We look for companies that have a) a business we understand; b) favorable long-term economics; c) able and trustworthy management; and d) a sensible price tag.
A truly great business must have an enduring “moat” that protects excellent returns on invested capital. The dynamics of capitalism guarantee that competitors will repeatedly assault any business “castle” that is earning high returns. Therefore a formidable barrier such as a company’s being the low cost producer (GEICO, Costco) or possessing a powerful world-wide brand (Coca-Cola, Gillette, American Express) is essential for sustained success. Business history is filled with “Roman Candles,” companies whose moats proved illusory and were soon crossed.
Our criterion of “enduring” causes us to rule out companies in industries prone to rapid and continuous change. Though capitalism’s “creative destruction” is highly beneficial for society, it precludes investment certainty. A moat that must be continuously rebuilt will eventually be no moat at all.
Additionally, this criterion eliminates the business whose success depends on having a great manager. Of course, a terrific CEO is a huge asset for any enterprise, and at Berkshire we have an abundance of these managers. Their abilities have created billions of dollars of value that would never have materialized if typical CEOs had been running their businesses.
But if a business requires a superstar to produce great results, the business itself cannot be deemed great. A medical partnership led by your area’s premier brain surgeon may enjoy outsized and growing earnings, but that tells little about its future. The partnership’s moat will go when the surgeon goes. You can count, though, on the moat of the Mayo Clinic to endure, even though you can’t name its CEO.
Long-term competitive advantage in a stable industry is what we seek in a business. If that comes with rapid organic growth, great. But even without organic growth, such a business is rewarding. We will simply take the lush earnings of the business and use them to buy similar businesses elsewhere. There’s no rule that you have to invest money where you’ve earned it. Indeed, it’s often a mistake to do so: Truly great businesses, earning huge returns on tangible assets, can’t for any extended period reinvest a large portion of their earnings internally at high rates of return.”
Rule No. 5: Invest According To Your Temperament and Act Within Your Circle Of Competence:
That investing is a test of psychology and character and of intellect and that an investor has to invest depending on his particular temperament and should not forcefully copy a style of investment only because someone he admires adopts that style.
The investment legends give the example of Warren Buffett for whom the investment mantra was a “concentrated portfolio” and “Buy and Hold Forever”. Warren Buffett was immensely successful in that strategy. However, Peter Lynch, also a successful investor openly declared that “he never saw a stock he didn’t like” and had as many as 1,400 stocks in the Magellan Fund which he managed. Similarly, as against Warren Buffett‘s “Our Holding Period Is Forever”, George Soros philosophy was “Everything is a buy or a sell depending on the price.”
So, what & point out is that the investor must invest in the way that he understands best depending on his temperament. The investment gurus also point out that there are certain businesses or industries where one may either instinctively have a better understanding or where one may have absolutely no idea. An example is that of Warren Buffett who did not invest in Google because he did not understand the nature of the business and where Google would be in ten or twenty years. Warren Buffett lost out on a fabulous multi-bagger but that is no reason to regret. As a principle, one should not venture into businesses that one has no understanding about emphasize & .
Rule No. 6: Don’t Get Carried Away By Public Euphoria – Never Buy A Stock Only Because It Is Popular & Everybody Is Buying It:
This is probably the single most important piece of advise given by & . & caution that markets sometimes take a fancy for a certain type of stock or a certain sector and investors get carried away. gives the example of dotcom stocks in the 1990s when the public euphoria was so great that there were many companies trading at Rs 70,000-90,000 crore kind of market cap. points out that even Infosys, whose profit then was Rs. 500 crores was trading at a market capitalization of Rs 130,000 crores. It is only after the bubble burst that investors realized that they were paying for Infosys about 5-6 times more than what was its correct valuation.
That while Infosys continued to be a great company even after 10 years of the euphoria, a number of other stocks like Global Tele and Himachal Futuristicwent to absurd valuations and today they are literally penny stocks.
A more contemporary example of how getting carried away with public euphoria can ruin an investor. They point out that in the recent real estate boom a number of real estate companies such as DLF and Unitech spun plans on how they would be selling 15-25-30 million square feet and making a lot of profits. Their story was very plausible and easy to believe selling. They claimed that they were like FMCG companies and that the Country had the ability to absord such high priced real estate.
Unfortunately, when the bubble burst, the investors were left holding the shares of real estate companies at completely extravagant valuations. & forcefully bring home the point that when the crowd gets charged, it becomes completely irrational.
Rule No. 7: Never Hesitate To Buy A Stock Only Because It Is Unpopular & No one Is Buying It:
This Rule is the converse of the earlier Rule. In the earlier Rule, & cautioned investors against buying a share only because it was popular and everyone was buying it. In this Rule, & caution investors against hesitating to buy a stock which meets all the criteria only on the ground that nobody else is buying it.
The priceless advice given by , India’s greatest investor, who candidly says “Never in my life have I not made an investment because the stock is not popular. In fact I like to make the investment when the stock is not popular.”
There are several examples that , and give in support of their proposition. The first is public sector banking stocks that at one time were totally ignored by the public at large. These stocks, though of fundamentally strong companies, were ignored by the investor community in the misconception that these PSU companies were inefficient and no match for their private sector counterparts.
He took advantage of this misconception in the public’s mind and bought huge quantities of PSU stocks like Shipping Corporation of India, Bharat Electronics, CMC, BEML etc. Likewise, bought huge quantities of PSU Bank State Bank of India. Both and bought the PSU stocks at a fraction of their fundamental value. When the inesting public realized that the PSU companies were quite efficient as well and started paying a premium for the shares, and got their multibaggers.
Other examples of stocks that are undervalued by the market because nobody likes these shares even though there is nothing fundamentally wrong with them. VIP Industries is one example that is never tired of giving. The stock of VIP Industries was quoting at Rs. 65 15 months ago when bought it (see & VIP Industries: Best Stock Pick!). Today, VIP Industries is quoting at Rs. 650 and that means has got himself a ten-bagger!
Another example that & like to give is that of United Brewerieswhich was languishing at a market cap of USD 40 million or Rs. 160 crores even though it had 50% share in the Indian liquor market and a great brand name. Similarly, McDowell was available at a market cap of Rs 200 crore. United Breweries held 40% of McDowell at that time. So it was clear as rain that United Breweries was grossly undervalued but somehow the company was not fancied by the investor public.
The example of Bharti Telecom which was langusihing at Rs. 25. recalls that all his well-wishers were so convinced that he had made a mistake in buying Bharti Telecom that they virtually forced him to sell a large part of his shares. However, such was ‘s conviction in Bharti Airtel that even after he succumbed to the advice of his well-wishers and sold out, he bought back a large quantity. The rest is history because made a huge fortune from the multi-bagger that Bharti Airtel became shortly thereafter.
Rule No. 8: Never Accept Anything At Face Value – Do Your Homework:
In formulating this Rule, & have been inspired by Warren Buffett‘s timeless maxim “Only when the tide goes out, you discover who is been swimming naked.”
The example of Satyam to highlight this Rule. At the peak of the scam, Satyam was seen to have several big marquee clients like GE and State Farm. Satyam‘s founder Ramalinga Raju was even awarded the “Businessman of the Year” prize by Ernst & Young. However, it soon turned out that everything was a fraud. The clients disappeared, the employees were non-existent and the business was just a bubble.
There are several other examples like Enron and World Com that should caution the investor that what he sees and what he gets may be two different things say & .
Rule No. 9: Buy What Is. Not What Will Be:
Be cautious against getting carried away with forecasts and projections of future profitability. This happened at the time of the Dot-com boom and again at the time of the Realty Boom when euphoric investors started making irrational and unrealistic assumptions about where profits were headed and where share prices would go.
Investors must have their feet firmly planted on the ground and err on the side of caution emphasize & . This makes sense, when read with the other Rule regarding preservation of capital.
Rule No. 10: Better To Have A Small Holding In An Excellent Company Than A Large Holding In A Mediocre Company:
For those investors who are constantly scouring for penny stocks in the hope that they will turn into multi-baggers overnight by some mysterious process. & advice that the investor is better off in investing in quality companies rather than in mediocre companies. This way, not only is the capital safe but the investor is assured of a reasonable return.
If one thinks about it, there is a lot of merit in the advice that & are handing out. If a company’s earnings are growing at say 25% p.a. (not an unreasonable assumption) and the share price grows at the same pace, in five year’s time, the investors investment would have tripled. In 10 years time, the investment would have grown 9.31 times. At the end of 20 years, the investment has grown 86.73 times. In other words, if Rs. 10,000 is invested in year one and allowed to compound at 25%, at the end of 10 years, the investor has Rs. 93,100 and at the end of 20 years, the investor has Rs. 867,300. You have your own “multi-bagger”! Of course, the income by way of dividends is extra!
ALL THREE TARGETS MET IN TTK PRESTIGE
TODAY WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY TTK PRESTIGE AT CMP OF 2582 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 2550 FOR A TARGET OF 2638, 2653 AND 2668. OUR THIRD TARGET OF 2653 ACHIEVED TODAY ITSELF. BINGO AGAIN!
SO WHAT R U WAITING FOR? SUBSCRIBE NOW
SO WHAT R U WAITING FOR? SUBSCRIBE NOW
Monday, October 31, 2011
LATEST POTFOLIO OF MR. RAKESH JHUNJHUNWALA AS ON SEPTEMBER 2011(30.09.2011)
UPDATED PORTFOLIO OF MR. RAKESH JHUNJHUNWALA AS ON SEPTEMBER’2011 (30.09.11)
APTECH 2,000,000
APTECH 3,152,100
APTECH 10,554,403 (RARE EQUITY (P) LTD.)
ALPHAGEO 125,000
ATFL 1,100,700
ATFL 774,559
AUTOIND 731,233
AUTOIND 520,000
BILCARE 1,735,425
BILCARE 267,500
CRISIL 550,000
DCB 1,200,000 @ 55.40 IN RARE ENTERPRISES
DELTA CORP 500,000 @ 87.65 ON 10.12.10
DELTA CORP 7,500,000 @ 51 ON 19.11.10
DELTA CORP 7,500,000 WARRANTS
MR. RAMESH DAMANI ALSO HOLDS 3,000,000 DELTA CORP @ 51
GEOJITBNPP 18,000,000
GEOMETRIC 850,000
GEOMETRIC 3,940,000
HINDOILEXP 2,050,000
HINDOILEXP 1,762,273
ION EXCHANGE 875,000
KARURVYSYA 4,807,507
LUPIN 9,025,405
MBECL 460,078
NAGARCONST 10,000,000
NAGARCONST 5,000,000
ORCHID CHEM 1,750,000
ORCHID CHEM 750,000 OUT OF THIS 615,988 @ 246.57
PRAJIND 2,598,000
PRAJIND 13,653,624
PFOCUS 6,325,000
PFOCUS 2,495,000
PROVOGUE 1,900,000
PRETAIL DVR 210,589
RALLIS 12,591,820
RELIANCE BROADCAST NETWORK 1,750,000
STAR 500,000
SREINFRA 1,250,000
SUBEX 1,250,000
TITAN 22,116,160
TITAN 63,509,100
VIPIND 1,263,000 (OUT OF THIS 370000 BOUGHT ON 21.06.10 @ 296.55)
VIPIND 409,500
VICEROY 4,250,000
VICEROY 500,000
VISAKAIND 100,000
ZEN TECHNOLOGY 450,000
ZEN TECHNOLOGY 450,000
RED BAR = REDUCTION IN POTFOLIO
A2Z MAINTAINANCE 12,773,351 (1,375,000 BOUGHT ON 23.12.10 @ 347)
A2Z MAINTAINANCE 1,400,000
ADINATH EXIM RESOURCE 188,500A2Z MAINTAINANCE 1,400,000
APTECH 2,000,000
APTECH 3,152,100
APTECH 10,554,403 (RARE EQUITY (P) LTD.)
ALPHAGEO 125,000
ATFL 1,100,700
ATFL 774,559
AUTOIND 731,233
AUTOIND 520,000
BILCARE 1,735,425
BILCARE 267,500
CRISIL 550,000
DCB 1,200,000 @ 55.40 IN RARE ENTERPRISES
DELTA CORP 500,000 @ 87.65 ON 10.12.10
DELTA CORP 7,500,000 @ 51 ON 19.11.10
DELTA CORP 7,500,000 WARRANTS
MR. RAMESH DAMANI ALSO HOLDS 3,000,000 DELTA CORP @ 51
GEOJITBNPP 18,000,000
GEOMETRIC 850,000
GEOMETRIC 3,940,000
HINDOILEXP 2,050,000
HINDOILEXP 1,762,273
ION EXCHANGE 875,000
KARURVYSYA 4,807,507
LUPIN 9,025,405
MBECL 460,078
NAGARCONST 10,000,000
NAGARCONST 5,000,000
ORCHID CHEM 1,750,000
ORCHID CHEM 750,000 OUT OF THIS 615,988 @ 246.57
PRAJIND 2,598,000
PRAJIND 13,653,624
PFOCUS 6,325,000
PFOCUS 2,495,000
PROVOGUE 1,900,000
PRETAIL DVR 210,589
RALLIS 12,591,820
RELIANCE BROADCAST NETWORK 1,750,000
STAR 500,000
SREINFRA 1,250,000
SUBEX 1,250,000
TITAN 22,116,160
TITAN 63,509,100
VIPIND 1,263,000 (OUT OF THIS 370000 BOUGHT ON 21.06.10 @ 296.55)
VIPIND 409,500
VICEROY 4,250,000
VICEROY 500,000
VISAKAIND 100,000
ZEN TECHNOLOGY 450,000
ZEN TECHNOLOGY 450,000
BLUE BAR = NO CHANGE
GREEN BAR = ADDITION IN PORTFOLIORED BAR = REDUCTION IN POTFOLIO
FOURTH TARGET MET IN EDUCOMP SOLUTIONS
ON 25.10.11 WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY EDUCOMP SOLUTIONS AT CMP OF 252 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 246 FOR A TARGET OF 258, 263, 268, 273, 278 AND 283. OUR FOURTH TARGET OF 273 ACHIEVED TODAY. BINGO AGAIN!
ALL THREE TARGETS MET IN LIC HOUSING FINANCE
ON 25.10.11 WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY LIC HOUSING AT CMO OF 216 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 209 FOR A TARGET OF 223, 228 AND 233. OUR THIRD TARGET OF 233 ACHIEVED TODAY. BINGO AGAIN!
WHAT R U WAITING FOR? SUBSCIBE NOW.
WHAT R U WAITING FOR? SUBSCIBE NOW.
ALL THREE TARGETS MET IN SARDA ENERGY
TODAY WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY SARDA ENERGY AT CMP OF 122 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 118 FOR A TARGET OF 126.80, 128.40 AND 129.80. OUR THIRD TARGET OF 129.80 ACHIEVED TODAY ITSELF. BINGO AGAIN!
WHAT R U WAITING FOR? SUBSCRIBE NOW.
WHAT R U WAITING FOR? SUBSCRIBE NOW.
ALL THREE TARGET MET IN LOVABLE LINGERIE
ON 25.10.11 WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY LOVABLE LINGERIE AT CMP OF 467 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 453 FOR A TARGET OF 483, 488 AND 493. OUR THIRD TARGET OF 493 ACHIEVED TODAY. BINGO!
WHAT R U WAITING FOR? SUBSCRIBE NOW.
WHAT R U WAITING FOR? SUBSCRIBE NOW.
Friday, October 28, 2011
OUR BLOG GOING PAID THIS DIWALI ONWARDS
TILL NOW OUR SERVICES R FREE. BUT WE R GOING FOR PAID SERVICES THIS DIWALI ONWARDS i.e. 26TH OCTOBER 2011.
COMBO OFFER:
1) ANY TWO: RS. 15000 ANNUALLY BEFORE 26.10.11
RS. 17500 ANNUALLY AFTER 26.10.11
2) ALL THREE: RS. 20000 ANNUALLY BEFORE 26.10.11.
RS. 24000 ANNUALLY AFTER 26.10.11
OUR CHARGES WILL BE AS FOLLOWS:
1) INVESTMENT IN OUR STRATEGY : RS. 10000 ANNUALLY.
2) INVESTMENT IN SGRG-S.I.P. : RS. 10000 ANNUALLY.
3) SHORT TERM INVESTMENTS : RS. 10000 ANNUALLY.
IF U WANT TO GO FOR OUR PAID SUBSCRIPTION AND DEPOSIT THE AMOUNT BEFORE 26TH OCTOBER, 2011 THEN THE ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTION WILL COME AT RS.8000 ANNUALLY i.e. U WILL GET A DISCOUNT OF 20%.
COMBO OFFER:
1) ANY TWO: RS. 15000 ANNUALLY BEFORE 26.10.11
RS. 17500 ANNUALLY AFTER 26.10.11
2) ALL THREE: RS. 20000 ANNUALLY BEFORE 26.10.11.
RS. 24000 ANNUALLY AFTER 26.10.11
FOR DETAILS OF BANK A/C KINDLY EMAIL US AT r1974g@gmail.com or r1974g@yahoo.com
SINCE, WE R GOING PAID ON THE EVE OF DIWALI, HERE IS PROCEDURE TO LOGIN.
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4) ENJOY HAPPY TRADING.
SINCE, WE R GOING PAID ON THE EVE OF DIWALI, HERE IS PROCEDURE TO LOGIN.
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2) LOGIN WITH GMAIL ACCOUNT CREATED BY US.(WE WILL TELL U THE USER NAME AND PASSWORD AFTER WE HAVE RECEIVED THE PAYMENT.)
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4) ENJOY HAPPY TRADING.
Tuesday, October 25, 2011
NIFTY MAY BE HEADING FOR A BIG MOVE
The Nifty has been in a bear market for the past one year. Its weekly chart shows each successive high was lower than the previous one. This is a bear market pattern. The previous high of the Nifty was at 5200. For the past three months, the Index has been consolidating at lower levels, but has NOT crossed the 5200 high. The consolidation is givin a message: A big move may be coming in the Nifty. A close above 5200 will give a second message: the pattern of lower highs in the Nifty has been broken. And, the consolidation in the Nifty has seen a breakout on the upside.
Then, we may be in the process of (a) seeing an end of the bear market, or, (b) witnessing a sharp upward move inside the bear market. In either case, a close above 5200 tells us to be alert to buying opportunities. The bullish sense will be cancelled if the Nifty were to close below 5000.
Then, we may be in the process of (a) seeing an end of the bear market, or, (b) witnessing a sharp upward move inside the bear market. In either case, a close above 5200 tells us to be alert to buying opportunities. The bullish sense will be cancelled if the Nifty were to close below 5000.
7TH BINGO! EDUCOMP REACHED OUR FIRST TARGET OF 258
TODAY WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY EDUCOMP SOLUTIONS AT CMP OF 252 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 246 FOR A TARGET OF 258, 263 AND 268. OUR FIRST TARGET OF 258 ACHIEVED TODAY ITSELF. BINGO AGAIN!
6TH BINGO! BAJAJ AUTO REACHED OUR NINETH TARGET OF 1748
ON 24.10.11 WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY BAJAJ AUTO AT CMP OF 1668 WITH A STOPLOS OF 1650 FOR A TARGET OF 1688, 1693, 1698, 1708, 1713, 1728, 1733, 1738 AND 1748. OUR NINETH TARGET OF 1748 ACHIEVED TODAY. BINGO AGAIN!
5TH BINGO! BAJAJ AUTO REACHED OUR EIGHTH TARGET OF 1738
ON 24.10.11 WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY BAJAJ AUTO AT CMP OF 1668 WITH A STOPLOS OF 1650 FOR A TARGET OF 1688, 1693, 1698, 1708, 1713, 1728, 1733, 1738 AND 1748. OUR EIGHTH TARGET OF 1738 ACHIEVED TODAY. BINGO AGAIN!
4TH BINGO! BAJAJ AUTO REACHED OUR SEVENTH TARGET OF 1733
ON 24.10.11 WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY BAJAJ AUTO AT CMP OF 1668 WITH A STOPLOS OF 1650 FOR A TARGET OF 1688, 1693, 1698, 1708, 1713, 1728, 1733, 1738 AND 1748. OUR SEVENTH TARGET OF 1733 ACHIEVED TODAY. BINGO AGAIN!
BUY EDUCOMP SOLUTIONS AT CMP OF 252 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 246
WE RECOMMEND TO BUY EDUCOMP SOLUTIONS AT CMP OF 252 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 246 FOR A TARGET OF 258, 263 AND 268.
3RD BINGO! BAJAJ AUTO REACHED OUR SIXTH TARGET OF 1728
ON 24.10.11 WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY BAJAJ AUTO AT CMP OF 1668 WITH A STOPLOS OF 1650 FOR A TARGET OF 1688, 1693, 1698, 1708, 1713 AND 1728. OUR SIXTH TARGET OF 1728 ACHIEVED TODAY. BINGO AGAIN!
BUY LOVABLE LINGERIE AT CMP OF 467 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 453
WE RECOMMEND TO BUY LOVABLE LINGERIE AT CMP OF 467 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 453 FOR A TARGET OF 483, 488 AND 493.
BUY LIC HOUSING AT CMO OF 216 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 209
WE RECOMMEND TO BUY LIC HOUSING AT CMO OF 216 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 209 FOR A TARGET OF 223, 228 AND 233.
BUY RALLIS AT CMP OF 157.25 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 152
WE RECOMMEND TO BUY RALLIS AT CMP OF 157.25 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 152 FOR A TARGET OF 163.80, 166.40 AND 168.80.
BUY PRIME FOCUS AT CMP OF 53.30 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 51
WE RECOMMEND TO BUY PRIME FOCUS AT CMP OF 53.30 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 51 FOR A TARGET OF 55.80, 56.40 AND 57.80.
2ND BINGO! BAJAJ AUTO REACHED OUR FIFTH TARGET OF 1713
ON 24.10.11 WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY BAJAJ AUTO AT CMP OF 1668 WITH A STOPLOS OF 1650 FOR A TARGET OF 1688, 1693, 1698, 1708, 1713 AND 1728. OUR FIFTH TARGET OF 1713 ACHIEVED TODAY. BINGO!
1ST BINGO! BAJAJ AUTO REACHED OUR FOURTH TARGET OF 1708
ON 24.10.11 WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY BAJAJ AUTO AT CMP OF 1668 WITH A STOPLOS OF 1650 FOR A TARGET OF 1688, 1693, 1698, 1708, 1713 AND 1728. OUR FOURTH TARGET OF 1708 ACHIEVED TODAY. BINGO!
BUY VIP IND AT CMP OF 839 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 818
WE RECOMMEND TO BUY VIP IND AT CMP OF 839 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 818 FOR A TARGET OF 868, 883 AND 888.
Monday, October 24, 2011
4TH BINGO! SBI REACHED OUR FIRST TARGET
ON 21.10.11 WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY SBI AT CMP OF 1953 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 1923 FOR A TARGET OF 1988, 2004 AND 2018. OUR FIRST TARGET ACHIEVED TODAY. BINGO AGAIN!
3RD BINGO! BAJAJ AUTO REACHED OUR THIRD TARGET OF 1698
TODAY WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY BAJAJ AUTO AT CMP OF 1668 WITH A STOPLOS OF 1650 FOR A TARGET OF 1688, 1693 AND 1698. OUR THIRD TARGET OF 1698 ACHIEVED TODAY ITSELF. BINGO! NOW NEXT TARGETS R 1708, 1713 AND 1728.
2ND BINGO! BAJAJ AUTO REACHED OUR SECOND TARGET OF 1693
TODAY WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY BAJAJ AUTO AT CMP OF 1668 WITH A STOPLOS OF 1650 FOR A TARGET OF 1688, 1693 AND 1698. OUR SECOND TARGET OF 1693 ACHIEVED TODAY ITSELF. BINGO!
1ST BINGO! BAJAJ AUTO REACHED OUR FIRST TARGET OF 1688
TODAY WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY BAJAJ AUTO AT CMP OF 1668 WITH A STOPLOS OF 1650 FOR A TARGET OF 1688, 1693 AND 1698. OUR FIRST TARGET OF 1688 ACHIEVED TODAY ITSELF. BINGO!
BUY BAJAJ AUTO AT CMP OF 1668 WITH A STOPLOS OF 1650
WE RECOMMEND TO BUY BAJAJ AUTO AT CMP OF 1668 WITH A STOPLOS OF 1650 FOR A TARGET OF 1688, 1693 AND 1698.
Friday, October 21, 2011
HOW TO LOGIN ON THE EVE OF DIWALI
SINCE, WE R GOING PAID ON THE EVE OF DIWALI, HERE IS PROCEDURE TO LOGIN.
1) BROWSE OUR BLOG BY TYPING www.profitsunlimitid33.blogspot.com
2) LOGIN WITH GMAIL ACCOUNT CREATED BY US.(WE WILL TELL U THE USER NAME AND PASSWORD AFTER WE HAVE RECEIVED THE PAYMENT.)
3) TELL US UR PAYMENT DETAILS ON r1974g@gmail.com or r1974g@yahoo.com. WE WILL THEN COMMUNICATE UR USER ID AND PASSWORD.
4) ENJOY HAPPY TRADING.
HAPPY DIWALI
1) BROWSE OUR BLOG BY TYPING www.profitsunlimitid33.blogspot.com
2) LOGIN WITH GMAIL ACCOUNT CREATED BY US.(WE WILL TELL U THE USER NAME AND PASSWORD AFTER WE HAVE RECEIVED THE PAYMENT.)
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4) ENJOY HAPPY TRADING.
HAPPY DIWALI
OUR BLOG IS GOING PAID THIS DIWALI ONWARDS
TILL NOW OUR SERVICES R FREE. BUT WE R GOING FOR PAID SERVICES THIS DIWALI ONWARDS i.e. 26TH OCTOBER 2011.
COMBO OFFER:
1) ANY TWO: RS. 15000 ANNUALLY BEFORE 26.10.11
RS. 17500 ANNUALLY AFTER 26.10.11
2) ALL THREE: RS. 20000 ANNUALLY BEFORE 26.10.11.
RS. 24000 ANNUALLY AFTER 26.10.11
OUR CHARGES WILL BE AS FOLLOWS:
1) INVESTMENT IN OUR STRATEGY : RS. 10000 ANNUALLY.
2) INVESTMENT IN SGRG-S.I.P. : RS. 10000 ANNUALLY.
3) SHORT TERM INVESTMENTS : RS. 10000 ANNUALLY.
IF U WANT TO GO FOR OUR PAID SUBSCRIPTION AND DEPOSIT THE AMOUNT BEFORE 26TH OCTOBER, 2011 THEN THE ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTION WILL COME AT RS.8000 ANNUALLY i.e. U WILL GET A DISCOUNT OF 20%.
COMBO OFFER:
1) ANY TWO: RS. 15000 ANNUALLY BEFORE 26.10.11
RS. 17500 ANNUALLY AFTER 26.10.11
2) ALL THREE: RS. 20000 ANNUALLY BEFORE 26.10.11.
RS. 24000 ANNUALLY AFTER 26.10.11
FOR DETAILS OF BANK A/C KINDLY EMAIL US AT r1974g@gmail.com or r1974g@yahoo.com
2ND BINGO! RALLIS REACHED OUR SECOND TARGET OF 168.40
ON 20.10.11 WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY RALLIS AT CMP OF 162.50 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 158 FOR A TARGET OF 166.80, 168.40 AND 169.80. OUR SECOND TARGET OF 168.40 ACHIEVED TODAY. BINGO!
1ST BINGO! RALLIS REACHED OUR FIRST TARGET OF 166.80
ON 20.10.11 WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY RALLIS AT CMP OF 162.50 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 158 FOR A TARGET OF 166.80, 168.40 AND 169.80. OUR FIRST TARGET OF 166.80 ACHIEVED TODAY. BINGO!
BUY SBI AT CMP OF 1953 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 1923
WE RECOMMEND TO BUY SBI AT CMP OF 1953 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 1923 FOR A TARGET OF 1988, 2004 AND 2018.
BUY SINTEX AT CMP OF 118.50 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 115
WE RECOMMEND TO BUY SINTEX AT CMP OF 118.50 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 115 FOR A TARGET OF 123.80, 125.40 AND 128.80.
Thursday, October 20, 2011
BUY SHRIRAM TRANSPORT FINANCE AT CMP OF 603 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 590
WE RECOMMEND TO BUY SHRIRAM TRANSPORT FINANCE AT CMP OF 603 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 590 FOR A TARGET OF 618, 623 AND 628.
BUY RALLIS AT CMP OF 162.50 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 158
WE RECOMMEND TO BUY RALLIS AT CMP OF 162.50 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 158 FOR A TARGET OF 166.80, 168.40 AND 169.80.
BUY LIC HOUSING FINANCE AT CMP OF 215.40 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 209
WE RECOMMEND TO BUY LIC HOUSING FINANCE AT CMP OF 215.40 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 209 FOR A TARGET OF 223, 228 AND 233.
Monday, October 17, 2011
1ST BINGO! EDUCOMP REACHED OUR SECOND TARGET OF 268
ON 14.10.11 WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY EDUCOMP AT CMP OF 256 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 250 FOR A TARGET OF 263, 268 AND 273. OUR SECOND TARGET OF 268 ACHIEVED TODAY. BINGO!
Friday, October 14, 2011
1ST BINGO! EDUCOMP REACHED OUR FIRST TARGET OF 263
TODAY WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY EDUCOMP AT CMP OF 256 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 250 FOR A TARGET OF 263, 268 AND 273. OUR FIRST TARGET OF 263 ACHIEVED TODAY ITSELF. BINGO!
BUY PIPAPAV SHIPYARD ABOVE 84.25 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 81
WE RECOMMEND TO BUY PIPAPAV SHIPYARD ABOVE 84.25 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 81 FOR A TARGET OF 87.80, 89.40 AND 89.80.
BUY PRIME FOCUS AT CMP OF 55.60 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 53
WE RECOMMEND TO BUY PRIME FOCUS AT CMP OF 55.60 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 53 FOR A TARGET OF 58.80, 59.40 AND 60.80.
BUY EDUCOMP AT CMP OF 256 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 250
WE RECOMMEND TO BUY EDUCOMP AT CMP OF 256 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 250 FOR A TARGET OF 263, 268 AND 273.
Thursday, October 13, 2011
11TH BINGO! SREI INFRASTRUCTURE REACHED OUR FIFTH TARGET OF 35.80
ON 10.10.11 WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY SREI INFRA AT CMP OF 32 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 30.50 FOR A TARGET OF 33.40, 33.80, 34.80, 35.40, 35.80 AND 36.80. OUR FIFTH TARGET OF 35.80 ACHIEVED TODAY. BINGO AGAIN!
10TH BINGO! SREI INFRA REACHED OUR FOURTH TARGET OF 35.40
ON 10.10.11 WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY SREI INFRA AT CMP OF 32 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 30.50 FOR A TARGET OF 33.40, 33.80, 34.80, 35.40, 35.80 AND 36.80. OUR FOURTH TARGET OF 35.40 ACHIEVED TODAY. BINGO AGAIN!
9TH BINGO! VIP IND REACHED OUR FIFTEENTH TARGET OF 978
ON 10.10.11 WE RECOMMEND TO BUY VIP AT CMP OF 883 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 868 FOR A TARGET OF 898, 903, 918, 923, 928, 933, 938, 943, 948, 953, 958, 963, 968, 973 AND 978. OUR FIFTEENTH TARGET OF 978 ACHIEVED TODAY. BINGO AGAIN!
8TH BINGO! PRIME FOCUS REACHED OUR FOURTH TARGET OF 59.40
ON 12.10.11 WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY PRIME FOCUS AT CMP OF 56.60 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 55.50 FOR A TARGET OF 57.80, 58.40, 58.80, 59.40, 59.80 AND 60.80. OUR FOURTH TARGET OF 59.40 ACHIEVED TODAY. BINGO AGAIN!
7TH BINGO! PRIME FOCUS REACHED OUR THIRD TARGET OF 58.80
ON 12.10.11 WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY PRIME FOCUS AT CMP OF 56.60 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 55.50 FOR A TARGET OF 57.80, 58.40 AND 58.80. OUR THIRD TARGET OF 58.80 ACHIEVED TODAY ITSELF. BINGO AGAIN! NOW NEXT TARGETS R 59.40, 59.80 AND 60.80.
6TH BINGO! DISHTV REACHED OUR FIRST TARGET OF 83.40
TODAY WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY DISHTV AT CMP OF 80.30 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 78 FOR A TARGET OF 83.40, 85.80 AND 87.80. OUR FIRST TARGET OF 83.40 ACHIEVED TODAY ITSELF. BINGO!
BUY DISHTV AT CMP OF 80.30 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 78
WE RECOMMEND TO BUY DISHTV AT CMP OF 80.30 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 78 FOR A TARGET OF 83.40, 85.80 AND 87.80.
5TH BINGO! SHRIRAM TRANSPORT FINANCE REACHED OUR FIFTH TARGET OF 638
ON 13.10.11 WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY SHRIRAM TRANSPORT FINANCE AT CMP OF 603 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 588 FOR A TARGET OF 618, 623, 628, 633, 638 AND 648. OUR FIFTH TARGET OF 638 ACHIEVED TODAY. BINGO AGAIN!
4TH BINGO! SHRIRAM TRANSPORT REACHED OUR FOURTH TARGET OF 633
ON 13.10.11 WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY SHRIRAM TRANSPORT FINANCE AT CMP OF 603 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 588 FOR A TARGET OF 618, 623, 628, 633, 638 AND 648. OUR FOURTH TARGET OF 633 ACHIEVED TODAY. BINGO AGAIN!
BUY HANUNG TOYS AT CMP OF 115 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 108
WE RECOMMEND TO BUY HANUNG TOYS AT CMP OF 115 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 108 FOR A TARGET OF 123, 128 AND 133.
3RD BINGO! SREI INFRA REACHED OUR THIRD TARGET OF 34.80
ON 10.10.11 WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY SREI INFRA AT CMP OF 32 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 30.50 FOR A TARGET OF 33.40, 33.80 AND 34.80. OUR THIRD TARGET OF 34.80 ACHIEVED TODAY. BINGO! NOW NEXT TARGETS R 35.40, 35.80 AND 36.80.
2ND BINGO! LOVABLE LINGERIE REACHED OUR FOURTEENTH TARGET OF 508
ON 10.10.11 WE RECOMMENDED TO BUY LOVABLE LINGERIE AT CMP OF 432 WITH A STOPLOSS OF 416 FOR A TARGET OF 443, 448, 453, 458, 463, 468, 473, 478, 483, 488, 493, 498, 503, 508 AND 518. OUR FOURTEENTH TARGET OF 508 ACHIEVED TODAY. BINGO!
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