Financial Graph of Companies

amitrandive

Well-Known Member
#1
Here is a good news for all Fundamental investors.

Money control has recently launched Financial graphs.All those interested in financial snapshots of any company can refer the link for Financial graphs.

http://www.moneycontrol.com/financials/upl/financial-graphs/book-value-per-share/UP04

Charts are updated only till March 2013 on annual basis only.

But good for starters,it has twelve parameters one can get.

1)Operating Profit & OPM
2)EBITDA, PBT & PAT(Standalone and Consolidated)
3)Total Assets & Asset Turnover Ratio
4)Net Sales
5)EBITDA
6)Profit Before Tax
7)Profit After Tax
8)Networth
9)Return On Capital Employed %
10)Gross Block
11)Dividend
12)Book Value.


A good place to get the Fundamental and Technical graphs at the same place.
:clap::clap::clap:
 

jamit_05

Well-Known Member
#2
Thanks for the information. I look forward to seeing your posts as you are kind in sharing. As for the utility of the tool, I have a different view.

Markets don't tend to reward people who see "what is" and react. The "Big pockets" use this attitude to manipulate the retailers, hand them over priced stocks and leave them high and dry. On the other hand, the ones who are handsomely rewarded are the ones who harbour a vision of a future and act upon it. (This applies to Portfolio Investment and not short term trading, which is a completely different arena, where the opposite works.)
 

amitrandive

Well-Known Member
#3
Thanks for the information. I look forward to seeing your posts as you are kind in sharing. As for the utility of the tool, I have a different view.

Markets don't tend to reward people who see "what is" and react. The "Big pockets" use this attitude to manipulate the retailers, hand them over priced stocks and leave them high and dry. On the other hand, the ones who are handsomely rewarded are the ones who harbour a vision of a future and act upon it. (This applies to Portfolio Investment and not short term trading, which is a completely different arena, where the opposite works.)
Amit Sir

Thanks for your word of appreciation.!!!

I totally agree with you on your viewpoint about manipulation of information.
 

jamit_05

Well-Known Member
#4
Amit Sir

Thanks for your word of appreciation.!!!

I totally agree with you on your viewpoint about manipulation of information.
I am glad you do. Because the recent past is replete with such examples. And the king of scams was RPower IPO, gosh. The Ambani fam laughed their way to the banks (in the plural, cuz one bank cannot take care of so much money so quickly). The most recent case of IDFC, the stock tumbled as soon as it got the banking licence, something which i pointed out in my FA thread well in advance.
 

amitrandive

Well-Known Member
#5
I am glad you do. Because the recent past is replete with such examples. And the king of scams was RPower IPO, gosh. The Ambani fam laughed their way to the banks (in the plural, cuz one bank cannot take care of so much money so quickly). The most recent case of IDFC, the stock tumbled as soon as it got the banking licence, something which i pointed out in my FA thread well in advance.
Yes

I read it.I am a regular follower of your thread.
:thumb:
 

Einstein

Well-Known Member
#6
I am glad you do. Because the recent past is replete with such examples. And the king of scams was RPower IPO, gosh. The Ambani fam laughed their way to the banks (in the plural, cuz one bank cannot take care of so much money so quickly). The most recent case of IDFC, the stock tumbled as soon as it got the banking licence, something which i pointed out in my FA thread well in advance.
Actually I looked at IDFC few months back and was very sure that its over priced by atleast 10-20%. after banking license I didn't comment anything because of the market behavior (no one would like to look like bozo). but it did corrected pretty fast.
 

jamit_05

Well-Known Member
#7
Actually I looked at IDFC few months back and was very sure that its over priced by atleast 10-20%. after banking license I didn't comment anything because of the market behavior (no one would like to look like bozo). but it did corrected pretty fast.

Now, I think the next big hogwash is going to be one hell of a surprise for the Indian junta. Investor expectations are going to be so badly shattered that people, in general, are going swear themselves away from the stock market for a fairly long time. This tamasha is going to be called THE MODI-WAVE.

BJP coming into full majority, will be a ripe time for the unpleasant reality to surface as some facts cannot hold much longer and must surface for a long breather.
 

amitrandive

Well-Known Member
#8
Actually I looked at IDFC few months back and was very sure that its over priced by atleast 10-20%. after banking license I didn't comment anything because of the market behavior (no one would like to look like bozo). but it did corrected pretty fast.
Amit Sir and Einstein.

I am trying to learn breakout trading on Charts.I have posted my observation on IDFC chart.

 

praveen taneja

Well-Known Member
#9
Now, I think the next big hogwash is going to be one hell of a surprise for the Indian junta. Investor expectations are going to be so badly shattered that people, in general, are going swear themselves away from the stock market for a fairly long time. This tamasha is going to be called THE MODI-WAVE.

BJP coming into full majority, will be a ripe time for the unpleasant reality to surface as some facts cannot hold much longer and must surface for a long breather.
Bro I admire you knowledge on mkt but the bolded lines must need some clarification for a person of little knowldge like me:confused::confused:
 

jamit_05

Well-Known Member
#10
Bro I admire you knowledge on mkt but the bolded lines must need some clarification for a person of little knowldge like me:confused::confused:
I also claim to have little knowledge, just like you do. And that is an advantage. In fact, I go a mile to ensure that I do not accumulate unnecessary junk. :)

Big Pocket investors have a habit, an age old strategy. They don't randomly sell their stocks as they have huge volumes for which they won't find resolute buyers. Hence, they wait for an opportune time. Like when retailers rush to buy due to their new-found beliefs, like this time in Modi. They use this gusto to alight their positions in stocks they feel are expensive.

This, more times than one would like, turns into a bloodshed. The higher the hope and expectation, the deeper will be the pessimism, which sometimes even the biggest of pockets cannot control. They, eventually, have to call up the big-boss, Uncle Sam, and control the free-fall. Uncle-Sam gets the best stocks at the super-best price and the incumbent government gets to save their faces.

This is what I mean by Modi-Wave turning gruesome.
 

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