My Picks

padiyaraa

Well-Known Member
#51
watch for praj industries ( I am sorry, my graphs are getting shuffled)




praj industries
Market Cap: 1517.20 Crores
Current Price: 85.50
Book Value: 37.13
Stock P/E: 19.89
Dividend Yield: 2.16%
Stock is 2.00 paid up
Listed on BSE & NSE
52 Week High/Low: 89.40 / 54.55
Return on capital employed: 11.75%
Quick ratio: 0.97
Dividend Payout: 72.12%
Number of equity shares: 17.75Cr.
EPS: 4.30
Expected quarterly EPS: 0.47 hence don't expect a big move
 
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padiyaraa

Well-Known Member
#52
heliosmath

heliosmath
Market Cap: 70.91 Crores
Current Price: 24.45
Book Value: 115.99
Stock P/E: 1.59
Dividend Yield: 15.60%
Stock is 10.00 paid up
Listed on BSE & NSE
52 Week High/Low: 147.50 / 21.50
Return on capital employed: 18.31%
Quick ratio: 3.95
Dividend Payout: 27.87%
Number of equity shares: 2.64Cr.
EPS: 16.89
Expected quarterly EPS: 8.81
Pros:
- Stock is trading at 0.23 times its book value
- Stock is providing a good dividend yield of 15.60%.
- Company is expected to give good quarter
- Promoter's stake has increased
- Company has been maintaining a healthy dividend payout of 22.64%
Cons:
- Company has a low return on equity of 11.43% for last 3 years.
- Contingent liabilities of Rs.51.77 Cr.
- Promoters have pledged 45.25% of their holding
-promoters holding 1.1995680 Cr = 45.42%
-public holding 1.1466064 Cr =43.41 %
 

padiyaraa

Well-Known Member
#53

Global Vectra Helicorp Limited has further came down
Market Cap:90.16 Crores
Current Price: 64.40
Book Value: 10.49
Stock P/E: 6.14
Dividend Yield: 0.00%
Stock is 10.00 paid up
Listed on BSE & NSE
52 Week High/Low: 93.30 / 24.00
Return on capital employed: 11.17%
Quick ratio: 0.41
Dividend Payout: 0.00%
Number of equity shares: 1.40Cr.
EPS: 16.51
Expected quarterly EPS: 9.27A positive
outlook on this stock.
 
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padiyaraa

Well-Known Member
#54
GeeCee Ventures Limited

GeeCee Ventures Limited
Market Cap: 114.47 Crores
Current Price: 60.15
Book Value: 153.82
Stock P/E: 15.32
Dividend Yield: 2.07%
Stock is 10.00 paid up
Listed on BSE & NSE
52 Week High/Low: 61.65 / 33.25
Return on capital employed: 2.86%
Quick ratio: 4.01
Dividend Payout: 36.92%
Number of equity shares: 1.90Cr.
EPS: 3.95
Expected quarterly EPS: 0.60
 
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narangji

Well-Known Member
#55
Your charts indicated that sobha developers can break out from 500 levels but from 500 levels, it fell down to 400. The person who would have put money in it 10 days back would have lost nearly 20% in now. So, what do you think went wrong with it?
Was it wrong analysis or some limitation of technical indicator or just poor sentiments in the concerned sector/market?

Looking at the RSI, it shows that this stock is over sold. Can anyone experienced person do a TA of this stock and put his comments, specifically, why or why not one should buy this stock now?

Anyway, thanks for your calls. I got into asian electronics at 124 yesterday :p with a target of 175. :p purely on the basis of your analysis...anyway, i will follow your stop loss and exit from it at 101.
Although you are right, I think any smart trader would have used the SL, new comers ask these question like you did.

PS: The guy who is posting this should not give entry and exit, just TA, you might be banned from this forums if you keep on giving trading calls.
 

padiyaraa

Well-Known Member
#56
nice to see that I have many old followers :D
Why do businesses rely so heavily on past performance metrics like quarterly revenue numbers and historical stock prices to make forecasts? Two reasons: the lack of real*-time data and the absence of a reliable way to make that data useful. I argue that organizations need to better understand performance metrics through real*-time data to make business decisions in order to effectively compete in today’s global marketplace. Large corporations can take a cue from the nimble startup world * just because organizations are big doesn’t mean they should be stuck in the past.
Yes, the past provides comfort and certainty, but also supplies a set of data that won’t ever change again. Previous generations of business leaders in relatively data-*poor worlds have left behind a legacy of lagging indicators: quarterly reports, year-*ago comparisons, and historical trends. These were great at defining the “was”, but not so helpful for describing the “is” and “will be”.
 
#57
most tv channels babble about this lagging indicators and leads the audience to fools paradise.this can be seen in high value stocks,the moment they declare bonus ,or quarterly results ,the stock plunges. A solution in my humble opinion seems taking the average of (ROI,ROC,debt,pledge status,bonus) last 10 years and if average ROI,ROCE is 30-45% ,we have a solace that even if stock plummets it wont go satyam's way .combining this with Gann and RSI will be better
 

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