General Trading Chat

princy01

Well-Known Member
it might be slow grinding day but still made some money , lets see tomorrow, looks like put will be sold tomorrow
if one is stuck on a view and doesnt change when the change is warranted , he will lose surely

sold 23500 calls at 16 avg price , because market opened weak and there was weakness on 23500 calls too as compared to future charts , so sold it and if market doesnt turn up then its going to zero , lets see
 

princy01

Well-Known Member
if one is stuck on a view and doesnt change when the change is warranted , he will lose surely

sold 23500 calls at 16 avg price , because market opened weak and there was weakness on 23500 calls too as compared to future charts , so sold it and if market doesnt turn up then its going to zero , lets see
another reason was continuous weakness in puts throughout the week , so market doesnt go in one direction continuously , so it was time for call writers to make an effort and make some money on expiry
 
One auto ancillary stock which is doing well is Motherson Sumi Systems....keep it in our watch list.It is trading at 3 years high.

Caution : It is a Midcap volatile stock..

Smart_trade
 
if one is stuck on a view and doesnt change when the change is warranted , he will lose surely

sold 23500 calls at 16 avg price , because market opened weak and there was weakness on 23500 calls too as compared to future charts , so sold it and if market doesnt turn up then its going to zero , lets see
I hope you will keep the trade till eod.
Right na !!!!!!!!!!!!
 
I was comparing last 1 year performance of good PMS managers like Porinju Velliath,Basant Maheshwari.They have generated returns of 40-45 % in last one year.They have average Portfolio size of Rs 75 Lacs per portfolio and the investors are HNIs,NRIs etc....so each investor pays them between 1.5 to 5 lacs every year....

Many of the Smallcase portfolios constructed by Small Case on sound investing principles beat this return and the cost is just Rs 100.....so less expensive does not necessarily mean lower quality.....:thumb:

Smart_trade
 
Last edited:
Once a blue Chip .......

Anil Ambani's RCOM ........ on the way ...... to become penny stock .....

Moral of the story ......

never mess up with the Big Brother ... :D



PS: Ironically originally RCOM was Big Brother's brain child ....... which introduced new (at that time) CDMA technology.


http://www.livemint.com/Opinion/7Vk...-default-wont-fly-in-Indias-banking-mess.html

An Ambani default won’t fly in India’s banking mess
Andy Mukherjee, The Bloomberg he Mint Published on June 1, 2017


Anil Ambani's Reliance Communications is an unusual cautionary tale signalling that India’s soured debt malaise is spreading beyond infrastructure, power and steel

Singapore, May 31: Balance-sheet turbulence at large Indian companies is nothing new. The $180 billion of stressed assets in the banking system are mainly due to about 60 big corporate accounts. Yet two things make this week’s meltdown in the shares and debentures of Reliance Communications Ltd an unusual cautionary tale.

Banks and bondholders are sitting on a combined $7 billion exposure to RCom, which is confidently reiterating plans to spin off two of its main businesses to pay down 55% of its debt by 30 September. Credit rating companies, though, are wondering how RCom can service the remainder of its borrowings once it has sold its wireless and tower units, the source of the bulk of operating income.

Moody’s Investors Service on Tuesday cut RCom’s ratings by two notches to Caa1, four levels above default, and said it may lower them again. RCom has “no scope” to shed its debt burden of 9 times Ebitda “absent the successful execution of its corporate restructuring,” it said. That’s back to waiting for 30 September.

RCom’s short- and long-term debt was also downgraded to default by local ratings companies Care Ratings and Icra Ltd on Tuesday, with the former saying in a statement the move takes into account delays by RCom in servicing its obligations as a result of “significant stress on its cash flows and high level of debt.”

The saga of distress is curious because, first, RCom is controlled by Anil Ambani, the once-estranged younger brother of India’s richest man. It’s a business that Mukesh Ambani, the oil billionaire, once nurtured, only reluctantly giving it to his sibling as part of a family settlement.

The older brother may not have much interest in the undersea cable and optic-fibre business that will remain with RCom. He has his own shiny new toy now. (More on that later.) Yet a default won’t exactly be a joyride for Mukesh Ambani.

RCom, after all, still uses the Reliance name. That brand, which was behind the first 100-year dollar bond issue from India two decades ago, can’t afford to lose the market’s trust. Institutional investors aren’t the problem, but clients of a private bank in Singapore or London aren’t very likely to know—or care about—the finer details of which Ambani brother owns what part of the empire.

Maintaining face will be important locally, too. The only homegrown Reliance company known to have forced haircuts on creditors is an unlisted gas transportation unit the group sold some years prior to Mukesh Ambani. It was essentially his private venture seeking an extension of debt maturities; and even that didn’t go unnoticed.

Besides, that was before beer tycoon Vijay Mallya checked out of India last year leaving behind a failed airline and owing $1.4 billion. The outcry that caused means the country’s rich will find it increasingly hard to walk away from corporate liabilities.

Stressed assets

Secondly, RCom is a warning sign that India’s soured debt malaise is spreading beyond infrastructure, power and steel. News the company may have already missed payments to banks and become a so-called special mention account, the first step to being declared a bad loan, comes less than two months after India’s central bank warned lenders about their telecom advances.

Ironically, it’s Mukesh Ambani who’s driving the shake-up with his new fourth-generation wireless service, Reliance Jio. Free voice calls and discounted data charges are squeezing profits at larger rivals such as Bharti Airtel Ltd, and causing losses at smaller ones.

At $115 billion, telecom debt in India is a big number for a banking system whose stressed assets exceed its net worth. Letting a hefty chunk of this go sour could unleash chaos. Jio’s aggressive launch has already led to a hissy exchange between the government and the regulator. Mukesh Ambani wants market share, but not front-page news about how he’s bankrupting the industry.

A smartphone revolution, driven by cheap data, would benefit the entire Indian economy. But if that throws off balance even the younger Ambani, who a few months ago was effusive about the “virtual merger” with Jio—a sharing arrangement for spectrum, network and towers—then it’ll be a Pyrrhic victory for Mukesh.

An Ambani default won’t fly. The main goal then will be to avoid it at all costs without putting Mukesh Ambani’s flagship, Reliance Industries Ltd, anywhere in this not-so-pretty picture. How the two brothers pull that off will be interesting to watch.
 
Housing Finance companies such as India Bulls Housing Fin,LIC Housing finance are doing well today.HDFC will catch up soon.

Smart_trade
Today HDFC opened in RED ....... now in Green
 
suddenly large red candle in maruti ....

Bought this dip in small amount ....
 

Similar threads