Trading Tips - koolfriend4u

How the Intra day calls & Short term calls in this section?

  • Rocking

    Votes: 24 35.3%
  • Moderate

    Votes: 14 20.6%
  • very few reach the targets

    Votes: 5 7.4%
  • yet to try

    Votes: 27 39.7%

  • Total voters
    68
  • Poll closed .
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koolfriend4u

Well-Known Member
The worst thing is that nifty is moving up when we r expecting it to come down and surprisingly dragging up weak stocks like suzlon along with it.
thats how market behaves always:)

hmm 5080 need to be gud resistance - now no trades

( except energy development & Unitech - both long for tgt 10% return.)

Buddy on suzlon - even a small order for 21 MW & 42 MW kinda news suzlon firing :)
 

koolfriend4u

Well-Known Member
I hav seen cautions (of same kind) in two diff blogs :

>>FIIs on Friday sold 1057 crores worth of shares in cash market. So, it’s time to be cautious. Keep an eye on Friday’s high i.e. 4950 for support or breakdown.
-deepak singh


>> after a long time the negative correlation between the global equities and the us dollar index gets disturbed, and asian mkts particularly seen correction on dubai debt payment delays in real estate sector giving doubts on economic recovery in that part of the world and indian listed shares of companies having operations in west asia getting a good amount of beating. fii's are continously turning out to be net sellers in cash in large amounts.
-abhay r sowkumar

Nifty view:
Can short near 5140 for sure. 1st res seen @ 5080 & 2nd res @ 5130 keep sl @5150
 

koolfriend4u

Well-Known Member
news - koolfriend4u

Dec. 1 (Bloomberg) -- India’s central bank may withdraw more stimulus measures by the end of the year after Asia’s third-biggest economy grew at the fastest pace in six quarters.

“The chances of a rate move before the end of December have risen,” said Robert Prior-Wandesforde, senior Asia economist at HSBC Holdings Plc in Singapore. Economic growth of 7.9 percent last quarter was an “extraordinary” number that “will no doubt make the Reserve Bank of India sit up and take notice,” he said.

Governor Duvvuri Subbarao, concerned about inflation gaining traction, last week indicated that there was a need to exit some of the “unconventional” measures used to spur growth. Australia and Vietnam have already begun to tighten monetary policy as the Asia Pacific region leads the world out of the worst recession since the 1930s.

India’s $1.2 trillion economy may grow about 7 percent in the year to March 31, Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee said in New Delhi yesterday after the statistics bureau released gross domestic product figures for the quarter ended Sept 30. Last quarter’s growth beat the estimates of all 22 economists in a Bloomberg survey. Subbarao in October predicted growth this fiscal year of 6 percent “with an upward bias.”

The benchmark Sensitive index gained 1.8 percent to 16,926.22 yesterday after the GDP report and the rupee increased 0.3 percent to 46.5157 against the dollar. The yield on the benchmark 10-year government bond rose 7 basis points to 7.26 percent.

Growth in India is benefiting from record-low interest rates, tax cuts and higher government spending unveiled by policy makers since September 2008 to shield the economy from the global slump. The combined stimulus is worth more than 12 percent of GDP.

While Subbarao started to withdraw monetary stimulus in October by ordering lenders to keep aside a greater proportion of deposits in government bonds, he has kept the benchmark reverse repurchase rate unchanged at 3.25 percent since April.

Inflation pressures are building as growth quickens and after the weakest monsoon rains since 1972 hurt farm output, pushing up food costs. The central bank forecasts inflation of 6.5 percent by March 31 from 1.34 percent in October and 0.5 percent in September.

‘Corrective’ Steps

Macquarie Group Ltd. economist Rajeev Malik expects Subbarao to raise the cash reserve ratio, or the proportion of deposits lenders keep with the central bank as cash reserves, as early as this month before increasing interest rates.

Mukherjee said last month he will take “corrective” steps and pull back fiscal stimulus once economic recovery takes hold.

That stage may not have been reached, as the central bank deputy governor Subir Gokarn yesterday said the unexpected increase in India’s economic growth may be on account of the government stimulus and that its “premature” to say the economy can grow 7 percent in the current financial year.

Montek Singh Ahluwalia, deputy chairman of India’s Planning Commission, the government’s economic advisory arm, said the growth numbers suggest that policies are working and that there is no need to change them at present. Inflation is not a “big problem” at the moment, he said yesterday.

Withdrawing Liquidity

“We are still about two quarters away from rate hikes per se but the central bank might start withdrawing liquidity through an increase in its regulatory reserve requirements,” said Gaurav Kapur, an economist at ABN Amro Bank in Mumbai. “While there is some improvement in private consumption, investment activity still remains a laggard.”

Companies including JSW Steel Ltd., India’s third-largest producer, said it is “not very clear” whether the economy would expand at the same pace in the current quarter. Growth in the construction and real estate business has been subdued since October, JSW’s Chief Financial Officer Seshagiri Rao said yesterday.

Still, the economic expansion in India is the fastest after China among the world’s biggest economies, attracting investments from French tire maker Michelin & Cie and South Korea’s Samsung Electronics Co. China’s economy grew 8.9 percent last quarter.

Michelin said this month it plans to invest 40 billion rupees ($860 million) in a new factory in the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu. Samsung on Nov. 17 inaugurated an air- conditioner manufacturing unit in India, its fifth such facility in the world.

“The pace of recovery is stronger than expected,” said Chetan Ahya, regional economist at Morgan Stanley in Singapore. “We maintain our view that the central bank will lift policy rates by 25 basis points in January, 2010.”
 
This guy seems to be crazy. He posts the same question in all active threads. Just because he is holding PUTS, he wants the market to fall.
In case this gives you some satisfaction "Yes the market is going to touch 4000 in Dec"
:rofl::rofl::rofl::rofl: 3200 in first week
 
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