Stock analysis is used by traders to make buy and sell call. It’s an approach to make informed decisions while investing in stocks. Stock analysis can be categorised into – fundamental analysis and technical analysis. Fundamental analysis is evaluation of data from sources, including financial records, economic reports, company assets, and market share. Analysts typically study the company’s financial statements – balance sheet, income statement, cash flow statement, and footnotes. These statements are made available to the investors in the form of quarterly earnings, disclosures to stock exchanges in compliance with the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) norms. In fundamental analysis, the analysts particularly check for a company's core income, income from other sources, profitability, guidance, assets and liabilities and debt ratio among other parameters. The other method, i.e. the technical analysis focuses purely on statistical data. It works on two assumptions; one, the stock price reflects the fundamentals. Second, the study of past and present movement in prices can help determine the future price trends. Technical analysis primarily deals with price, volume, demand and supply factors. This method is effective only when supply and demand forces influence the market. However, when outside factors are involved in a price movement, technical analysis may not be successful. More
On CNBC-TV18's in Super Six show, market gurus Shardul Kulkarni, Sr Technical Analyst of Angel Broking, Rajesh Jain, EVP Retail Research, Religare Sec and Vishal Kshatriya, Sr Derivative and Technical Analyst of Edelweiss, place their bets on two stocks each, thus offering investors a variety of options to choose from.
Short Tata Power, says Prakash Diwan of Asit C Mehta Investment.
CNBC-TV18 brings you a brand new week of Bull's Eye. It's the popular game show where market experts come together to dish out trading strategies for you to make your week more exciting and compete with each other to see whose portfolio is the strongest.
Sharmila Joshi of Fairwealth securities advises to exit Reliance Power.
Tata Power looks weak, says SP Tulsian, sptulsian.com.
Abhishek Agarwal of Fortune Interfinance advises to invest in power stocks.
Chandan Taparia of Anand Rathi Securities is positive on Lupin, Alstom Projects and Kotak Mahindra but bearish on Tata Power.
Tata Power has target of Rs 1358, says Jagannadham Thununguntla, Head of Research, SMC Global.