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
Experts are hopeful of further uptrend towards 22,700-22,800 in the coming sessions, with support at 22,300-22,200 levels, and the volatility index diving to November 2023 lows
Given the formation of a bullish candlestick pattern for the second straight week, and staying above the downward sloping resistance trendline, the Nifty50 may sustain the upward bias amid consolidation and any dips would be a buying opportunity
Nykaa was the third largest gainer in the Nifty500, rising more than 9 percent with robust volumes after breakout of horizontal resistance trendline adjoining multiple touchpoints. The stock traded above all key moving averages.
EIH was also in strong momentum, rising nearly 12 percent to Rs 201, the highest closing level since April 2, 2019. The stock has seen formation of robust bullish candle, which engulfed both previous red candles, and the Bollinger Band expanded on both the side and the closing was above the upper band of Bollinger Band. The volume was also strong.
Here's what Mehul Kothari of Anand Rathi Shares & Stock Brokers, recommends what investors should do with these stocks when the market resumes trading today.
Reacting on the above news, stock of many auto and auto-components makers rallied. The Nifty Auto index gained 0.86 percent as Tube Investments, Ashok Leyland, Tata Motors, Bharat Forge, Balkrishna Industries and Bajaj Auto gained 1-3.6 percent.
D-Street is counting on key reforms in the Budget that could push growth and kicks tart the capex cycle in the economy.
Experts point out select mid and smallcaps look good for medium to long term horizon. They name about 20 favourite stocks
With an improvement in sentiment along with the earnings, the outlook for the mid and smallcaps looks positive, says Pankaj Bobade of Axis Securities.
Kotak sees risks to Indian component suppliers' earnings (Motherson, BHFC, Balkrishna and Varroc Engineering) as they are linked to global auto OEM demand.
The move comes after the September quarter saw a 77 percent YoY drop in profit at Rs 22.9 crore.
Investors should be prepared for quality stocks as brokerages believe that there are ample opportunities in the market considering expected broad-based rally
Seema Aggarwal bought 94,000 shares of GSS Infotech at Rs 115.99 per share and Jhaveri Trading and Investment purchased 85,000 shares of Lambodhara Textiles at Rs 52.56 per share on NSE.
Akash Jain of Ajcon Global said investors can gradually start building their long term portfolio in some of the top rung stocks of which many have come down 30-40 percent in the recent fall