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
Thunuguntla said stocks in non-banking sectors have been languishing that reflects the impact of a slow economy
The Goods and Services (GST) Council, which met in Guwahati for a 2-day meet starting Thursday of last week, has decided to keep only 50 luxury and 'sin' goods like tobacco in the highest slab.
One can expect more short covering once index will move above 10,250 levels. For the near term, we expect its buy on dip markets and one can use any dip as a buying opportunity.
Clarity on cigarette taxation boosts ITC, and other stocks like Godfrey Philips India and VST Industries. In an interview to CNBC-TV18, Abneesh Roy, Senior Vice President of Edelweiss Securities shared his views on the whole new goods and services tax (GST) taxation on ITC.
From TCS, Coal India to Reliance, a look at what brokerages are talking about these stocks.
Ashwani Gujral of ashwanigujral.com recommends buying HDFC Bank and UPL and advises selling Bharti Airtel.
In an interview to CNBC-TV18's Latha Venkatesh & Sonia Shenoy, SP Tulsian of sptulsian.com shared his readings and outlook on specific stocks and sectors.
Pankaj Pandey, Head-Research at ICICIdirect likes VST Industries and sees 20 percent upside with a target price of Rs 2437.
CNBC-TV18's analysts gives stocks to keep on your radar for trade today - stocks expected to be under pressure today are ABB India, IPCA Labs, State Bank of Travancore, Sun Pharma, ITC, Godfrey Phillips and VST Industries while the stocks expected to gain are Indiabulls Housing, Bharti Airtel, Shilcar Tech, Novartis India and Excel Crop Care.
Sudip Bandopadhyay, Market Expert recommends buying Persistent Systems.
CLSA suggest selling the stock with a target price of Rs 330 per share and cuts earnings per share (EPS) estimates by 5-10 percent over FY16-17. It also warns that the stock may even go down to Rs 290 per share in the near-term.
Here are top 10 stocks to focus on December 4 - Ashok Leyland, Apollo Tyres, NBCC, HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank, MBL Infra, SAIL, Ranbaxy, Dr Reddy's and Sadbhav Engineering.
Buy VST Industries with a target of Rs 1260, says Rajesh Agarwal, Head of Research at Eastern Financiers.
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.