Friday, October 9, 2009

NALWA SONS & INVESTMENTS

Yesterday I booked some partial profits on Nalwa Sons which was bought on Aug 18 for Rs 715/=. After I bought it has picked up like PSLV and almost appreciated 100%. After touching Rs.1500, it looked tired. I just churned off my Capital and left only the profits with it. Very much excited & bought some SBI Gold ETF.

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Bharat Bijlee : An Analysis

Apart from strong business operations Bharat Bijlee is holding a solid investment in some blue chip stocks which itself converted into per share value around Rs. 348/=. Following table will enumerate in detail:-

Bharat Bijlee An Analysis

07-10-2009
Name of Scrip Invested Qty of Shares Book Value/ of Investment in lacs Amount invested in Rs(Book Value) Current Rate Current Value
Siemens 2825160 214.81 21481000 555 1567963800
HDFC Ltd 102980 13.52 1352000 2727 280826460
ICICI bank 15,821 6.16 616000 917 14507857
HOEL 333333 216.5 21650000 309 102999897
HDFC Bank 500 0.05 5000 1670 835000
Bank of India 5400 2.43 243000 399 2154600
Total value
453.47

1969287614





196.93






Market Cap
528.84 Crores

Value of quoted Investment 196.93 Crores

Net Market Cap 331.91 Crores

Debt
12.00 Crores

Trailing EPS
77.98


CMP of BBL 936



Total shares Isuued 5650000



Per Share Cash 349




If the company announces some good Q- 2 result then it can take this stock to higher levels.

Friday, March 7, 2008

QUOTE OF THE DAY

"Sometimes your best investments are the ones you don't make"

Investment Nuggets:John Neff

An expert investor, John Neff was called “the professional’s professional”, as many fund managers entrusted their money to him in the belief that it would be in safe hands.
That view was justified by his remarkably consistent performance. For more than 30 years, the Windsor Fund managed by him routinely featured in the top 5 per cent of all US mutual funds.
A hardcore value investor, Neff invests in companies with moderate growth and high dividends while they are out of favour and sells them once they rise to fair value.
Neff always stuck to a simple investment style based on the following seven selection criteria:
Low P/E ratio.
Fundamental earnings growth above 7 per cent.
A solid, and ideally rising, dividend.
A much-better-than-average total return in relation to the P/E ratio
No exposure to cyclical downturns without a compensatory low P/E
Solid companies in growing fields.
A strong fundamental case for investment
Below are some of his key sayings:
“Absent stunning growth rates, low P/E stocks can capture the wonders of P/E expansion with less risk than skittish growth stocks.”
“An awful lot of people keep a stock too long because it gives them warm fuzzies — particularly when a contrarian stance has been vindicated. If they sell it, they lose bragging rights.”
“A dividend increase is one kind of ‘free plus’. A free plus is the return investors enjoy over and above initial expectations.”
“As a low P/E investor, you have to distinguish misunderstood and overlooked stocks selling at bargain prices from many more stocks with lacklustre prospects.”
“When you make up your mind stick to your conclusion and above all be patient”.
“Businesses exhibiting higher growth always suffer from increased mortality.”
“Don’t chase highly recognised growth stocks. Their P/E ratios are invariably pushed up to ridiculously expensive levels. This greatly increases the risk of a sudden collapse in the share price.”
“It’s not always easy to do what’s not popular, but that’s where you make your money. Buy stocks that look bad to less careful investors and hang on until their real value is recognised.”
“Sell substantially when the stock goes up and hold on to your position. If the stock falls back again you may buy it back.”

Source: thehindubusinessline

Thursday, March 6, 2008

QUOTE OF THE DAY

" Bulls make money. Bears make money. Pigs get slaughtered."
-Anonymous