Benchmarks flat, mid-caps rally; RIL up 3% ahead of Q3 numbers


After bouts of volatility in the last two trading sessions, markets took a breather on Friday and traded flat for better part of the day. While financial and banking counters traded in the sea of red throughout the day, index heavyweights like Reliance Industries and Bharti Airtel, that surged 3 per cent and 6 per cent, respectively in the intra-day trade today, provided the necessary support.

In the intra-day trade, the S&P BSE Sensex hit a record high of 42063.93. At close, the 30-share index was at 41,945.37 level, up 12.81 points or 0.031 per cent. Bharti Airtel, that gained over 6 per cent today, was the top gainer at close. The stock hit an over 2-year high of Rs 503.60 on the BSE amid expectations that the telecom company is poised for strong market share gain if payment due to AGR makes Vodafone Idea exit the industry. On the downside, IndusInd Bank was the top loser, down 2 per cent, due to its high exposure towards telecom companies.

On the NSE, the Nifty50 settled 3.15 points, or 0.025 per cent, lower at 12,352.35-mark. Nifty Bank, financial services, metals and IT indices settled the day in the negative territory. On the other hand, Nifty Pharma gained nearly 2 per cent.

For the week, the Sensex has advanced 0.9 per cent, while the broader Nifty50 has gained 0.8 per cent. Nifty mid-cap index, meanwhile, has risen 4 per cent during the week.

The party in the broader markets continued for the ninth straight session. The S&P BSE mid-cap index was up 0.5 per cent at 15,703 level. Meanwhile, the S&P BSE small-cap index ended at 14,708.70 level, up 0.42 per cent.

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Reblog: Price Discounts Everything – Even Results


There are lots of people who trade stocks based on news and financial results. And they get severely confused and even disappointed when stock price roars despite a bad result/bad news or worse, it falls despite a wonderful result/good news. Today’s article depicts how trading based on news and results is a hopeless, dangerous and a loser’s game.

In India, companies are required to report their quarterly earnings to its shareholders. So, in every three months’ time, we are faced with a plethora of companies coming out with their quarterly results. So, most traders buy if results are good and if results are disappointing, they sell. On the face of it, it appears completely logical but let me tell you, it is far from being logical.

Let me show you a recent real life scenario which defied the logic of buying on good results:

Mahanagar Gas Limited (MGL), announced it’s Q1 2017-18 results on 9th August 2017. The result was terrific yet the stock fell like there’s no tomorrow.

Here are the key highlights of the result:

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