Month: August 2017

Sanwaria Agro Oils Ltd – Investment Idea

Sanwaria Agro Oils Ltd

Sanwaria Agro Oils Ltd; A FMCG Food Processing Company of the Sanwaria Group; BSE (Code: 519260)-NSE (SANWARIA)  Listed; was incorporated in April 1991, by Lt. Shri Ram Narayan Agrawal and commenced its operations in 1993. Sanwaria Agro Oils Ltd is one of the largest integrated food processors in India and is engaged in the business of manufacturing and selling of Rice, edible oil and staple food products like Pulses, Sugar, Soya Chunks, Wheat Flour, Rice Flour, Salt, Suji, Maida, Besan, Daliya, Soya Meal etc.

Sanwaria Agro Oils Ltd started its voyage with the small Solvent extraction capacity of 200 TPD in Itarsi and thereafter it left no stone unturned. Currently the Sanwaria Agro Oils Ltd is having the capacity of 2500 TPD of Solvent Extraction Plant, Soya Refinery of 250 TPD and 500 TPD of Rice Milling Plant. It’s all units are situated in Madhya Pradesh; the heart of India; Registered Office is located in Bhopal and It’s a state where Soyabean, Paddy, Wheat are available in plenty along with Skilled, semi-skilled and unskilled labour.

Sanwaria Agro Oils Ltd is ISO 14001, 22000, GMP and Halal Certified and Government Recognized Export Trading House. The Company has a strong distribution network with reputable brands like Sanwaria, Narmada, Sulabh and Nashira.
Sanwaria Agro Oils Ltd has ventured into direct retail by opening up ATM size retail outlets under the brand name ‘Sanwaria Kirana’ to reach the end customer directly.

The Group has sustained exposure in manufacturing/processing/trading of Soya Products, Rice and rice related products, food grains and pulses. In Addition, the Company has marked it’s presence in international market for Import and Export for its various commodities and has a 100% Subsidiary in Singapore.

Sanwaria Agro Oils Ltd has manufacturing units at 3 location – Mandideep, Itarsi and Betul, strategically located in the food production and consumption belt in India.
Recently, the Company was ranked 336th in amongst 1000 India's finest Companies on the basis of Turnover by the “The Financial Express”.

Source : – http://www.sanwariaagro.com

Recommended Price: 7.50 Rs

Current Price

Book Value:  4.48

Stock P/E: 10.56

Face value: 1

52 Week High/Low:  2.25 / 9.70

Listing: NSE/BSE

one can buy Sanwaria Agro Oils Ltd for long term

FreeStockAnalysis Hindalco Industries Limited,PC Jeweller Limited,Tata Motors Limited,Hindustan Unilever Limited

Intraday Trading Strategy – 1


Hindalco Industries Limited

Buy Hindalco Industries Limited at / above 232.56 Target 236.27 – 240.12 – 244.01 – 247.93

Stop loss — 228.76

Sell Hindalco Industries Limited at / below 228.76 Target 225.11 – 221.37 – 217.67 – 213.99

Stop loss — 232.56

 

Intraday Trading Strategy – 2


PC Jeweller Limited

Buy PC Jeweller Limited at / above 356.26 Target 360.81 – 365.58 – 370.37 – 375.2

Stop loss — 351.56

Sell PC Jeweller Limited at / below 351.56 Target 347.06 – 342.42 – 337.8 – 333.22

Stop loss — 356.26

 

Intraday Trading Strategy – 3


Tata Motors Limited

Buy Tata Motors Limited at / above 385.14 Target 389.86 – 394.81 – 399.8 – 404.81

Stop loss — 380.25

Sell Tata Motors Limited at / below 380.25 Target 375.57 – 370.74 – 365.94 – 361.18

Stop loss — 385.14

 

Intraday Trading Strategy – 4


Hindustan Unilever Limited

Buy Hindustan Unilever Limited at / above 1181.64 Target 1189.65 – 1198.29 – 1206.95 – 1215.65

Stop loss — 1173.06

Sell Hindustan Unilever Limited at / below 1173.06 Target 1165.09 – 1156.57 – 1148.08 – 1139.63

Stop loss — 1181.64

 

All prices relate to the NSE Spot/Cash Market

FreeStockAnalysis Hindalco Industries Limited,PC Jeweller Limited,Tata Motors Limited,Hindustan Unilever Limited based on the previous trading day’s price activity.

Intraday call is valid for the next trading session only unless otherwise mentioned.

Stop-loss levels are given so that there is a level below/above, which the market will tell us that the call has gone wrong. Stop-loss is an essential risk control mechanism; it should always be there.

Book, at least, part profits when the prices reach their targets; if you continue to hold on to positions then use trailing stops to lock in your profits.

 

30 Unfortunate Truths About Investing

Unfortunate Truths About Investing

1. The gulf between a great company and a great investment can be extraordinary.

2. Markets go through at least one big pullback every year, and one massive pullback every decade. Get used to it. It's just what they do.

3. There is virtually no accountability in the financial pundit arena. People who have been wrong about everything for years still draw crowds.

4. There are tens of thousands of professional money managers. Statistically, a handful of them have been successful by pure chance.

5. On that note, some investors who we call "legendary" have barely, if at all, beaten an index fund over their careers. On Wall Street, big wealth isn't indicative of big returns.

6. During Recessions, Elections, and Federal Reserve Policy Meetings, people become unshakably certain about things they know nothing about.

7. The more comfortable an investment feels, the more likely you are to be slaughtered.

8. Time-saving tip: Instead of trading penny stocks, just light your money on fire. Same for leveraged ETFs.

9. Not a single person in the world knows what the market will do in the short run. End of the story.

10. The analyst who talks about his mistakes is the guy you want to listen to. Avoid the guy who doesn't — his are much bigger.

11. You don't understand a big bank's balance sheet. The people running the place and their accountants don't, either.

12. There will be 7 to 10 recessions over the next 50 years. Don't act surprised when they come.

13. Thirty years ago, there was one hour of market TV per day. Today there's upwards of 18 hours. What changed isn't the volume of news, but the volume of nonsense.

14. Warren Buffett's best returns were achieved when markets were much less competitive. It's doubtful anyone will ever match his 50-year record.

15. Most of what is taught about investing in university is theoretical nonsense. There are very few rich professors.

16. The more someone is on TV, the less likely his or her predictions are to come true. (U.C. Berkeley psychologist Phil Tetlock has data on this).

17. Trust no one who is on Fincial TV Channels more than twice a week.

18. The majority of market news is not only useless, but also harmful to your financial health.

19. Professional investors have better information and faster computers than you do. You will never beat them short-term trading. Don't even try.

20. The decline of trading costs is one of the worst things to happen to investors, as it made frequent trading possible. High transaction costs used to cause people to think hard before they acted.

21. Most IPOs will burn you. People with more information than you, want to sell. Think about that.

22. The phrase "double-dip recession" was mentioned 10.8 million times in 2010 and 2011, according to Google. It never came. There were virtually no mentions of "financial collapse" in 2006 and 2007. It did come.

23. The best investors in the world have more of an edge in psychology than in finance.

24. What markets do day to day is overwhelmingly driven by random chance. Ascribing explanations to short-term moves is like trying to explain lottery numbers.

25. If you have credit card debt and are thinking about investing in anything, stop. You will never beat 30% annual interest.

26. A large portion of share buybacks are just offsetting shares issued to management as compensation. Managers still tout the buybacks as "returning money to shareholders."

27. Twelve years ago General Motors was on top of the world and Apple was laughed at. A similar shift will occur over the next decade, but no one knows to what companies.

28. Most would be better off if they stopped obsessing about Congress, the Federal Reserve, and the president and focused on their own financial mismanagement.

29. For many, a house is a large liability masquerading as a safe asset.

30. The most boring companies — toothpaste, food, bolts — can make some of the best long-term investments. The most innovative, some of the worst.⁠⁠⁠⁠

FreeStockAnalysis Indo Count Industries Limited,ICICI Bank Limited,Tata Chemicals Limited,Sun Pharmaceuticals Industries Limited

Intraday Trading Strategy – 1

 

 

 

 

Indo Count Industries Limited

 

 

 

 

Buy Indo Count Industries Limited at / above 118.26 Target 120.93 – 123.7 – 126.49 – 129.32

Stop loss — 115.56

Sell Indo Count Industries Limited at / below 115.56 Target 112.94 – 110.3 – 107.69 – 105.11

Stop loss — 118.26

 

Intraday Trading Strategy – 2

 

 

 

 

ICICI Bank Limited

 

 

 

 

Buy ICICI Bank Limited at / above 297.56 Target 301.73 – 306.09 – 310.48 – 314.9

Stop loss — 293.26

Sell ICICI Bank Limited at / below 293.26 Target 289.14 – 284.9 – 280.7 – 276.52

Stop loss — 297.56

 

Intraday Trading Strategy – 3

 

 

 

 

Tata Chemicals Limited

 

 

 

 

Buy Tata Chemicals Limited at / above 606.39 Target 612.25 – 618.45 – 624.68 – 630.94

Stop loss — 600.25

Sell Tata Chemicals Limited at / below 600.25 Target 594.43 – 588.35 – 582.3 – 576.28

Stop loss — 606.39

 

Intraday Trading Strategy – 4

 

 

 

 

Sun Pharmaceuticals Industries Limited

 

 

 

 

Buy Sun Pharmaceuticals Industries Limited at / above 489.51 Target 494.81 – 500.39 – 505.99 – 511.63

Stop loss — 484

Sell Sun Pharmaceuticals Industries Limited at / below 484 Target 478.75 – 473.29 – 467.87 – 462.48

Stop loss — 489.51

 

All prices relate to the NSE Spot/Cash Market

FreeStockAnalysis Indo Count Industries Limited,ICICI Bank Limited,Tata Chemicals Limited,Sun Pharmaceuticals Industries Limited based on the previous trading day’s price activity.

Intraday call is valid for the next trading session only unless otherwise mentioned.

Stop-loss levels are given so that there is a level below/above, which the market will tell us that the call has gone wrong. Stop-loss is an essential risk control mechanism; it should always be there.

Book, at least, part profits when the prices reach their targets; if you continue to hold on to positions then use trailing stops to lock in your profits.