Sunday, December 28, 2008

>Reliance communication technical analysis

We had a good swing trade in Reliance communication a solid 50 points.
Check old post to see the set up Reliance communication technical analysis
All given targets were touched 250.

Now as we have seen a week's more movement in the RCOM chart ,It looks more or
less like a triangle can see clear 3 waves in each triangle wave...
Here we have two opportunities (would be) the safest would be to try to buy
it near 185-190 with a stoploss below 180 for a possible 10%upside target.

Another idea which is a risky one would be to try to long one it gives a breakout
above the yellow line,Why risky? Because breakouts in BEAR market usually get sold
nicely.

Regards
Rish

RESEARCH REPORTS

>INSIDE TRADING 26-12-2008

531590Bilpower Ltd.Suresh Kumar Choudhary.17/12/2008B10170.012707222.57
531590Bilpower Ltd.Suresh Kumar Choudhary.18/12/2008B9840.002717062.58
532330Biopac India Corporation LtdPankaj B Doshi22/12/2008B2100
317751419.86
532330Biopac India Corporation LtdPankaj B Doshi19/12/2008B2830
317541419.85
532548Century Plyboards (India) Ltd.Brij Bhushan Agarwal.15/12/2008 - 16/12/2008S73500
8384159
532548Century Plyboards (India) Ltd.Brij Bhushan Agarwal.19/12/2008S16301
8367858
532339Compucom Software Lt.Compucom Technologies Pvt Ltd.--B160000.06260953610.38
532339Compucom Software Lt.Compucom Software Technologies Pvt Ltd.--B150000.05262453610.44
506401Deepak Nitrite LimitedC.K. Mehta.11/12/2008B1093
2734763.05
522261Dolphin Offshore Enterprises (India) ltd.Mr. Navpreet Singh22/12/2008B1100
6866807.18
522261Dolphin Offshore Enterprises (India) ltd.Dolphin Offshore Projects Ltd19/12/2008 - 22/12/2008B1928
171309517.91
500246Envair Electrodyne Ltd.Mr. Shripad Mirashi15/12/2008 - 19/12/2008B200
155902251.28
532345Gati LimitedMahendra Kumar Agarwal18/12/2008 - 23/12/2008B13687
16514651.95
532767Gayatri Projects LimitedMr. T V Sandeep Kumar Reddy19/12/2008B62262
131433613.01
509567Goa Carbon Ltd.,Shrinivas V Dempo18/12/2008 - 23/12/2008B38261
716200.78
532015Gravity (India) Ltd.Smt. Dakshaben R Thakkar22/12/2008B17100.02476750.53
526797Greenply Industries LtdPayash Securities Pvt Ltd15/12/2008B5113463.018619035.07
500180HDFC Bank Ltd.Life Insurance Corporation of India17/12/2008B1585190.03213062605.01
532741Kamdhenu Ispat LimitedKamdhenu Overseas Ltd16/12/2008B6125
221316011.64
532732Kewal Kiran Clothing Ltd.ICICI Prudential Mutual Fund17/12/2008S88500.076622454.56
512559Kohinoor Foods LtdTemptation Foods Ltd.16/12/2008B3500001.32298064811.23
523704Mastek LimitedAshank Desai.23/12/2008B2300
318567911.84
523704Mastek LimitedSudhakar Ram.23/12/2008B2556
279058710.37
523704Mastek LimitedKetan Mehta.23/12/2008B3000
25184009.36
507609Olympic Oil Industries Ltd.,Vijay Balwant Patil.11/12/2008S10000
3500014.29
507609Olympic Oil Industries Ltd.,Tushar Rangnath Patil.19/12/2008S4860
00.00
532391Opto Circuits (India) Ltd.Mr. Vinod Ramnani03/12/2008B9789288
2377398614.85
532391Opto Circuits (India) Ltd.Mrs. Usha Ramnani03/12/2008B2361567
58151353.63
532391Opto Circuits (India) Ltd.Mr. Jayesh C Patel03/12/2008B3435819
83441335.21
532391Opto Circuits (India) Ltd.Mr. Thomas Dietiker03/12/2008B4448567
108036636.74
532391Opto Circuits (India) Ltd.Mr. Suleman Merchant03/12/2008B101917
2475130.15
532391Opto Circuits (India) Ltd.Mr.V Bala Subramaniam03/12/2008B8190
198900.01
532391Opto Circuits (India) Ltd.Dr. Anvay Mulay03/12/2008B595
1445
532391Opto Circuits (India) Ltd.Mr. Rajkumar Raisinghani03/12/2008B9000
218580.01
526753Roselabs LtdSinghal Overseas Ltd--S45376
174829415.38
526753Roselabs LtdSinghal Overseas Ltd--S329010
141928412.48
532793Shree Ashtavinayak Cine Vision LtdDahlia Traders Pvt Ld23/12/2008B5000
340882732.53
532945Shriram EPC LimitedR Sundarajan--B3000
--
532945Shriram EPC LimitedR Sundarajan25/06/2008B4800
78000.01
532945Shriram EPC LimitedR Sundarajan--B2000
--
532667SUZLON ENERGY LTD.Amarsinh A Parmar22/12/2008S21000
35440000.24
532667SUZLON ENERGY LTD.Ranjitsinh A Parmar22/12/2008S26000
159140331.06
532667SUZLON ENERGY LTD.Balrajsinh A Parmar22/12/2008S26000
208400001.39
532667SUZLON ENERGY LTD.Vasant A Parmar22/12/2008S3500
11500000.08
532824Vijayeswari Textiles Ltd.M/s Seshraj Enterprises Pvt Ltd23/12/2008B325000.18709266239.03
511333VLS Finance LimitedM.P. Mehrotra (HUF)22/12/2008B200000.054807251.20
B - Buy
S - Sale

RESEARCH REPORTS

Friday, December 26, 2008

>The great American Bailout

A very good write up about American bailout read on..
F
ed Chairman Ben Bernanke has done it. He's thrown down the gauntlet. Desperate times call for desperate measures, as they say, and the Federal Reserve has now gone "all in."

Specifically, Bernanke and other Fed policymakers ...

• Slashed the federal funds rate to a range of 0% to 0.25% from the previous target of 1%. That is the lowest level in U.S. history. The Fed is now pursuing the same "ZIRP" (Zero Interest Rate Policy) strategy Japan tried several years back to boost its economy.

• Said they would "support the functioning of financial markets and stimulate the economy through open market operations and other measures that sustain the size of the Federal Reserve's balance sheet at a high level." That's Fed-speak for "We're going to print money and flood the banking system with massive amounts of reserves."

• Reiterated the Fed's intention to buy "large quantities" of debt sold by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, as well as the mortgage backed securities (MBS) that those agencies guarantee.

• In fact, they upped the ante by saying the Fed "stands ready to expand its purchases" if necessary. And it said it was continuing to study whether it should also buy long-term U.S. Treasury bonds.

• Said the Fed will "continue to consider ways of using its balance sheet to further support credit markets and economic activity." What does that mean? Potentially whatever the Fed wants it to mean, as far as I can tell.

The Fed and Treasury are already directly manipulating the secondary market for home mortgages. And they've announced that they're going to intervene in the consumer loan market, too.

Why shouldn't commercial real estate mortgages come next? After all, credit conditions there are tight, aren't they?

Or how about buying the Dow? Higher stock prices would allow troubled banks and corporations to raise money and support the economy ... wouldn't they?

What about corporate bonds? Junk bonds? Artwork? My old football card collection?

I used to think the idea that the Fed might buy assets of all shapes and sizes as kind of crazy — "Kookburger" stuff, to use one of my colleague's terms.

But now? Nothing surprises me.

The 10 Questions
We Should ALL Be Asking ...

Wall Street couldn't be happier with what the Fed and Treasury are doing. Thunderous applause erupted in trading rooms after the Fed's statement came out Tuesday. And the buying of stocks came fast and furious. Ditto for bonds.

I watched fund manager after fund manager — you know, the supposed capitalists out there — come on television and praise the Fed. Heck, they were urging even more socialistic ... er, intervention ... to support the market.

Apparently almost everyone agrees with the idea of a small group of men and women deciding that THEY know the "right" price for mortgage bonds, Treasury bonds, or other assets — while the entire universe of private investors out there has things "wrong."

And the consequences? Nothing to worry about, according to the pundits ...

Question #1: Is the 10% plunge in the U.S. dollar in the span of a few days a clear vote of "no confidence" in the Fed's policy from currency traders?

Pundits' answer: Who cares! We can keep shafting our foreign creditors and they'll come back for more. They always do.

Question #2: How about the deterioration (albeit minor) in the cost of insuring U.S. debt against default?

Pundits' answer: Who cares! We're the U.S. and investors will always flock to our shores.

Question #3: Aren't we completely abandoning 200+ years of American free market principles?

Pundits' answer: Don't bother us with that long-term stuff.

Question #4: Isn't the Fed submitting prudent savers to total abuse by slashing the returns they can earn on their savings accounts and Treasuries?

Pundits' answer: Who cares about them! We need Americans to spend, spend, spend!

Question #5: Was it wise to "fix" the dot-com bubble with easy money ... which led to the housing bubble that has since popped ... and which the Fed is now trying to fix with ... you guessed it ... more easy money?

Pundits' answer: Quit whining! The Fed never makes mistakes. You just don't get it.

Question #6: The idea that maybe, just maybe, the cure for inflated home prices is ... drum roll please ... lower prices? Prices that allow NEW buyers to purchase homes without taking out ridiculous mortgages — and eat bread and cereal to make their payments?

Pundits' answer: We can't have that! We have to prop them up!

Question #7: What about the hundreds of billions of dollars of additional debt our country is taking on? The first TRILLION-dollar deficit in U.S. history? The massive interest costs my little girls, and probably THEIR children, are going to pay for years and years as a result of all these bailouts?

Pundits' answer: Who cares! That's someone else's problem.

Question #8: And finally, have we forgotten the whole concept of occasionally having a cleansing recession? A downturn that, while painful, cleans out all the crud — the crud built up by years of recklessness by greedy bankers, clueless speculators, hands-off regulators, crooked scam artists, and head-in-the-sand policymakers?

Pundits' answer: Nope. We have to prevent that at all costs. Don't bother us with that "healthy business cycle" claptrap.

Look, I keep hearing about how the Fed is doing a great job. I keep hearing that "there are no atheists in the foxhole" and that the government has to do what it's doing to save us all from apocalypse.

But I have two more questions ...

Question #9: What if the economy and asset prices are going to get where they're headed ... no matter WHAT the government does?

What about the idea that we're just delaying the inevitable by trying to prop up home prices?

And the biggest question of all ...

Question #10: What if we spend all this money and end up with nothing to show for it — except for a multi-trillion dollar bill that we'll be paying for the rest of our lives?

Sound crazy?

Then maybe you should check out the December 16 piece in the Wall Street Journal entitled "Barack Obama-san." It chronicled how Japan spent exorbitant amounts of money trying to revive its economy after the twin real estate and stock market busts there.

The steps that Japan took included a 10.7 trillion yen stimulus package in August 1992 ... a 13.2 trillion plan in April 1993 ... 6.2 trillion in September 1993 ... 15.3 trillion in February 1994 ... 14.2 trillion in September 1995 ... 16.7 trillion in April 1998 ... 23.9 trillion in November 1998 ... and 18 trillion in November 1999.

Grand total: A whopping 118.2 TRILLION yen or about $1.35 trillion at today's dollar-yen exchange rate.

Yet it was all for naught. The economy still suffered a "Lost Decade" of deflation and lackluster growth. Or as the Journal explained:

"Keynesian 'pump-priming' in a recession has often been tried, and as an economic stimulus it is overrated. The money that the government spends has to come from somewhere, which means from the private economy in higher taxes or borrowing. The public works are usually less productive than the foregone private investment."

Maybe Bernanke will get what he wants. Maybe his helicopter drops of money will pay off. Maybe the incoming administration, and its team of economic advisors, will do better than the Bush bunch.

But considering the success rate of the past government programs targeted at helping the housing and credit markets (TARP anyone?), I wonder why nobody is worried about waking up another day older ... deeper in debt ... and right back at square one.

Until next time,

Mike

This investment news is brought to you by Money and Markets. Money and Markets is a free daily investment newsletter from Martin D. Weiss and Weiss Research analysts offering the latest investing news and financial insights for the stock market, including tips and advice on investing in gold, energy and oil. Dr. Weiss is a leader in the fields of investing, interest rates, financial safety and economic forecasting. To view archives or subscribe, visit http://www.moneyandmarkets.com.

RESEARCH REPORTS

>Will Ambani Brother's patch up?

In the midst of a meltdown, the most intense sibling rivalry in corporate India — the Ambanis — is heading for a rapproachment, says SHANTANU GUHA RAY
LAST WEEK, brokers circles at Asia’s oldest bourse, the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE), were awash with the rumour that a patch-up between the world’s richest brothers, warring since an infamous split in 2005 and a settlement a year later, might just be possible.

That the good news was merely a rumour was evident from the fact that neither brother — nor anyone from their respective camps — was willing to confirm its veracity. But the very lack of a vociferous denial did help increase the price of their stocks by almost 14 percent.
However, the possibility that there was indeed some fire beneath the smoke was borne out by the fact that this was the third such incident within a fortnight. In the first week of December, the Reliance (RIL) scrip rose to Rs 1258.90, ostensibly because of market talk that it was within reach of a gas supply deal with Reliance Natural Resources Limited (RNRL), owned by sibling and rival Anil Ambani. The value of the RNRL share rose by as much as 26 percent, its sharpest daily rise in 18 months. The two firms are locked in a dispute over whether and at what price RIL is required to sell gas to RNRL.
To read the full story.....

Will Ambani Brother's patch up?



RESEARCH REPORTS