Nov 4, 2016

India October 2016 Service Sector PMI near 43 Month High

A solid upturn in incoming new business helped push up growth in India’s manufacturing activity in October, the widely tracked Nikkei India Services Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) showed. 

After falling to 52 in September due to drop in new orders, PMI bounced back in October to 54.5 near — close to the 43-month high of 54.7 seen in August. The 50-point mark separates expansion from contraction. 

The order books also rose at a quicker pace, with growth climbing to a 22-month high. However, employment levels remained unchanged, a trend that has now continued for months in both the manufacturing and services. 

However, with October being part of the festive season, it remains to be seen whether this pace of growth will sustain.
The crucial Index of Industrial Production figures are to come before the gross domestic product (GDP) figures for the second quarter of FY17 are released on November 30. India’s GDP grew 7.1 per cent in the first quarter of the current financial year, which was a six-quarter low growth rate. 

Orders placed with Indian service providers led companies to scale up activity in October. The upturn was supported by greater client requests and improved demand conditions. 

Services PMI gathers pace on new orders Survey data indicated that this placed pressure on firms’ capacity; as backlogs of work rose further, unfinished business volumes rose for the fifth consecutive month. Little changed since September, the overall rate of backlog accumulation was solid. A similar trend was seen among manufacturers, where  outstanding business showed a marked increase. 

“One underlying concern is the sustained stagnant trend in workforces, with both manufacturers and service providers showing some reluctance to hire. Hopefully, the added pressure on capacity shown in the PMI surveys will translate into job creation as we move towards the end of 2016,” said Pollyanna De Lima, economist at IHS Markit and author of the report. 

With service providers paying higher prices for petrol, input costs increased again, although at a marginal rate that was softer than in September. However, the survey pointed out that October saw cost inflation ease to a marginal pace that was much lower than the long-run series average. “In fact, less than two per cent of monitored firms reported rising cost burdens,” it said.

Within manufacturing, purchase price inflation reached a 26-month peak. Softer inflationary pressures assisted service providers with their pricing strategies. Amid reports of efforts to attract new customers, selling prices were left unchanged by 98 per cent of firms. Overall, a fractional reduction was recorded as the respective index recorded just below the no-change mark of 50.

Output prices, however, remained broadly unchanged. 

While remaining upbeat towards the 12-month outlook for activity, the overall level of sentiment for companies struck a four-month low. Those firms anticipating growth indicated that improved market conditions and aggressive marketing campaigns were expected to boost activity. Nevertheless, worries regarding fierce competition for new work restricted confidence. 

Released earlier this week, the manufacturing PMI data also showed the same spurt in growth with manufacturing activity touching a 22-month high in October. After falling to 52.1 in September, PMI rose to 54.4 in October. 

As a result, the seasonally adjusted Nikkei India Composite PMI Output Index rose from 52.4 in September to 55.4 in October. This pointed to a marked pace of expansion in private sector activity, which was the quickest in nearly four years. The index had seen a 42-month high of 54.6 in August, but the latest above-50 reading was the 16th in as many months, highlighting ongoing growth.

Posted on Friday, November 04, 2016 | Categories:

Oct 11, 2016

India : August IIP shrinks; stands at -0.7% versus -2.5% in July

The Index of Industrial Production (IIP) for the month of August contracted (-)0.7% versus (-)2.5% in July. The General Index for the month of August 2016 stands at 175.3, which is 0.7 percent lower as compared to the level in the month of August 2015. The cumulative growth for the period April-August 2016 over the corresponding period of the previous year stands at (-) 0.3 percent, said a Ministry of Statistics & Programme Implementation release.
The Indices of Industrial Production for the Mining, Manufacturing and Electricity sectors for the month of August stand at 113.5, 184.3 and 194.6 respectively, with the corresponding growth rates of (-) 5.6%, (-) 0.3% and 0.1%. The cumulative growth in these three sectors during April-August 2016 over the corresponding period of 2015 has been 0.6%, (-) 1.2% and 5.7% respectively.

In terms of industries, seven out of the twenty two industry groups in the manufacturing sector have shown negative growth. “The industry group ‘Electrical machinery & apparatus n.e.c.’ has shown the highest negative growth of (-) 49.4 percent followed by (-) 22.4 percent in ‘Furniture; manufacturing n.e.c.’ and (-) 6.6 percent in ‘Wearing apparel; dressing and dyeing of fur’,” the release said. While Basic goods sector grew at 3.3%, capital goods contracted (-)22.2.%. Intermediate goods grew at 3.6%.
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Posted on Tuesday, October 11, 2016 | Categories:

The mind game of trading

The mind game of trading
The inner game of trading
Success in trading is more internal than external


Oct 9, 2016

Some Of The Most Successful Traders In The World And The Money They Made


Below are some of the great persons who proved that we can also make tremendous amount of money from trading and it's not that one can become wealthy from long-term investing only.
So, below are some of the most successful traders and the kind of money the made


Jesse Livermore (Considered by many to be the greatest stock market operator ever. Made 100 million dollars in 1929 stock market crash. Made several other multi-million dollar fortunes in his trading career).

Richard Dennis (Turned 400 dollars into a fortune of at least 200 million dollars by using his remarkable trading skills).

-Ed Seykota (One of the greatest traders of all time. Turned 5000 dollars into an incredible 15 million dollars or more).

-Paul Tudor Jones (An amazingly consistent and successful trader. In 2006, earned a whopping 750 million dollars).

Bernard Baruch (Fantastic trader who earned ten’s of millions of dollars in the first part of the 20th century).

- Michael Marcus (In a ten-year period, he multipled his company account by an incredible 2500 times).

-Bruce Kovner (One of the world’s largest traders in the 1980′s. Made profits of over 300 million trading for himself).

-Randy McKay (Turned $2000 into $70,000 his first year of trading. Went on to double digit million dollar gains).

Sep 25, 2016

Practical Lessons For Successful Stock Trading

How to Find Your Trading Tendency

* How you trade after you’ve made money versus after you’ve lost money:  Do you trade more?  Larger?  Do you trade differently based on recent P/L?  Do you become risk averse after recent losses?  Does that affect your future P/L?
*  How do you trade when you’re taking more risk versus less risk?  Does different size/risk exposure cause you to trade differently?  Are you actually making more money when you’re taking more risk? 

*  What kinds of markets and market patterns provide you with your greatest profits?  Losses?  Do you trade selectively to maximize your best opportunities?  Do you overtrade markets that are not ones providing you with opportunities?

*  What is your ratio of winning to losing trades?  What is the ratio of the size of average winners to the size of average losers?  How successful have you been in finding large winners?  In preventing large losers?

Many times, our greatest biases and psychological mistakes come through when we thoroughly review performance.  The decision to not review performance is perhaps traders’ greatest bias blind spot.

All above points are too much important for success in trading.
One must contemplate and get answers to all the questions above and find reasons as well and take necessary steps to improve.
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5 Types of Mindset And Importance For Traders - Successful Mindset For Traders

5 Types of Mindset And Importance For Traders - Successful Mindset For Traders 
Create a better mindset for success in trading

1) An open mindset – Traders succeed when they see things that others don’t. Sometimes those are overarching themes and trends; sometimes they are short-term patterns in market behavior. To see things differently, we need a mind that is open to new and different information and open to shifts in market behavior.
2) A quiet mindset – Minds filled with noise can’t process new information. When we’re focused on ourselves and our profits/losses, we’re no longer focused on markets. We can’t exercise self-control in our actions if we are not able to sustain control over our thought processes.
3) A constructive mindset – Losses happen. We miss opportunities. The great trader learns from mistakes and embraces the lessons from drawdowns. If every day brings wins from trading or wins from learning, there is always something of value to be taken from each day.
4) A positive mindset – It’s because we cannot count upon our profits and losses to make us happy that we need to lead a fulfilling life outside of trading. A life that is filled with meaningful activities, fun activities, activities that bring us close to others, and activities that give us energy is most likely to provide us with the emotional fuel needed to power through challenging market times.
5) An action mindset – All the best ideas and intentions will get us nowhere if we aren’t prepared to act upon them. The action mindset is one focused on plans, translating excellent ideas into excellent risk/reward opportunities. Preparation is idea-focused, but also execution-focused. It is as important to work on our implementation of ideas as our generation of them.

 Lessons for traders, psychological aspects of trading, successful trader psychology  

China Faces Banking Crisis After $2 Trillion Mountain of Toxic Debt Exposed

According to the agency’s Tuesday report, up to 21 percent of China’s loan pool is “non-performing loans,” (NPLs) which means debtors are struggling to make the repayments. At the same time, only 1.8 percent of loans were classified as bad ones by state authorities last June.
Moreover, Beijing’s reliance on credit growth for providing near-term GDP increase could exacerbate existing problems, Fitch stressed, as it “will increase the size of asset-quality problems in the financial system.” “There seems a high likelihood that banks’ NPL ratios will continue rising over the medium term, in light of this discrepancy,” the report stated. “There are already signs of stress, most obviously in the increased frequency with which banks are writing off or offloading loans, such as those to asset-management companies.” As of the late 2015, Chinese debt made up 243 percent of the national GDP with a prospect of reaching 269 percent on a condition of debt continuing to grow. The latest statistical data also revealed that loans will be increasing by 13 percent annually, surpassing the pace of the GDP growth that stands at 6.5 percent as of now.
Liquidation of bad loans would cost China some $2.1 trillion, if the country’s financial sector moved to address the problem immediately, the report assessed. In longer perspective, however, dealing with the growing economic pressure would require the government taking some drastic measures such as writing off debts or expanding repayment terms.
Still, some experts are skeptical about the Fitch’s assessments. Senior economist at Commerzbank’s Singapore Hao Zhou said that the problems of Chinese financial system are caused by the shadow banking sector and aren’t big enough to plunge the economy. “The size [of shadow banking] is about 12 to 15 per cent of the overall banking [industry] and most of the shadow banking assets are related to bonds and cash products, which is seen as a low-risk product,” he said in an interview with City A.M.


Posted on Sunday, September 25, 2016 | Categories:

Sep 4, 2016

Why traders lose money? Take time to do your HOMEWORK before you start trading/investing or select an advisor

Take time to do your HOMEWORK before you start trading/investing or select an advisor
Why traders lose money?
Selecting right advisor for stock market
Do your HOMEWORK before you start trading or select an advisor

Yes, this has been the problem with most if not everyone.
A person wants to trade/invest in the market and for that he wants some professional/expert advise.
So, he goes on Google and search for the same. In result they get a lot of advertisement sites as well some other results for the same.
Now, the person opens a bunch of the sites from the result and surfs them not giving proper time to go inside all pages and read it fully and also not giving time to compare.
Also, a big mistake made by him is register on the site for free trial, without knowing what it free trial? Why it is given out? What will he get out of it? Does it satisfy his needs for what he was looking for in the first place? Is it the right thing to do? Does any valuable thing come in free? Can he judge the performace of anyone for next one month based on 1 day advice? (read full article on free trials scam here http://meghainvestments.blogspot.in/2012/07/trap-of-trials-read-why-free-trials-is.html )

So, he doesn’t do this and simply registers. Why, because of lack of awareness of the above questions as well as the deep subconscious lure of ‘free things’ in human nature. Besides, it’s fast, as the ‘unscrupulous site’ is only asking for name and mobile number most of the time which takes few seconds to fill up (and they know it).
So, the point is you should not be impatience in starting your trading and take your time to check out the complete site and try to figure out below questions by searching whole site, comparing it with other sites and its services on several points.
Below article can help you with that –

Also TALK TO THEM. You ask many questions and continue your discussion for many days. This is also a very good point to understand the real character of the advisory firm and its genuineness. Ask them questions about their methods and so on. Ask them why 10 points why you should trust them with your money. (we have this big notice on our site saying discuss with us before selecting services)
See, just can’t risk your thousands or lacs Rs. by opening websites in google results and registering in them for free oneday trial. Is this what you want really? So, TAKE YOUR TIME and DO YOUR HOMEWORK before your trade or invest( learn some most basic things about trading- available on google only- devote 1 week or 2 week to find good advisor and selecting and scrutinizing them). Nothing is running away.

It’s your hard earned money (even if it’s not hard earned, you wouldn’t want to just throw it away!)

Why are you even in the Stock Market? How Do You Literally Get Lost In Market Without Knowing

Why are you even in the Stock Market? Reasons of your NOT SUCCEEDING in markets
Why are you trading/investing in stock market?
How to select right advisor for your investing trading needs?

Yes. You might think this is very obvious question. Of course to earn money.
But just repeat the question in your mind, to yourself, why am I even in the stock market? What am I doing? What do I want to achieve out of it? Why am I trading or Why do I want to trade?
The entire point we want to make here is that we have seen, over talking to thousands of persons and serving hundreds of clients that they literally are not FULLY AWARE of their actual purpose of being in stock market, except this vague obvious idea that ‘it will earn them money or to make money’
This is problem one and it gets worse. At least, at this stage they have this consciousness of making money, although they didn’t have full understanding of their goals, objectives and plan for entering market or starting trading and investing.

Now, after they are in market, this thing gets worse in the form of them completely forgetting WHY THEY WERE IN THE MARKET IN THE FIRST PLACE?
Yes, this happens. Imagine you setting out for a trip to, say Ladakh and on the way visiting Delhi, Simla and so on and your time and expenses are running out. You get immersed in destinations on the way that you forget to focus on getting to Ladakh. Although, this is not an exact illustration, I hope you understand what I want to say.
Because of this, after sometime in market, the person starts to trade and invest haphardly, tries to get in and out of stocks, takes advice of any Tom, Dick, Harry and Tanyas, or Sonias of xyZ stock advisory who calls him, keeps registering on anonymous websites offering literally 90-99% accurate trade tips…and so on….

…This is what we mean by “completely forgetting WHY THEY WERE IN THE MARKET IN THE FIRST PLACE?”
This happens because of one or many of the reasons below,
1.      complete dumbness (sorry) of the investor about how the market works and commonsense of purchasing any service or professional advise
2.      Genuine non-awareness of the way market works, how to select and not select a good advisor, non awareness of unscrupulous malpracticing businesses in this field of stock consulting etc.
3.      Initial losses in the market kills the temperament, moral, tempo and mood of the person which disorients him from prudent thinking and acting regarding all these
You will find the below pop up on our site on home page reminding every visitor what are basic purposes of them being in the market which I also put below, (comprise both investing and trading)
1. You want to generate extra/side income source.
2. You want to build a long term portfolio for your family and kids.
3. You want to increase your standard of living.
4. You want to participate and benefit from the Indian economy and growing stock markets.
5. You have a certain risk capital and you want to try it on stock/commodity trading.
6. You are a fulltime trader or want to be a fulltime trader.
7. You are broker or stock market professional.

This thing actually makes them commit lots of other mistakes which ultimately leads them into decisions which in turn give them further failure in trading and investing.
So, the whole point is you must not GET DISORIENTED and let your subconscious mind take over you.
Find other useful articles on our ‘beware investors’ series below,

Sep 1, 2016

Market cap of BSE companies at Rs 110 lakh crore (2016)

Market cap of BSE companies at Rs 110 lakh crore (2016)

Boosted by a strong stock market show today, the total market capitalisation (m-cap) of BSE-listed companies surged to an all-time high of Rs 110.7 lakh crore ($1.64 trillion). Following the sharp rally in stocks, investor wealth rose by Rs 1,39,948 crore to Rs 1,10,70,610 crore.

TCS is the most valued Indian company with a market valuation of Rs 5,02,202.97 crore, followed by Reliance Indu-stries Ltd (Rs 3,45,650.10 crore), HDFC Bank (Rs 3,22,240.25 crore), ITC (Rs 3,11,383.66 crore) and Infosys (Rs 2,39,111.94 crore).

Among the 30 Sensex companies, 29 scrips ended higher, led by Asian Paints and Bajaj Auto. Bharti Airtel fell by 2.82 per cent.

BSE is among the world’s 10 largest exchanges in terms of market value, while it is the biggest in terms of number of firms listed on its platform. Over 2,900 companies trade on BSE. On the exch-ange, 1,638 scrips adv-anced, while 1,073 dec-lined and 216 remained unchanged.

Aug 30, 2016

Mark Douglas: 7 Keys to Trading in the Zone

Mark Douglas: 7 Keys to Trading in the Zone


“I am a consistent winner because:

1. I objectively define my edges.

2. I predefine the risk of every trade.

3. I completely accept the risk or I am willing to let go of the trade.

4. I act on my edges without reservation or hesitation.

5. I pay myself as the market makes money available to me.

6. I continually monitor my susceptibility for making errors.

7. I understand the absolute necessity of these principles of consistent success and, therefore, I never violate them.”

Aug 27, 2016

DII (Mutual Funds etc.) Ownership In Stocks At Six Year High

The shareholding of domestic institutional investors (mutual funds, insurance companies etc.) (DIIs) in listed companies has risen to a six-year high, following an increase of 10 per cent in the value of their holdings, despite flat markets.

At the end of the June quarter, DII shareholding in National Stock Exchange-listed companies was 11.7 per cent, up nearly 100 basis points in 12 months, from data compiled by Prime Database. The value of their holdings touched a record high of Rs 11.74 lakh crore, a 12 per cent increase over the Rs 10.5 lakh crore at the end of the June 2015 quarter. The BSE 500 index remained flat in this period. 
By stock exchange data, DIIs had pumped nearly Rs 40,000 crore in the Indian markets in the four quarters ending June 2016. 
DIIs comprise domestic mutual funds, insurance companies and pension funds. The increase in DII ownership and value of their holdings is a positive sign for the Indian markets, largely dependent on foreign institutional investors (FIIs). 
The value of the latter FII holdings at the end of June was almost double that of DIIs, at Rs 20.1 crore. Their ownership stood at 20.1 per cent, making them the country’s largest non-promoter stakeholders. Within DIIs, state-owned Life Insurance Corporation of India (LIC) is one of the biggest investors. At the end of June, the value of its holding was Rs 4.6 lakh crore.

Some of the companies with high DII shareholding are Balmer Lawrie & Co (72.8 per cent), Gammon India (66.3), Consolidated Construction Consortium (56.4), IVRCL (52.6) and Monnet Ispat & Energy (50.1). During the June quarter, Bombay Rayon saw the highest increases in DII shareholding in percentage points, at 26.3. Sakthi Sugars (18.9 percentage point increase) and Rainbow Papers (11.45) were other companies which saw substantial increase.

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