Skip to main content

Six out of 10 stocks beat Sensex in recovery

Did you buy into stocks when the BSE Sensex hovered at the 14,800 mark in mid-March?
If you didn’t, you probably have reason to regret your decision. While you’ve been on the sidelines, the BSE Sensex has gained 12 per cent from its March 18 low and the BSE 500 has managed a 14 per cent return.
These numbers seem tame in comparison to gains managed by some B group stocks, of whom 76 stocks have managed gains of 50 per cent or more.
Stocks that have gained in value over this period have easily outnumbered those that lost ground. As many as 1044 of the 1200 NSE listed stocks, or nine out of every ten, have posted gains from their March 18 levels. As many as 723 stocks have beaten the Sensex (up 12 per cent) over this period.
Orchid Chemicals (up 127 per cent from March 18), Harrisons Malayalam (94 per cent), Gemini Communications (93 per cent), Mercator Lines (86 per cent), IL&FS Investsmart (80 per cent) and Praj Industries (78 per cent) are some of the better known names from the list of top gainers, which is dominated by mid and small-cap stocks. Gainers list
Among the large caps, Tata Steel (up 40 per cent), Tata Chemicals (40 per cent), Cairn India (39 per cent) and Infosys (39 per cent) lead the gainers list. Though there is little other evidence of any sectoral bias in the gainers, small-sized software and metal companies have been in favour.
Did stocks and sectors that declined the most, lead the recovery? Trends have been quite divergent. While the beaten down software stocks have recovered quite sharply, thanks to a weaker rupee, cement, real estate and select capital goods stocks have headed southwards, even from their levels in March. Thermax (down 18 per cent from March 18), Ultra Tech Cement (16 per cent down), Ambuja Cement (down 14 per cent), Grasim (down 13 per cent) are stocks that have headed down since March, despite the broader market recovery.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Stock Market says Merry Christmas to Investors

Sensex today closed 691.55 point up at 19854.12 , Nifty was up 218 points at 5985.10. It is the 6th bigeest gain in oneday. Today's main contributors are IT stocks. Wipro was up at 535.30 (+8.86%), Infosys up at 1810.90(+6.63%) and Satyam closed at 454.55 up by 6.28%. The buying activity was wide-base and lifted almost all the sectoral indices. Sector wise performance was as follows - BSE IT 4581.61 (+260.98) BSE Healthcare 4294.83(+52.30) BSE FMCG2218.74(+20.29) BANKEX 11101.74 (+363.15) BSE Auto5586.83(+45.57) BSE TECk3961.96 (+185.00) BSE PSU 9830.01 (+317.11) Today BSE Midcap closed at 9211.71 up by 186.17 and BSE Smallcap index closed at 11980.57 up by 167.25 points.

News - Economy

Interest rates unlikely to go down (The Economic Times 4th Jan 2008)Interest rates are unlikely to fall in near future as it was expected with the State Bank of India raising the fixed deposit rate of various maturities up to 1.5 percentage points. Other banks are also planning to raise deposit rates. After SBI increasing deposit rates, other banks have no choice but to raise the rates to mobilize resources in the domestic market, chairman of a public sector bank said. As the cost of funds for banks will increase, they will resort to raising the lending rates. A senior banker said banks would announce the increased rates in near future. More Gold zooms past Rs 11,000 per 10 gm (The Hindu Businessline 4th Jan 2008)Gold prices made history as they soared to a record $ 865.35 an ounce in the London A.M fixing on Thursday, tracking which the domestic gold surged to Rs. 11,000 per 10 gm. On Wednesday, gold was fixed at $ 840.75/oz in London while in the Indian market it quoted at Rs 10,70

IIP records negative growth of 0.4% in Oct

T he country's industrial output shrunk for the first time in many years to a record a negative growth of 0.4 per cent in October, stifled by manufacturing sector -- for rescuing which the government announced a stimulus package earlier this mo nth. Output had grown by 5.45 per cent in September, and 12.2 per cent in October, 2007. The Index for Industrial Production numbers for the seven-month period ended October was 4.1 per cent against 9.9 per cent a year ago. Manufacturing sector, which accounts for 80 per cent of the index, declined to 1.2 per cent from 13.8 per cent in the year-ago period. Only earlier this month, the government sought to rescue manufacturers by announcing an across-the-board (barring petroleum goods) four per cent cut in excise duty. Electricity sector grew by 4.4 per cent during the month, bettering 4.2 per cent output of the year-ago period, while mining sector grew by a slower 2.8 per cent against 5.1 per cent in the previous year's comparable period