Sunday, April 12, 2026
BSE multi bagger: From ₹34 to ₹3300- BSE's Jaw-Dropping 97x Surge in Just 5 Years.
Monday, March 23, 2026
Indian Share Market Crashes Below 52-Week Lows: Top Stocks Hit Hard & Recovery Signals.
Saturday, March 21, 2026
Meta Platforms Inc(Formerly Facebook) 52-Week Low at $479.80: Buy Signal or Trap? Analysis.
Thursday, March 19, 2026
Adani Total Gas Hits 5-Year Low at ₹463: Time to Buy or Sell?
Tuesday, March 10, 2026
Sapphire Foods India Crashes to All-Time Low ₹173: Buy Opportunity or Stay Away?
Monday, January 5, 2026
IIFL Securities (IIFLSEC) Delivers Powerful 3-Month Breakout: Buy, Sale or Hold?
Have you noticed IIFL Securities, or IIFLSEC as we traders call it, smashing through its recent highs? Over the last three months, the stock jumped around 30-31%, breaking out like a bull from a pen – think of it as finally shaking off that sideways rut. Current price hovers near ₹378-₹389, after touching a 52-week high of ₹391. Volumes spiked too, hinting buyers are piling in, but is this the real deal or just hype?
Market cap sits comfy at ₹11,763-₹12,059 Cr – mid-sized in broking world. P/E ratio? About 16.8-20.6, cheaper than industry average of 22.75, so not overpriced like some flashy peers. ROE shines at 28-32%, ROCE 33%, showing they squeeze good returns from money – better than many banks your uncle trusts blindly. Debt to equity is low at 0.37, cash flow positive with operating cash up massively YoY (think 840% in recent years). Dividend yield? A nice 0.78-0.79%, pays out steadily around 22%. Profit growth? Solid 35% CAGR over 5 years, though latest Q3FY25 PAT dipped QoQ but up 31% YoY to ₹197 Cr.
Started in 1995 by Nirmal Jain, IIM-A grad and CA – guy saw India's markets waking up and jumped in with research first. No fancy silver spoon; he built from scratch as India Infoline Group. Expanded to broking, went public later. R. Venkataraman now MD, keeping the family vibe. From research desk to full brokerage powerhouse by 2000s, adding wealth management amid booms and busts. Survived 2008 crash, listed on NSE/BSE – resilient like that old scooter that never quits.
Retail broking (your demat buys/sells), institutional equities for big FIIs, commodities, currency trading, plus investment banking and wealth advice. Distribute mutual funds, IPOs too – basically, your one-stop for trading masala. Revenue from fees, not lending risks, so steady in volatile times. Q3 income up 11% YoY despite dips elsewhere.
Short-term, that 3-month breakout screams buy if it holds ₹375 support – could test ₹450 soon, but watch volatility; dropped 27% from all-time high once. For 2026, analysts eye ₹550-₹860 end-year if bull run continues. Longer haul: 2030 maybe ₹1,400-₹5,000? Optimistic sites say so, banking on India's growth. 2035? ₹2,000+, 2040 even wilder at multi-baggers if ROE stays fat. But these are my wildest guesses and do not trust them blindly.
Saturday, December 27, 2025
Silver Price Explosion: 33% Surge in December – Will ₹2.5 Lakh/kg Rally Continue?
Sunday, December 14, 2025
Motilal Oswal Nifty Midcap 150 Index Fund Delivers 23.92% CAGR in 5 Years – Should You Invest Now?
Saturday, December 13, 2025
Ashok Leyland Hits All-Time High ₹164.86: Rally Breakdown; Buy, Sell or Hold Signals?
Ashok Leyland stock just smashed its all-time high at ₹164.86, leaving investors buzzing with excitement. If you're wondering why this truck giant is soaring and whether now's the time to jump in, this breakdown reveals the real story behind the surge.
Why the Big Rally Now?
Strong sales numbers fueled the fire. In November 2025, Ashok Leyland sold 18,272 vehicles total, up 29% from last year, with home sales jumping 32% to 16,491 units. Trucks and buses led the charge—medium and heavy trucks rose 29%, light vehicles 37%—thanks to steady demand after festivals and better roads. The stock climbed 2.62% on December 12, beating the market, with gains over 15% in a month and 49% year-to-date. Imagine missing this ride—early buyers turned ₹10,000 into lakhs over years!
Raghunandan Saran started it all in 1948 as Ashok Motors, named after his son, building Austin cars with a nudge from Nehru. It teamed up with British Leyland in 1954, becoming Ashok Leyland, India's truck king. The Hinduja Group grabbed control in the 1980s, buying out partners and turning it into their flagship. Today, promoters hold 51%, steering steady growth from Chennai plants.
Ashok Leyland sells trucks from 1-tonne to 55-tonne haulers, buses seating 9 to 80, plus defense gear and engines for ships or power. Think Ecomet lights, Boss haulers, Dost vans—rugged for India's rough roads. They earn big from vehicle sales, spare parts, and services like uptime centers that cut breakdowns. Exports to Africa, Middle East add spice, with electric buses and green tech pushing future wins. Revenue hit ₹510 billion lately, profits strong.
Analysts see huge upside from infra boom, EV shift, and exports. By 2030, it could double or triple on sales growth; longer term, roads and defense deals push it sky-high. Past 5-year gains of 250% prove the power.
For 2026, the share price is projected in the range of ₹240 to ₹420, while by 2030 the range widens to about ₹380 to ₹1,030. Looking further ahead, the 2035 targets move up to ₹800–₹1,500, and by 2040 the estimated band stands at roughly ₹1,500–₹2,500, indicating expectations of strong multi‑year growth potential.
Thursday, December 11, 2025
Vodafone Idea Share Price Breaks Out to 52-Week High – Is a Big Rally Coming?
Vodafone Idea share price has broken out near its 52-week high around ₹11.08, firing up fresh hopes of a big rally among retail investors who have waited for years in this beaten-down telecom stock. But the real question you need answered is simple: is this just a short-term bounce or the start of a serious turnaround story?
Latest price and breakout reason:
As of mid-December 2025, Vodafone Idea is trading close to ₹11, after hitting a 52-week high of about ₹11.08 in November 2025, up roughly 35% in the last one year. This move has come on the back of visible progress on fundraising, debt refinancing and plans to finally speed up 4G/5G network expansion.
The company’s infrastructure arm is raising thousands of crores through bonds at double‑digit yields, and the board has already cleared a larger fund-raise of up to ₹20,000 crore via equity and debt, which the market sees as crucial lifeline money for capex and AGR dues. Technical indicators like bullish EMA crossovers on daily charts have also attracted traders, adding fuel to the 52‑week high breakout.
Vodafone Idea is not a typical single-founder story; it is a joint venture born from the merger of Vodafone India and Idea Cellular. On one side stands Vodafone Group from the UK, and on the other is the Aditya Birla Group led by billionaire Kumar Mangalam Birla, with the Government of India now the largest shareholder after converting part of its dues into equity. Post-merger, Vodafone Group held around 45% and the Aditya Birla Group about 26%, while the rest was with public investors; later, the government stake climbed to nearly 49% after the AGR dues conversion. This unique mix of global MNC, Indian conglomerate and government ownership is one of the biggest reasons many investors still believe survival odds are high despite losses and heavy debt.
The story started in the 1990s with Birla Communications, which later became Idea Cellular as it brought in partners like AT&T and then merged with Tata Cellular to grow pan‑India. Vodafone entered India by buying stakes in Hutch and built a strong urban brand before both Vodafone India and Idea Cellular agreed to merge in 2017 to fight Jio and Airtel. The merger was completed in August 2018, creating the largest telecom operator by subscribers, and in 2020 the unified brand “Vi” was launched. However, massive AGR-related dues, market share loss, weak 4G networks and years of losses pushed the stock to penny levels, and only now, after equity infusions and planned 5G capex, are investors again talking about a possible long-term revival.
For Vodafone Idea, a reasonable expectation (not a guarantee) is that the share could trade in the ₹15–₹22 zone by 2026 if the current price near ₹11–₹11.25 holds its breakout, fund-raising goes through, and 4G/5G capex shows visible results. If the turnaround continues with tariff hikes, stable 3‑player competition and better ARPU, the stock might gradually move towards ₹25–₹40 by 2030, ₹40–₹70 by 2035 and possibly ₹70–₹120 by 2040 as a long-term recovery story, but all these levels remain highly speculative and depend on execution, debt reduction and policy support.