Shankar Sharma | Vijay Kedia | Sanjiv Bhasin: Tweet Buster: Vijay Kedia warns against ‘Bhangar Cap’ stocks; don’t dump IPOs on listing day

Snapping a four-week winning run, Nifty ended the week down 0.7 per cent. IT and FMCG stocks were the only two sectoral indices that ended in the green last week. Metal stocks were the worst hit as Nifty Metal index ended down 6.6 per cent.

In this edition of Tweet Buster, we discover gems from some of the best investors on Dalal Street and elsewhere to help you navigate a volatile market so that you don’t lose sight of your long-term wealth creation goal.

What’s in the offing?
Robert Kiyosaki, author of the popular book ‘
Rich Dad, Poor Dad‘, warned that the biggest bubble in world history is getting bigger. “Biggest crash in world history coming. Buying more gold and silver. Waiting for Bitcoin to drop to $24 k. Crashes best time to get rich.”

PMS Funda

PMS fund manager Shankar Sharma said investors must always insist on knowing how much money the PMS fund manager has made himself in his personal investing career. He also said PMS fund managers who do not charge performance fees should be avoided at all costs.

‘Bhangar Cap’

Maverick value investor Vijay Kedia asked investors to be careful in good times as more than 4,000 out of 5,000 stocks fit in the category of being “Bhangar Cap”.

Beyond Listing Day

Radhika Gupta of Edelweiss Mutual Fund said buying every IPO for listing day gains doesn’t work as in good quality companies, there is money to be made after listing.

Excessive leverage kills

PMS fund manager Basant Maheshwari said markets do not fall on over-valuation but on participation and excessive leverage.

BUY call
Sanjiv Bhasin of IIF Securities gave a buy call on HDFC with a target price of Rs 3,000 by the year-end.

Warning Sign

Independent market expert Sandip Sabharwal warned that this could be the time to take the reverse trade.

IPO Bubble

Sabharwal said venture capital and private equity investors are desperate to convert more and more of their investee companies into unicorns and then palm them off to other large companies or IPO them out to retail and mutual funds investors as valuations become unsustainable.



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