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That sound is your banker rejoicing

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Links

Linkfest: October 19,2016

Some stuff I am reading today morning:

Endurance Technologies to list today (MoneyControl)

Indian conglomerates are being cut to size (Jaggi)

Who cried for travel agents? (Mint)

India’s puzzling gender gap (Bloomberg)

Stock Talk: Kitex Garments (RJ)

Company Profile: Hero Cycles (Forbes)

All about Post Office Recurring Deposit Schemes (BasuNivesh)

How to stay the course to Financial Independence (RetireBy40)

Get rich predicting the future in real estate (FS)

What is the best “risk off” asset for trend followers (AA)

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Excerpts

Imitate at your own risk

Source:Samir Arora

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Chart

Top 5 Equity Large Cap Funds in India

Source:Prashanth

Find it interesting that the best fund has returned 14.73%

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Anecdotes

How Rakesh Jhunjhunwala got started

My father was also interested in stocks. When I was a young child, he and his friends would drink in the evening and discuss about the stock market. I would listen to them and one day I asked him why do these prices fluctuate.

He told me to check if there is a news item on Gwalior Rayon in the newspaper, and if there was Gwalior Rayon’s price would fluctuate the next day.

I found it very interesting and I got fascinated by stocks, I self-taught myself. My father told me to do whatever I wanted in life but at least get professionally qualified.

I was always a reasonably good student so I took up chartered accountancy. In January 1985, I completed my CA. I told my father I wanted to go to the stock market. My father reacted by telling me not to ask him or any of his friends for money. He, however, told me that I could live in the house in Mumbai and that if I did not do well in the market I could always earn my livelihood as chartered accountant. This sense of security really drove me in life.

Between 1986 and 1989 I must have earned Rs 20-25 lakhs. After 1986, the market went into a big depression for two three years but I put that money in Tata Power and the Tata Power stocks became about 1100-1200.

Now I was worth Rs 50-55 lakhs.

Sesa Goa had a big fall because there was a depression in the iron ore industry and then prices for the next year had been considerably raised about 20-25%. The stock was available abysmally cheap around Rs. 25-26. There was a projection of a very good growth in profitability in the next year but nobody seemed to believe it.

When I saw the facts, I wanted to invest but I did not have capital.

I bought 4 lakh shares of Sesa Goa in forward trading, worth Rs 1 crore. I sold about 2-2.5 lakh shares at Rs 60-65 and another 1 lakh at Rs 150-175. The prices then went up to Rs 2200 and I sold some shares. I did some other trading too. I had net worth of about Rs 2 – 2.5 crore.

-said Rakesh Jhunjhunwala