Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Tips for selecting a good stock





Cheap Stocks:
companies with PE multiple of less than 20. Try to restrict list to only those stocks whose earnings (as measured by earnings per share) has grown by at least 20 per cent in both of the last two financial years

Example:








Low Beta Stocks
Beta is a statistical measure that shows how sensitive a stock is to market moves. For example,if Sensex moves by 25 per cent, a stock's beta number suggests whether the stock's returns are expected to be more than this or less.

The beta value for an index itself is taken as one. Stocks can have beta values, which can be above one, less than one or equal to one. A stock with a beta of more than one is expected to rise more than the market and also fall more than market. Similarly, a low-beta fund will rise less than the market on the way up and lose less on the way down. This means that high beta stocks are meant for aggressive investors who want to beat the market on the upside, but do not mind taking the risk of higher losses if the markets fall. On the other hand, for conservative investors who want higher insulation from losses, a stock with a beta of less than one is a better option.








Contrarian Bets?
The idea behind the contrarian strategy is to buy into the out-of favour stocks, i.e., the stocks which have few takers at the moment, and hold them till the time they catch the fancy of the markets again and bring in handsome gains.

Aim to search for such out-of favour stocks which are available quite cheap,
but seem to have a reasonably strong financial position. Therefore, as and when the markets rediscover their potential, they might be in for a significant capital appreciation. The first filter is that they should have a price-earning multiple of
not more than 12, which suggests that the markets does not seem to be very optimistic about them at the moment. But a high current ratio (of 2 times or higher), coupled with negligible debt on the balance sheet points towards a potentially strong financial condition. We can add another criterion
that the stock should have a decent dividend yield (of at least 2.5 per cent) to ensure that at least it yields some dividend income till the time it brings in the capital appreciation.


Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Tax saving instruments







QUICK GUIDE TO TAX SAVING DEDUCTIONS

INCOME TAX DEDUCTION MAXIMUM DEDUCTION ALLOWED PER YEAR
SECTION 80C
Life Insurance premium






 Actual amount contributed / invested, up to Rs. 1 lakh
Contribution to Employee Provident Fund (EPF)
Contribution to Public Provident Fund (PPF)
National Savings Certificate (NSC)
Unit Linked Insurance Plans (ULIPs)
Repayment of Home Loan Principal
Equity Linked Savings Schemes (ELSS)
5 Year Bank FDs
Pension Funds
SECTION 80CCF  
Long Term Infrastructure Bonds Actual amount invested, up to Rs. 20,000
SECTION 80D  
Mediclaim Premium for self and family Actual premium paid, up to Rs. 40,000 (if both self and parents are senior citizens)
SECTION 80DD  
Expense on treatment of a disabled relative, or payment of insurance premium for said relative Rs. 50,000 or Rs. 1 lakh depending on severity of disability
SECTION 80DDB  
Expenses incurred on medical treatment for yourself or for a dependent relative (not necessarily disabled) Actual expense incurred, up to Rs. 40,000 (Up to Rs. 60,000 in case of senior citizen)
SECTION 80E  
Interest of an education loan taken for yourself, your spouse or your child Full interest amount paid during the year, for a limit of 8 years
SECTION 80G  
Donation to certain charitable institutions 100% or 50% of donation given, depending on the institution, subject to limitations
SECTION 80U  
Deduction in case of a disabled assessee Rs. 50,000 or Rs. 1 lakh, depending on severity of disability