Penny stock boom sparks 4\,300% gain in Indian firm with no sales
Penny stock boom sparks 4,300% gain in Indian firm with no sales
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Penny stock boom sparks 4,300% gain in Indian firm with no sales
Bloomberg
Synopsis
These include Transglobe Foods Ltd., a fruit-jam maker that has skyrocketed more than 4,300 per cent this year, and real-estate services firm Shree Precoated Steels Ltd., which has jumped over 1,300 per cent. Both companies booked losses on no sales in the latest fiscal year.
AgenciesIt encouraged retail investors to stick with blue-chip companies.
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By Abhishek Vishnoi
Retail investors’ frenzy over small stocks in India has reached such extremes that shares of some companies that aren’t booking any sales, let alone profits, are going through the roof.
These include Transglobe Foods Ltd., a fruit-jam maker that has skyrocketed more than 4,300 per cent this year, and real-estate services firm Shree Precoated Steels Ltd., which has jumped over 1,300 per cent. Both companies booked losses on no sales in the latest fiscal year.
The prospect of risky investments turning sour raises concerns that any sudden withdrawals by small traders could wind up hurting the broader market as well. That’s due to the rapid expansion in the presence of individual investors in India’s stock market, mirroring record sign-ups seen at U.S. brokerages including Robinhood during virus-related lockdowns.
“The outperformance of retail-driven small stocks raises the risk of a pullback and some contagion” to broader markets, said Sumeet Rohra, a fund manager at Smartsun Capital Pte. in Singapore. Investors should stick with “quality stocks which have not participated, rather than chasing small caps,” he said.
Bloomberg
While stocks of all sizes have roared back from the depths of the pandemic selloff, the recovery in smaller Indian shares has been stronger. The S&P BSE Small Cap Index has surged 69 per cent from its March low and is now up 9.3 per cent for the year. In comparison, the benchmark Sensex has climbed about 50 per cent from its low and is still down 5.3 per cent in 2020.
The small cap rally has been aided by the influx of amateur traders, with about 2.8 million new retail accounts opened since March, according to data from Central Depository Services (India) Ltd. The flood of individuals, many with limited knowledge of fundamental and valuation metrics, is making some pros reconsider their positions.
“It is time to book some profits, as retail money is chasing penny stocks like crazy,” said Chokkalingam G, chief investment officer at Equinomics Research & Advisory Ltd. in Mumbai. “People are buying anything without knowing its price-to-earnings ratio or Ebitda or earnings,” said Chokkalingam, who estimates that individual investors now account for about half of total trading in Indian equities versus about a third last year.
Bloomberg
India’s overall equity market value has increased by nearly $770 billion from the March low, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. This hasn’t been all due to local individuals -- India is one of the few Asian markets where foreigners are net buyers in 2020.
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On a roll
A glut in liquidity flowing into domestic equities has taken the majority of stocks higher on Dalal Street, despite some of the high-frequency indicators signalling a bleak outlook for the economy. One of the biggest beneficiaries of the market rally has been the penny stocks, those priced below Rs 10, with as much as 89 per cent of them rising sharply and some soaring up to 1,508 per cent between April 1 and August 24, 2020. Rahul Oberoi takes a deep dive into this basket of stocks.
What are penny stocks?
There is no theoretical definition for penny stocks in India. However, stocks that trade in single-digit prices with low market capitalisations are bracketed in this club. Some typical characteristics of these stocks tend to be low promoter holding, huge debt, accumulated losses and poor dividend track record. However, stocks like Vodafone Idea and Suzlon Energy, which now trade at prices of less than Rs 10 with huge equity base and market capitalisation of nearly Rs 26,000 crore and Rs 3,232 crore, respectively, do not fall in this basket.
Stocks that turned five-baggers
Out of the 521 stocks that traded below Rs 10 on April 1, 13 have seen their prices swell over five-fold till date. Vikas Multicorp advanced the most at 1,508 per cent to Rs 17.53 on August 24 from Rs 1.09 on April 1. McLeod Russel (up 939 per cent), Vikas EcoTech (up 884 per cent), GBL Industries (up 795 per cent), Alok Industries (up 730 per cent), Bharat Immunological (up 652 per cent), Birla Tyres (up 639 per cent), Alchemist (up 536 per cent), Praveg Communications (up 528 per cent), Ballarpur Industries (up 472 per cent), Kaushalya Infrastructure (up 439 per cent) and Biofil Chemicals (up 430 per cent) have also gained over five times.
Caveat Emptor
In general, a rise in stock prices tends to be backed by fundamental factors like good management, better financial performance and business expansion. That's not the case in this space. Investors should be careful not to get trapped into buying low-valued shares since that can degrade the quality of investments. Market experts advise conservative investors to avoid penny stocks. Sometimes such stocks are driven by market operators. When they fall, these stocks at times tend to hit lower price circuits continuously, making it impossible for small investors to exit their positions.
Things to keep in mind
A) If at all, one should buy such stocks only if it has a reasonably high trading volume which would suggest ample liquidity. Don’t look only at one day’s trading, but consider the monthly average.
B) If you bought a share at Rs 5 and it now trades at Rs 2, don’t try to average out your purchase by adding more of it. You may end up digging a deeper hole for yourself and lose more money. Don’t get anchored to a price and be ready to book losses if an investment goes wrong. You should improve the average by selling some shares when the price starts moving up, than buying more when it goes down.
It’s also true that some broadening of the rally is welcome given concerns not long ago that gains were being dominated by just a few big names. Technicals are supportive, with the Sensex keeping below overbought levels, but some still see a need for caution.
True Beacon, a top-performing Indian hedge fund, told Bloomberg last week that it has trimmed bullish bets as the market has run ahead of fundamentals. It encouraged retail investors to stick with blue-chip companies.