Value-Stock-Plus

Informed Investing!

Investing is most intelligent when it is most businesslike - Benjamin Graham (1894-1976)

____________________________________________________________________

Value-Stock-Plus stands at No. 50 in the list of Top 100 Finance Blogs  by ValueWiki

Recognised by The Economic Times as one of the most popular financial blog

Updated! Compilation on Warren Buffett, Rakesh Jhunjhunwala & Charlie Munger
____________________________________________________________________

« Home | Stock Market related books » | When Markets Go Mad » | Investing: What matters! » | Rakesh Jhunjhunwala: A Compilation » | Money matters: Rules of the game! » | Capital goods: Look before you leap! » | What’s the correlation between money and happiness? » | Rakesh Jhunjhunwala: The Punter’s Favourite » | Stockmarkets: Where to from here? » | Run down on 'capex-led' growth! »

What turns on Rakesh Jhunjhunwala

Retail, infrastructure, liquor are his favourites; strict no to auto components, realty, sugar
by Sumit Moitra/ FE
Enigmatic equity investor and self-styled India bull Rakesh Jhunjhunwala is a contrarian investor, going by tips handed out by him on Saturday. While the media always closely follows what stocks the ace investor buys into, here’s what he stays away from. And there are a few surprises.
He is keeping away from sectors like auto-ancillary and real estate, the two big growth stories of India. “I am not quite bullish about the auto-component sector. They have no pricing power.” That’s what Jhunjhunwala had to say when members of Millennium Mams, a club of women investors, asked him about what he thinks of the much-talked about global opportunities before the auto-ancillary makers.
There’s another tip: don’t buy the property story that has propelled such stocks like Unitech and Mahindra Gesco to stratospheric heights amply supplemented by the SEZ craze. “Real estate sector is India’s new Internet. Stay away from it,” the chubby investor told another Millennium Mams’ member, comparing the rush for any stock that peddles a real-estate story with the Internet bubble of the ’90s.
And considering current valuation, sugar and cement are also out of favour for Jhunjhunwala. “Cement stocks are fully valued; all positive factors have been discounted. Don’t enter the sugar sector either. From what I have gathered from recent news reports, selling ethanol to oil companies wouldn’t be as profitable as what was thought before,” he said.
So what is he bullish about? Jhunjhunwala is betting big on retail (his pick: Shoppers’ Stop), infrastructure (particularly Punj Lloyd), liquor, financial services and small cap hotels and IT stocks. “Try to identify those small cap hotels and IT companies that can scale up. For scalability and sustaining, growth are the two big challenges before corporate India,” he said.
Jhunjhunwala has already placed his bets on the following sectors: Nagarjuna Construction, Praj Industries, Pantaloon, Punj Lloyd, Geojit Finance and Geojit Software, which now feature in his portfolio that has appeared in bits and pieces in various news reports. “I have made some good money investing in Pantaloon, and if you are convinced that Kishore Biyani will be able to achieve his ambitious dream, you can bet on him,” he said.
The ace investor’s portfolio is not a surefire prescription to earn above average returns and he himself fears that a strategy to follow in his footsteps may not work. “Taking a tip from another investor is injurious to investing, more so if he is a smoker,” Jhunjhunwala told a lady member, lighting up a cigarette.

Posted by toughiee on Monday, September 04, 2006 at 12:01 PM | Permalink

That's quite deep. So RKJ thinks mid-sized construction co's like Punj Lloyd, NCC, retail co's Pantaloon or small brokerages like Geojit have pricing power?? Last time I checked the net margins for likes of Pantaloon & NCC were around 4-5.5% only and under pressure. The less said about valuations of Praj or Punj Lloyd or small cap hotels he likes(Viceroy Hotels)the better. The only smart thing he said in this article was the last statement. He could have added that investors are bullish about stocks they've entered at lower levels and sceptical about those they've missed.

Posted by Anonymous Anonymous | 12:22 PM  

When RJ the Great says that he is placing his bets on some stocks (Punj Lyoyd, Shoppers Stop etc) and some sectors (like Retail) he may be actually saying that "I have caught these stocks at their lows and now want to dump them at highest possible prices on Unsuspecting Investors".... or as GreyFool has put it, the only sensible thing in his talk was his last statement.

Posted by Anonymous Anonymous | 8:47 PM  

I somewhat disagree, Usually such investors never ever tell people to buy what they have bought.
A mere mention of scrip does not mean that scrip should be bought because buying requires a reason supported by thorough analysis.
The purpose of posting such articles is just to learn from them & brush up our investing ways.
It does not matter whether RJ is an investor or an operator...one thing is sure that he is surely sucessful in what he does & there is nothing wrong in learning his style.
Pump & Dump strategy does not apply here because rather than money reputation is at stake!.

Posted by Blogger toughiee | 9:19 PM  

RJ said it right..

two imp things are growth and pricing power.

while many things can grow all cannot make profit and go kaput at the top.

his idea of growth + pricing power is right and full of insight. (vah vah sayari ho gaya)..!!

Posted by Blogger Rajeev mundra | 10:28 PM  

Post a Comment

Search


Compilations

  • Warren Buffett
  • Charlie Munger
  • Rakesh Jhunjhunwala

Previous posts

  • Stock Market related books
  • When Markets Go Mad
  • Investing: What matters!
  • Rakesh Jhunjhunwala: A Compilation
  • Money matters: Rules of the game!
  • Capital goods: Look before you leap!
  • What’s the correlation between money and happiness?
  • Rakesh Jhunjhunwala: The Punter’s Favourite
  • Stockmarkets: Where to from here?
  • Run down on 'capex-led' growth!

Archives

  • November 2005
  • December 2005
  • January 2006
  • February 2006
  • March 2006
  • April 2006
  • May 2006
  • June 2006
  • July 2006
  • August 2006
  • September 2006
  • October 2006
  • November 2006
  • December 2006
  • January 2007
  • February 2007
  • March 2007
  • April 2007
  • May 2007
  • June 2007
  • July 2007
  • August 2007
  • September 2007
  • October 2007
  • November 2007
  • December 2007
  • January 2008
  • February 2008
  • March 2008
  • April 2008
  • May 2008
  • June 2008

About This Blog

  • Get on Mobile
  • Atom Feeds
  • Disclaimer
  • Email to Owner

Blog Directories

  • Stockblogs

Related Blogs

  • DeepWealth
  • Dardashti
  • Ridgewood Group
  • Trading Day by Day

Business Papers

  • Economic Times
  • Business Standard
  • Business Line
  • Financial Express
  • DNA Money

Business News

  • Capital Market
  • Equitymaster
  • India Infoline
  • Moneycontrol.com
  • Yahoo! India Finance
  • ICICIdirect

Results

  • India Earnings

Quotes & Stats

  • Asian Indices
  • All Indian Quotes
  • Indian ADRs
  • Indian GDRs
  • Arbitrage
  • Sector Classification
  • FII Trends
  • MF Trends
  • NSE Heat Map
  • Insider Trading
  • BC/RD
  • BM (Company)
  • BM (Date)
  • BSE Bulk Deals
  • NSE Bulk Deals
  • NSE Block Deals
  • US Indices
  • US Pre-Market
  • US After Hours
  • CBOE VIX
  • European Indices
  • Commodity/Currency
  • Nymex Light Crude Oil
  • Nymex Natural Gas
  • Nymex Gold
  • Nymex Silver
  • Nymex Copper
  • All In One

Equity Analysis

  • Kotak Street
  • Moneypore
  • Geojit
  • IDBI
  • Naviamarkets
  • ET Big Bucks
  • BS Smart Investor
  • FE Investor
  • BL Investment World

Screeners

  • Equitymaster
  • ICICIdirect

Research Reports

  • Moneycontrol

Technical Analysis

  • ICICIdirect
  • Yahoo! Finance

E-Books

  • Value Investing
  • Trading & Technicals
  • Gann
  • Elliott Wave
  • Risk Management
  • Derivatives

Misc. Links

  • BSE
  • NSE
  • SEBI
  • SEBI Edifar
  • Corp. Filings
  • WatchOutInvestors

Global Research

  • Morgan Stanley GEF
  • Hussman Funds

Interactive

  • Online Chat
Subscribe to this blog's feed
[What is this?]
Powered by Blogger