View Full Version : Sensex
kgupta1
October 12th, 2007, 08:00 AM
What will be the high point for Sensex in 2007.
ASHFAQUE MANJAR
October 12th, 2007, 03:20 PM
it will touch atleast 21000 points
jatin_met1
October 12th, 2007, 03:38 PM
no, lets see what surprise rbi and our finance minister has for us by end of 31st oct. im sure it wont go beyond 20000
prakash_dudes
October 12th, 2007, 03:55 PM
hmmm.......high level for sensex for 2007.....
Max to max.......it going to be............20 k
But, Markets are unpredictable........You never noe.....wat can happen in markets.......
Ashishpatna
October 12th, 2007, 04:49 PM
sensex is sure to touch 20k by the end of this yr and may go to abt 20,700 levels
vic
October 13th, 2007, 01:08 PM
I wud really appreciate if people giv the reasons for their conclusions on the bull run ......
Regards
i_ishani_119
October 13th, 2007, 02:17 PM
wht makes sense whether sensex touches 20k or 21k.....
where r we on other human parameters?????
guys think abt it.....
devendra
October 13th, 2007, 03:49 PM
i guess that the Sensex will bounce back from 19k or 19.5k
i shall not touch 20k in this jump!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
avi999
October 13th, 2007, 05:38 PM
hey thts an ineresting Ques????....
well,we have used various techniuqes of forecasting and have cm 2 a conclusion tht sensex wud go at its peak by the end of 2007.....
it should reach upto 19575.....according to our predictions.....
Tc
mahesh.dukhande
October 13th, 2007, 06:51 PM
I think Sensex has attained its peak for this yearand would probably drop incomming festive season.lets see...
Wizard
October 13th, 2007, 08:54 PM
VERY SOON CORRRECTION WILL TAKE PLACE ITS GOING UP TO MUCH 19000 IS NOT CORRECT
deepakraam
October 15th, 2007, 05:44 PM
Sensex will touch 19500 and there will be a correction expected from the RBI and Finmin in the wake of rising rupee.
-Deepak.
Wizard
October 15th, 2007, 07:36 PM
very soon it will come doen corrrectio n will take place
Wizard
October 15th, 2007, 07:36 PM
it has happened in past it will also happen now to
sandeshdalvi
October 15th, 2007, 10:06 PM
20500 and then it will correct to 18500
vengabeats
October 15th, 2007, 10:19 PM
I guess we can see correction after levels of 20500..and now we are having festive season..we cant have correction before November 15th i guess.
g_neware
October 16th, 2007, 01:55 AM
rather than predicting sensex .. it would me more useful to consider its effcts on economy..
piyazcool
October 16th, 2007, 05:54 PM
Hi All,
Technically it should touch 22000 points !
But if thers correction by SEBI to regulate the market & calculating political risk (N- Deal , if tht eva happens in 2007) & If Chidambaram intervenes , market may fall to 15000 points.!
satya108agarwal
October 17th, 2007, 12:55 PM
sensex has crashed by 1600 bps
satya108agarwal
October 17th, 2007, 01:07 PM
I think the sensex may touch 20000 by the end of dec 2007
devendra
July 27th, 2008, 04:44 PM
hi guys what about the sensex
how did u found the bear stage of the market, my money is less than half
md.pankaj
August 3rd, 2008, 02:19 AM
Sensex will trade in range bound band i.e., between 13000 - 15000
chandoo.upadhyay
August 3rd, 2008, 03:31 PM
the highest point touch by sensex was 21550
Akchat
August 3rd, 2008, 03:52 PM
BSE SENSEX(Bombay: ^BSESN)
Index Value: 14,656.69
Trade Time: Aug 1
Change: 300.94 (2.10%)
Prev Close: 14,355.75
Open: 14,064.26
Day's Range: 14,032.87 - 14,682.33
52wk Range: 12,515.00
devendra
September 17th, 2008, 05:50 PM
I think Sensex has attained its peak for this yearand would probably drop incomming festive season.lets see...
Hi,
Friends currently the Sensex is around 13,000
Meter down and down.......................
pahuja.chirag
September 17th, 2008, 07:07 PM
senses today was 13262.90. it has come down by 255.90 points today reason being the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers and selling out of ML.
mbaguy
December 6th, 2008, 07:56 PM
The government’s report of a giant job loss in November, the biggest monthly decline in a generation, puts more pressure on Congress and the administration to move quickly on a stimulus package, mortgage relief and perhaps financial aid for Detroit’s big automakers.
The nation’s employers cut 533,000 jobs in November, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Friday.
Not since December 1974, toward the end of a severe recession, have so many jobs disappeared in a single month — and the current recession, far from ending, appears to be just gathering steam.
“We are caught in a downward spiral in which employment, incomes and spending are collapsing together,” said Nigel Gault, chief domestic economist for IHS Global Insight. “With private spending frozen, we have no choice but to rely on a stimulus package to revive the economy.”
The unemployment rate rose to 6.7 percent, up just two-tenths of a percentage point from October, but up six-tenths over the last three months. More than 420,000 men and women who had been working or seeking work in October left the labor force in November.
More significantly, the unemployment rate does not include those too discouraged to look for work any longer or those working fewer hours than they would like. Add those people to the roster of the unemployed, and the rate hit a record 12.5 percent in November, up 1.5 percentage points since September.
Noting that 1.9 million jobs have been lost since the start of the recession a year ago — two-thirds of them since September — President-elect Barack Obama invoked public spending as the best way to get a dead-in-the-water economy moving again. “This painful crisis,” he said in a statement, is an opportunity “to improve the lives of ordinary people by rebuilding roads and modernizing schools for our children,” and by investing in clean energy projects.
A goal of all this spending is to generate 2.5 million jobs over the next two years, he said, repeating an earlier pledge. Given the accelerating job losses, hitting that target would barely recover the jobs that have disappeared over the last year.
As part of Friday’s announcement, the government revised higher its estimates of jobs lost in September and October. Instead of 524,000 jobs disappearing in those months, 723,000 were lost, or a total of 1.2 million jobs in just three months. In all, jobs have been lost in each of the last 11 months.
“Obama is being deliberately unclear about those 2.5 million jobs,” said Robert Pollin, a University of Massachusetts economist. “He is not going to add 2.5 million on top of recovering the 1.9 million that have been lost so far this year.”
Despite the deterioration of the labor market, Democrats in Congress and a lame-duck president remain in a standoff over rescue measures.
At its core, the stalemate between the Republicans and the Democrats springs from fundamentally different views about the nature of the crisis and the role of government in resolving it. The White House contends that it has rightly focused on the credit and housing markets, while the Democrats see economic problems that can be resolved only through broader intervention.
New efforts to adopt a broad economic package are likely to wait until the new president takes office and Democrats have bigger majorities in Congress. That delay poses the possibility of a deeper recession, according to some experts.
President Bush, appearing in front of cameras on Friday morning at the White House, said he was “concerned about our workers who have lost jobs.” But he offered no hint of softening his opposition to either a stimulus package or a bailout of the automobile industry, saying that the measures already put in place by the Treasury Department and the Federal Reserve to ease credit problems would take time to work.
Shortly after his appearance, a White House spokesman, Scott Stanzel, dashed any expectation of a change in policy when he said that officials expected a stimulus package would “happen in the next administration.”
Support is building for a significant stimulus package as the economy slips into a deep recession. Most forecasters expect the gross domestic product to contract in the current fourth quarter at an annual rate of 4 or 5 percent, and continue to contract through most of next year, shrinking by 2 percent for all of 2009 — a contraction that has occurred only once since World War II: in 1982, a year of severe recession.
“If there was any doubt that a very large fiscal stimulus is required, then the numbers we have been getting recently should dispel that doubt,” said Jan Hatzius, chief domestic economist for Goldman Sachs. To offset the private sector retrenchment, he added, “we will need a stimulus package of $600 billion at an annual rate, or $1.2 trillion over two years.”
Economists and policy makers increasingly share his estimate of what it will take to revive America’s $14 trillion economy, with Democratic leaders talking recently about a stimulus package of $400 billion or more.
jain_rohitk
December 8th, 2008, 01:21 PM
This is really very hot topic. once you know about all the factor whic affects market liquidity, you will really feel interesting.
jain_rohitk
December 8th, 2008, 01:21 PM
This is really very hot topic. once you know about all the factor whic affects market liquidity, you will really feel interesting.
zadd00
December 8th, 2008, 10:54 PM
mkt will be volatile fr the time being , one can look agn at the reALTY SECTOR
khaitansaket
December 13th, 2008, 02:59 AM
the economic stimulus govt is cming up is going to definetly boast the sensex in the coming days
vBulletin® v3.7.0, Copyright ©2000-2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Search Engine Optimization by
vBSEO 3.2.0