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Although Money Times recommendation have outperformed other media, stock brokers and research houses, the brief recommendations under Money Times Talk (MTT) cannot display ‘BUY’, ‘SELL’ or ‘HOLD’ recommendations. Readers should, therefore, exercise their own judgement and evaluate the future prospects of the stock given its past performance, industry prospects in the backdrop of a growing economy and in consultation with their investment adviser.
- RBI announces major liquidity measures: Rs. 2 lakh cr OMO (bond purchases) and a $10 bn rupee swap for three years. This will inject liquidity, lower bond yields, and stabilise the rupee. Comfortable liquidity, softer yields, and a stable exchange rate are positive for growth and investments.
- US markets heading into 2026: Falling inflation, rising GDP, improving employment, and easing financial conditions under the Fed. With mid-term elections ahead, policy stability is likely. If this plays out, S&P 500 could move beyond 8,000 before elections. Early signs of Trump 2.0 optimism are visible—2026 will be key.
- Wealth creation truth: 20% strategy, 80% psychology. Even the best plans fail without self-belief. Many capable people underperform because they fear their own potential. The biggest enemy isn’t the market—it’s your mindset.
- Rules for a profitable trading journey: a) Cut losses fast – Never let a small loss become a big one. Capital protection is survival. b) Ride winners – Let profitable trades run; major gains come from a few strong trends, not frequent booking. c) Keep bets small – Risk only 1–2% per trade to stay emotionally stable and in the game long term. d) Follow rules consistently – Discipline and process matter more than predictions or opinions. e) Control emotions – Fear cuts winners short, greed holds losers too long. Stay objective. f) Break rules rarely – Only with experience, strong data, and exceptional market conditions.
- Avoiding your portfolio because markets are down is a red flag. It reflects weak conviction and avoidance of reality. Review your portfolio periodically and take corrective action. Retain fundamentally strong stocks and exit weak ones. While adding new stocks, focus on financial strength, management quality, and future visibility. Conviction comes from clarity, not ignorance. Seek professional advice if needed.
