Reddit Posts
Ripple's ODL and XRP Powering Japan's SBI Remittance Revolution in Asia
Ripple's ODL and XRP Powering Japan's SBI Remittance Revolution in Asia
SBI Joins Forces with XDC Network to Boost Expansion in Japan's Financial Sector
Now we can see why this Mr. Chadha of BoB is willing to help Adani at any cost. Did you? Ok, let me explain, Before joining BoB, he was the MD and CEO of SBI Capital Markets Ltd.(investment banking arm of SBI). So it looks like the man already helped Adani when he was in SBI. Any thought?
Here's a fun read about the Adani fiasco and all his loans. With Credit Suisse, Barclays and the State Bank of India as guest characters.
Here's a fun read about the Adani fiasco and all his loans. With Credit Suisse, Barclays and the State Bank of India as guest characters.
Excititng News as Skye Bioscience reaches agreement with Novotech
Nifty Bank index declined 1 percent led by the Bandhan Bank, SBI, IDFC First Bank
$GASE Letter of Intent confirmed with Sanatio Bioscience
Titan, Asian Paints among stocks to hit 52-week high, Paytm, Policybazaar hit fresh lows
Stocks that moved the most on January 5 : Gainers & Losers
Sao Chico Exploration Demonstrates Further Growth Potential
What are your thoughts on Etoro?
Investors Cheer After RBI Clarifies Crypto Trading Isn’t Banned
QTMM clear to close Pasaca Capital 51% buyout and becoming SEC compliant now that KC lawsuit is behind them
Investing in future is best.
Mentions
You don't invest your emergency money in stock market. Period. Any money that you would require in the next 3 years, stay away from stock market Now coming to your question about what happens when there is a crash, I had 2 different reactions and results in 2008 and 2020 2008 - Nifty dropped to 2900 from about 4400 levels. Blood rush and I felt this is the opportunity of the millenium and I am becoming a rich man. I liquidate everything that I could and started buying NIFTY FUTURES (wanted to become rich and such opportunity may not come again). kept buying at every dip....2600....2400...2200...then my broker cut all my positions as I was not able to bring in the required margins.....Net loss 24 lacs..lost the shirt off my back. whatever I had made in the 2000 boom...my stock options....all gone 2020 - Market started dipping from 11500 cracked some of my PUT sell positions, took SL. Figured that the market looks extremely bearish and IV's went thru the roof....SOLD CALL's and bought some PUTs....when NIfty hit 7700, the calls started thinning and Puts started to grow....switched sides, shorted PUTS and bought some calls (very few as the premiums were very high)..rode all the way to 9800 well...then it was a cat and mouse game..but overall banked a decent sum in those 4 months in 2020....added some positions to my banking portfolio of HDFC, KOTAK, AXIS and SBI overall was good. Moral of the story (TLDR): Opportunities will come, sometimes small sometimes large....Keep you head steady and bite only so much that you can chew.
I think this is *mostly* a thesis for a year ago as market is pricing in increased profits already. BUT - There's some low P/E miners that are being discounted because they used to have high costs relative to others or were scaling out. Still a lot of juice to squeeze on them. Example ticker is SBI (TSX) which is trading at less than 7 P/E and in scale out, there's a few others but can't remember them off the top of my head. Those tickers trade both on the gold price *and* on their increasing revenue slope / profitability.
Mike Hoffman, chief executive of the growth advisory consulting firm SBI, said in the past six months he has cut his software-development team by 80% while productivity has surged. “We have someone managing clusters of agents that are doing coding,” he said. “Our AI writes its own Python.” Sounds bullish to me
Mike Hoffman, chief executive of the growth advisory consulting firm SBI, said in the past six months he has cut his software-development team by 80% while productivity has surged. “We have someone managing clusters of agents that are doing coding,” he said. “Our AI writes its own Python.”
India in Vodafone Idea (rescue), SBI/LIC (PSUs) New Zealand in Air New Zealand (majority/strategic) France in EDF (100%), Renault, Air France-KLM, Orange, Airbus (strategic) Germany in Deutsche Telekom & Deutsche Post (via KfW, strategic), Volkswagen (Lower Saxony), Uniper/Lufthansa (rescue stakes) United Kingdom in NatWest (post-crisis sell-down), Rolls-Royce (golden share) And many more examples. Hell, the US already did this with GM and AIG.
Singapore in Singtel, DBS, Singapore Airlines (strategic via Temasek) India in Vodafone Idea (rescue), SBI/LIC (PSUs) New Zealand in Air New Zealand (majority/strategic) France in EDF (100%), Renault, Air France-KLM, Orange, Airbus (strategic) Germany in Deutsche Telekom & Deutsche Post (via KfW, strategic), Volkswagen (Lower Saxony), Uniper/Lufthansa (rescue stakes) United Kingdom in NatWest (post-crisis sell-down), Rolls-Royce (golden share) And many more examples. Hell, the US already did this with GM and AIG.
Japan in NTT (strategic/mandated), TEPCO (rescue/ongoing) Singapore in Singtel, DBS, Singapore Airlines (strategic via Temasek) India in Vodafone Idea (rescue), SBI/LIC (PSUs) New Zealand in Air New Zealand (majority/strategic) France in EDF (100%), Renault, Air France-KLM, Orange, Airbus (strategic) Germany in Deutsche Telekom & Deutsche Post (via KfW, strategic), Volkswagen (Lower Saxony), Uniper/Lufthansa (rescue stakes) United Kingdom in NatWest (post-crisis sell-down), Rolls-Royce (golden share) And many more examples. Hell, the US already did this with GM and AIG.
Most of them, considering examples include Taiwan in TSMC Japan in NTT (strategic/mandated), TEPCO (rescue/ongoing) Singapore in Singtel, DBS, Singapore Airlines (strategic via Temasek) India in Vodafone Idea (rescue), SBI/LIC (PSUs) New Zealand in Air New Zealand (majority/strategic) France in EDF (100%), Renault, Air France-KLM, Orange, Airbus (strategic) Germany in Deutsche Telekom & Deutsche Post (via KfW, strategic), Volkswagen (Lower Saxony), Uniper/Lufthansa (rescue stakes) United Kingdom in NatWest (post-crisis sell-down), Rolls-Royce (golden share) And many more examples. Hell, the US already did this with GM and AIG.
Most of them, considering examples include Taiwan in TSMC Japan in NTT (strategic/mandated), TEPCO (rescue/ongoing) Singapore in Singtel, DBS, Singapore Airlines (strategic via Temasek) India in Vodafone Idea (rescue), SBI/LIC (PSUs) New Zealand in Air New Zealand (majority/strategic) France in EDF (100%), Renault, Air France-KLM, Orange, Airbus (strategic) Germany in Deutsche Telekom & Deutsche Post (via KfW, strategic), Volkswagen (Lower Saxony), Uniper/Lufthansa (rescue stakes) United Kingdom in NatWest (post-crisis sell-down), Rolls-Royce (golden share) And many more examples. Amazing watching you retards think you've discovered something new.
As of the latest available data from March 31, 2025, the following institutions hold significant shares of Ocean Power Technologies, Inc. (OPTT) stock, based on 13F filings and other reports: 1. Vanguard Group Inc. - 6.26 million shares (12.27% of outstanding shares, valued at approximately $3.27 million) 2. BlackRock Inc. - 2.82 million shares (5.53%, valued at approximately $1.47 million) 3. Geode Capital Management, LLC - 1.56 million shares (3.06%, valued at approximately $814,970) 4. UBS Group AG - 929,830 shares (1.82%, valued at approximately $485,744) 5. Susquehanna International Group, LLP - 639,750 shares (1.25%, valued at approximately $334,208) 6. State Street Corporation - 419,880 shares (0.82%, valued at approximately $219,347) 7. Northern Trust Corporation - 313,950 shares (0.62%, valued at approximately $164,010) 8. SBI Securities Co., Ltd. - 289,270 shares (0.57%, valued at approximately $151,113) 9. J.W. Cole Advisors, Inc. - 215,140 shares (0.42%, valued at approximately $112,389) 10. Cambridge Investment Research Advisors Inc. - 198,150 shares (0.39%, valued at approximately $103,513) Additional institutions with smaller holdings include: • Sargent Investment Group, LLC - 528,000 shares (0.362% as of January 27, 2025, valued at approximately $539,000) • Baader Bank Aktiengesellschaft - 100,000 shares (0.058% as of July 10, 2025, valued at approximately $47,000) • Virtu Financial LLC - 61,109 shares (0.036% as of May 12, 2025, valued at approximately $28,000) • Penbrook Management LLC - 31,500 shares (0.022% as of January 23, 2025, valued at approximately $32,000) • LPL Financial LLC - 25,097 shares (0.017% as of February 11, 2025, valued at approximately $26,000) Key Points: • Total Institutional Ownership: Approximately 8.14% to 11.93% of OPTT’s shares are held by institutions, depending on the source and date of the data. • Number of Institutions: Around 50-61 institutions hold OPTT shares, with the variation depending on the reporting period and source. • Major Mutual Fund Holders: • Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund: 3.65 million shares (7.15%) • Vanguard Extended Market Index Fund: 2.57 million shares (5.05%) • Fidelity Extended Market Index Fund: 800,720 shares (1.57%) • Fidelity Total Market Index Fund: 278,960 shares (0.55%) • Fidelity Series Total Market Index Fund: 234,060 shares (0.46%) • Schwab Total Stock Market Index Fund: 50,000 shares (0.10%) Notes: • The data reflects holdings as of March 31, 2025, unless otherwise specified, and is sourced from 13F filings reported to the SEC. • Share prices and valuations fluctuate; for instance, the share price was $0.53 on August 8, 2025, and $0.40 on April 17, 2025, affecting the reported value of holdings. • Institutional ownership has increased recently, with a total of 14.88 million shares held by 57 institutions as of August 8, 2025, up by 4.16 million shares (38.81%) from the previous quarter. • Some institutions, like Sargent Investment Group and Baader Bank, significantly increased their stakes, while others, like Virtu Financial and XTX Topco Ltd., reduced their positions in recent quarters. For the most current and detailed institutional ownership information, you can check sources like Nasdaq.com, Yahoo Finance, or MarketBeat.com, which provide updated 13F filings and shareholder data.
As of the latest available data from March 31, 2025, the following institutions hold significant shares of Ocean Power Technologies, Inc. (OPTT) stock, based on 13F filings and other reports: 1. Vanguard Group Inc. - 6.26 million shares (12.27% of outstanding shares, valued at approximately $3.27 million) 2. BlackRock Inc. - 2.82 million shares (5.53%, valued at approximately $1.47 million) 3. Geode Capital Management, LLC - 1.56 million shares (3.06%, valued at approximately $814,970) 4. UBS Group AG - 929,830 shares (1.82%, valued at approximately $485,744) 5. Susquehanna International Group, LLP - 639,750 shares (1.25%, valued at approximately $334,208) 6. State Street Corporation - 419,880 shares (0.82%, valued at approximately $219,347) 7. Northern Trust Corporation - 313,950 shares (0.62%, valued at approximately $164,010) 8. SBI Securities Co., Ltd. - 289,270 shares (0.57%, valued at approximately $151,113) 9. J.W. Cole Advisors, Inc. - 215,140 shares (0.42%, valued at approximately $112,389) 10. Cambridge Investment Research Advisors Inc. - 198,150 shares (0.39%, valued at approximately $103,513) Additional institutions with smaller holdings include: • Sargent Investment Group, LLC - 528,000 shares (0.362% as of January 27, 2025, valued at approximately $539,000) • Baader Bank Aktiengesellschaft - 100,000 shares (0.058% as of July 10, 2025, valued at approximately $47,000) • Virtu Financial LLC - 61,109 shares (0.036% as of May 12, 2025, valued at approximately $28,000) • Penbrook Management LLC - 31,500 shares (0.022% as of January 23, 2025, valued at approximately $32,000) • LPL Financial LLC - 25,097 shares (0.017% as of February 11, 2025, valued at approximately $26,000) Key Points: • Total Institutional Ownership: Approximately 8.14% to 11.93% of OPTT’s shares are held by institutions, depending on the source and date of the data. • Number of Institutions: Around 50-61 institutions hold OPTT shares, with the variation depending on the reporting period and source. • Major Mutual Fund Holders: • Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund: 3.65 million shares (7.15%) • Vanguard Extended Market Index Fund: 2.57 million shares (5.05%) • Fidelity Extended Market Index Fund: 800,720 shares (1.57%) • Fidelity Total Market Index Fund: 278,960 shares (0.55%) • Fidelity Series Total Market Index Fund: 234,060 shares (0.46%) • Schwab Total Stock Market Index Fund: 50,000 shares (0.10%) Notes: • The data reflects holdings as of March 31, 2025, unless otherwise specified, and is sourced from 13F filings reported to the SEC. • Share prices and valuations fluctuate; for instance, the share price was $0.53 on August 8, 2025, and $0.40 on April 17, 2025, affecting the reported value of holdings. • Institutional ownership has increased recently, with a total of 14.88 million shares held by 57 institutions as of August 8, 2025, up by 4.16 million shares (38.81%) from the previous quarter. • Some institutions, like Sargent Investment Group and Baader Bank, significantly increased their stakes, while others, like Virtu Financial and XTX Topco Ltd., reduced their positions in recent quarters. For the most current and detailed institutional ownership information, you can check sources like Nasdaq.com, Yahoo Finance, or MarketBeat.com, which provide updated 13F filings and shareholder data.
I’ve made a Google Sheet called Stock Investment Study Material to track my mutual fund SIPs. It auto-fetches live NAVs, calculates returns, and shows when to consider exiting based on performance. To use it: 1. Enter your SIP amount next to Enter your budget here 2. Put your SIP start date in the Started on row 3. In the Mutual Fund Units Tracker, manually log the units received for each SIP date I’ve added a few funds I personally track like DSP Credit Risk, Navi Nifty Next 50, SBI Healthcare, Axis Midcap, etc., along with short notes on why I picked them. It’s a basic version for now but helps me stay consistent and clear. You can make a copy, edit it, or improve it your way. I’m open to suggestions if you feel something can be better. Let’s build something that helps more people stay on top of their investments. link to sheet: [**Stock Investment Study Material**](https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1SVsRJPO9vhFL0YILNFfma8nCaa0aI96z_HOa_4nhnjg/edit?usp=sharing)
Nobody anywhere does or would ever use it as a currency?? What are you living under a rock? Ripple is literally partnered with Bank of America, SBI Holdings, Santander Bank, UAE Exchange, Saudi British Bank, American Express, PNC, just to name a FEW partnerships with Banks and Financial Institutions all for the purpose of improving liquidity issues and cross border payments efficiency. Not to mention Ripple’s role in the Federal Reserve’s Faster Payments task force and participating in FedNow trials. They’re literally in the process of obtaining a Federal Reserve Master Account. To say no one actually uses or would ever use XRP, and crypto as a whole, is a complete understatement my brother in Christ.
Man, where should I begin…. I’ll first start by saying I agree with everyone here and believe you should definitely have a 3-6 month emergency fund set up first, and I’d even add on to that and say that if you have any debt, pay it off and stay away from debt. Now, Xrp… If you don’t know much about it, it’s a digital currency created by a company called Ripple Labs. Although unlike most other cryptocurrencies I’m sure you’ve heard of, XRP was designed with a very specific purpose and goal which is to move money across borders quickly and cheap. ESPECIALLY between banks and financial institutions. The world currently experiences several problems when sending money internationally such as high fees, delayed settlements, through a more complex messaging system (SWIFT). It’s ancient tech. Just scratching the surface here. XRP fixes this, it was created to do so. Banks and institutions could send money and settle transactions internationally within seconds and with minimal fees. We can already see a large network of global financial entities and governments partnering with Ripple. Bank of America, SBI Holdings, Santander Bank, UAE Exchange, Saudi British Bank, American Express, PNC, just to name a FEW of its partners. Shall I mention that Ripple has collaborated with the Federal Reserve as they were selected to join the Fed’s Faster Payments Task Force back in 2017. Ripple is now attempting to secure a Federal Reserve Master Account. I could get into more detail about what all of this means, but I’m at work and trying to move quickly through this lol let me stop and say DYOR, don’t trust me you don’t know who I am, or anyone else here. DYOR. Anyway, my favorite part is when you start to look at the relationship between Ripple Board members and US Gov & Regulatory bodies. Gregg Kidd was a former Senior Analyst at the federal reserve payments department, he is now a Chief Risk Officer for Ripple. Rosie Rios was the 43rd US Treasurer under Obama, now a part of the board of directors for Ripple. Michael Barr, ex former Ripple Advisor who went on to become an Assistant secretary for financial institutions at the us department of the treasury. Lauren Belive, former White House official, now the Head of US Public Policy and Government relations for Ripple. There’s more but you get the idea. The biggest hurdle Ripple is currently facing (which is all bs anyway) is its current lawsuit with the SEC. Which I’ve been following for years and won’t get too much into because I’d be here typing for hours. It’s all smoke and mirrors and bs, Ripple has pretty much already won the lawsuit and they’re now just dotting their “I”s and crossing their Ts. But because of this lawsuit xrp has struggled being adopted on the scale which it was designed to do and is ready to do so. I can only imagine what’ll happen when the lawsuit is over. Gotta wrap this up and get back to work, like I said DYOR. Don’t take my word for it, look into the claims I’ve made. Connect the dots, and it’ll click. Goodluck bb.
Investing is hard and can be risky. It is better to think about education loan. I also took an education loan from SBI with wemakescholars help. Speak with them, they get loan for the lowest interest rated possible. if you are sure that you can get a good job after your studies then you can go for loan. There tax benefits in the loan as well. Once you get a job it is easy pay it back.
If its Eagles vs Chiefs this year: Super Bowl Indicator, or SBI, which is based on this principle: If the NFC team, in this case, the Philadelphia Eagles, defeats the AFC team, the Kansas City Chiefs, the stock market will finish higher in the upcoming year. If the AFC team wins, we can expect a decline for the coming year. Eagles win SB = Green Year Chiefs win SB= Red year
So we can press charges against you if we make a significant investment and it goes negative/red? Because this post sure is worded like it’s a guarantee, which I hope you know, is illegal to do. You also continently didn’t tell the group that $MNTS already had its news last week. SBI Securities 13G: https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1851815/000185181524000007/xslSCHEDULE_13G_X01/primary_doc.xml Ghiocela Prod Com SRL 13G: https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/2040803/000204080324000001/xslSCHEDULE_13G_X01/primary_doc.xml
Nope $HOLO’s expected to hold/drop the till Monday-Tuesday as $MLGO’s expecting a breakout news by either tomorrow or by Monday. That’s also why SBI’s play’s currently at .35/share as it’s going to jump
Masaya Otsuka & Masato Takamura ( SBI Securities Co., Ltd.) NO connection other than the Country of Japan.
Delete this comment bro. The SBI might come after you.
Need help on investment through SIPs. Hi, I want to earn 30 lakhs in next 5 years through SIPs. MY current allocation is below, please suggest any changes(Already started fromay, 2025 month on monthly basis): 1. Kotak Multi cap fund: 500 rupees 2.Bandhan small cap fund: 2000 rupees 3.Motilal oswal Nasdaq 100 for scheme: 3000 rupees 4.Icici prudential equity and debt fund: 3000 rupees 5.Parag Parikh flexi cap fund: 5000 rupees 6.Quant small cap fund: 5000 rupees monthly 7.SBI psu fund: 1000 rupees 8. SBI contra fund: 1000 rupees. Kindly review and share your thoughts for any edit in the funds and amount to meet my Target. I appreciate your time and reply. Best, WhenIwasaking
Need help on investment through SIPs. Hi, I want to earn 30 lakhs in next 5 years through SIPs. MY current allocation is below, please suggest any changes(Already started fromay, 2025 month on monthly basis): 1. Kotak Multi cap fund: 500 rupees 2.Bandhan small cap fund: 2000 rupees 3.Motilal oswal Nasdaq 100 for scheme: 3000 rupees 4.Icici prudential equity and debt fund: 3000 rupees 5.Parag Parikh flexi cap fund: 5000 rupees 6.Quant small cap fund: 5000 rupees monthly 7.SBI psu fund: 1000 rupees 8. SBI contra fund: 1000 rupees. Kindly review and share your thoughts for any edit in the funds and amount to meet my Target. I appreciate your time and reply. Best, WhenIwasaking
My first investment. Please give me advice. Hello everyone. I(20M) decided to learn about investing and finance. I am still a noob when it comes to all this so please bear with me. So, using Groww app, I invested 100Rs as SIP to JM Flexicap Fund Direct Plan Growth. I know it is a very small amount but I don't know much about these stuff. The interest rates were good(the return calculator showed 20.18%)and I plan to keep this for 3 years(I think, so monthly 100Rs). I bought it today so will be etting the units in 3-4 days. I am a little clueless about bank charges. I am with SBI. What charges would be there? Will that be too much? Is this investment okay? It did tell me high risk but with 100Rs I feel kinda safe I guess. I am still a student who gets 2000 to 3000Rs as an allowance. I am very interested in low cost index funds. But I didn't get any options on the Groww app for some reason? I have heard of Groww app being bad? Is it really though? I want to learn about the field of investing. I am currently thinking of taking udemy course on personal finance for getting a good financial knowledge. Again, any advice or suggestion will be highly appreciated.
If you want to invest for very long term then go for Small cap mutual funds from SBI AXIS KOTAK AND NIPPON. All the above give roughly 18-20% yearly, which means your money is doubled in around 4-5 years.
Market cap of SBI is 70Billion USD https://preview.redd.it/zie6ybdkshza1.jpeg?width=1080&format=pjpg&auto=webp&v=enabled&s=f37e622497a72407bd9ea9ba278e908eab328cf9
I am a bot. You submitted a picture of a banned ticker, SBI. The market cap of SBI is **110,123,700** This check will fire if you included unnecessary pictures that have bad keywords/phrases. Repost with the useless pictures omitted if you did that.
I am a bot. You submitted a picture of a banned ticker, SBI. The market cap of SBI is **109,842,100** This check will fire if you included unnecessary pictures that have bad keywords/phrases. Repost with the useless pictures omitted if you did that.
Just learn from SBI. Some fools never learn though....
They did. This is partly because the government is scared if what may happen to SBI values and partly because the union is pressuring them saying thousands of jobs would be lost if an UBS purchase goes through. As a tax payer UBS was asking for 6 billion francs after the purchase, to help absorbing and sorting out whatever CS needs to function inside of it - but I'd still prefer that over my government buying CS instead.
The same bank recently wrote on article on why the Indian central bank SBI should be a sell why it is doing extraordinarily is now fighting for its life. Karma.
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Theres no way the government and regulatory authorities didn't know about his illegal practices of inflation of stock price. Also LIC and SBI together have an exposure of around 60000 thousand crores (~ 7.5 billion USD) to the Adani group. Remember this is all indirectly tax payer money. For those confused why a life insurance company is using so much funds to essentially trade in stocks, remember our pension and Insurance requirements are increasing everyday. However lic has really been transformed into the governments stockbroker essentially. It's less of a real life insurance company and more of a holding company.
The eventual bail out for SBI and LiC after he loses all of it will come out of taxpayers pocket.
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Nah only 6% of Adani's loans come from PSUs like LIC and SBI, 40% is from bonds. If shit really hits the fan for Adani, they have $13 Billion worth tangible assets that can be seized to cop out any losses
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As a citizen and taxpayer you own the public sector banks. Every rupee that SBI gives away to Adani for free it is coming out of your tax money.
I am not expecting no impact either. Their mutual fund have 1% or less. They avoided, even if 1000% rise in 2 years. Who are getting fucked. SBI and LIC. I don't care. Go privatised it.
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Gotta laugh they fkd him nicely just as he was raising funds  “At the end of the first day of the share sale, investors, mostly retail, had bid for around 470,160 shares in the Adani Enterprises share sale, compared with 45.5 million on offer, according to Indian stock exchange data. The share sale is being managed by Jefferies, India's SBI Capital Markets, and ICICI Securities among others. The firm has set a floor price of 3,112 rupees ($38.22) a share and a cap of 3,276 rupees. But on Friday the stock ended at 2,761.45 rupees - well below the lower end of the range.” [https://www.reuters.com/business/indias-adani-kicks-off-245-bln-share-sale-while-under-short-seller-attack-2023-01-27/](https://www.reuters.com/business/indias-adani-kicks-off-245-bln-share-sale-while-under-short-seller-attack-2023-01-27/)
He's not. Here's my 10 Paisa of DD: FPO of 2.4 bn usd will definitely help the D/E to some extent. Government run institutions like LIC and SBI will help buy up the follow-on public Offering. As long as he delivers the goods Modi government will support him. Also, there seems to be clear strategy on debt diversification and alignment of forex debt with nature of business. Ihave started buying Adani stocks on dips starting today as he isn’t going down for atleast 6 more years …1 year of current govt and 5 years of next government (which is going to be same guys).
This what half knowledge youtuber called akshat has been peddling. If banks like SBI don't sell them then SBI stocks get sold. If insurance corp like LIC doesn't sell them then LIC stocks get sold. Adani share prices can be near high doesn't mean those stocks which have exposure in adani are safe.
If ur talking seriously Im not going puts on Adani cause iv is too high rn. Maybe I will look into SBI and other banks that have lended them money. Maybe Lic too as they have a major stake in the adani group 
They are ripping off the whole country, the day modi won election he used adani's private jet to travel to Delhi. Almost all the ports and airports are owned by Adani. Grain refineries and silos that govt. Uses is owned by Adani. They made the govt. Bank (SBI) to give a billion dollar loan to adani in order to run a project to extract coal from a depleted mine in Australia. In 2016, govt. passed a bill which made all the donations to party as anonymous. Modi govt. are creating two chunbeyols in India - adani and Ambani. They gave a major military contract to Anil Ambani who had no relation or experience related to the military field. Anil Ambani was into a major debt on the brink of bankruptcy. Modi govt. uses these anonymous bonds(black money) to run their election campaigns and buy out the ministers of ruling party in different states. And also perform raid from IT dept. , CBI( Indian FBI equivalent) and ED (drugs related force) on the ministers of the opposing party. Modi has become the equivalent of second coming of Jesus to the brainwashed masses although they have been constantly pushing the country in a downward spiral. Unless Modi govt. goes away, nothing will happen to the Adani's and Ambani's.
LIC "invested" so that he can have a cushion to dump his manipulated stocks, it's all coordinated. Same for SBI, gave him debt because of political pressures.
SBI is the largest bank in india, maybe its another ticker for the US?
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Skye Bioscience Receives FDA Authorization of Investigational New Drug Application for SBI-100 OE
"The biggest factor behind Tesla's profit growth is sales volume, then prices hikes and a rise in self-driving software sales," said Koji Endo at SBI Securities. Additionally the single press body design "lowers quality" insofar as major crashes more often result in total, but otherwise the cars outshine most vehicles in safety. https://www.motorbiscuit.com/tesla-model-3-safety-scores-might-surprise-you/ You're just trying to find something to dislike in the company, which is fine, not everyone is going to like Tesla. I personally loathe Musk, but Tesla is profitable for a damn good reason
Imagine what could happen if TikTok were actually banned in a Taiwan/China scenario. Snap/Meta would benefit immensely from TikTok being removed from the App Store. At the same time, you know they have to be feeling the ad pinch as well.. Considering what the administration has done regarding semis in the last two weeks, I don’t think it’s beyond reasonable possibility to think that Snap is at a very attractive price point if something like this were to materialize. Even now at least than 4x sales with a growing mDAU base and continued commitment to repurchase to counterbalance SBI and moving towards sustainable FCF, there’s probably some compelling arguments that will be made for buying in here. Market may sell off in the morning, but Advance/Decline was in the process of trying to push up against some key levels—if Snap turns around even just a little from the PM losses, the Snap/Market selloff pattern from the last several quarters could break. We’ll see.
Best banks : HDFC, Kotak, ICICI. Govt operated bank - SBI Insurance - HDFC life Petrochemical, clothing, e-retail & telecom - Reliance industries. Consumer products - tata consumer products & Hindustan Unilever. Paint : Asian paint. Please note, personally I feel India is overvalued as of now. My prediction is that once US, UK fall into recession and plunge into bear market and a quarter later is when India will get impacted. This is the window of opportunity I'm looking at.
Yes, India is an amazing country to invest in going forward. True democracy, young hard working population. Reliance industries, SBI, HDFC, Kotak bank, ICICI, axis, tata consumer products, Hindustan univeler, Asian paints, are my all time favorite stocks. Just that a foreign investor needs to be careful about government control when it comes to certain industries. Oil & gas, coal and power are extremely regulated. Banks like SBI, Indian bank, Canara bank, bank of India ..etc etc . All are fully owned by govt. Auto sector has boat loads of debt. Steel is also cyclical. I believe we are at the peak. HDFC life insurance and asset management business is also an amazing investment. Personally I feel India is overvalued now. India will also face turbulent times very soon if US, China & Europe plunge into recession. Definitely India will bounce back, credits go to none other than the man with a mission - 🦁MODI Ji That is the window of opportunity I'm looking at
>STATE BANK OF INDIA RESTRICTS TRADE SETTLEMENTS IN DOLLAR, OTHER FOREIGN CURRENCIES WITH BANGLADESH: SOURCES \>SBI SAYS TRADE SETTLEMENT ONLY ALLOWED IN RUPEE OR TAKA: SOURCES ^\*Walter ^Bloomberg ^[@DeItaone](http://twitter.com/DeItaone) ^at ^2022-09-19 ^08:19:44 ^EDT-0400
The TSE won’t be switching to an NFT system SBI and SMFG are just making it to compete with the NYSE and the TSE. And they aren’t taking themselves off of the TSE or the NYSE so that should tell you something.
I am a bot from /r/wallstreetbets. You submitted one or more banned tickers: SBI. Message /u/zjz if they're above 1.5 billion-ish market cap and not related to crypto/pennies/OTC.
Banks make money on the sprea between medium term interest rates and short term interests rates. Older loans will have been issued at higher interest rates. New loans are made at about 0.5%. While mufg and almost all Japanese banks pay zero or near zero percent interest, you still have only 0.5% of profit. As old loans are paid off and new loans issued the overall profit of the loan balance decreases. Bonus fun fact: total value of home loans is decreasing. Japanese banks cannot find home buyers quicker than old home mortgages are being repaid. Thus Japanese banks core problem is a narrow interest rate spread and top few people wanting loans. Japan is thus a rich country in a way which makes it look poor. People own their own homes without debt. Banks have an excess of deposits. Wages are low, but costs are even lower. Personally while I own a bit of mufg, I own a lot of SBI bank stock. Sbi being a net bank with a lower cost structure and thus out competing the legacy banks. Note sbi is also the name of a large Indian bank, so searching in Japanese is required to find the correct bank.
I am a bot from /r/wallstreetbets. You submitted one or more banned tickers: BNGO BFLY AAIC SBI. Message /u/zjz if they're above 1.5 billion-ish market cap and not related to crypto/pennies/OTC.
Did anyone read till the end? It says : " Source:Interim Report of Country Garden (30.06.2021) From Nishant Maheshwari and Vishal Vora In case you are interested in making a contribution to our writing, please do so in the following account: Account Number: 00000037522669317 Name: Rashi Maheshwari IFSC Code: SBIN0030115Name of Bank: SBI India,YN Road Branch Indore-India " . Stick to India please as your "*assessments*" regarding China will ALWAYS be against it. The fact that the Chinese are not fully onboard with the Russians regarding US treasuries means that they'll stay solvent and relevant way easily than the Russians.
>INDIA'S STATE BANK OF INDIA (SBI) HAS STOPPED PROCESSING TRANSACTIONS INVOLVING SANCTIONED RUSSIAN ENTITIES -SOURCES ^\*Walter ^Bloomberg ^[@DeItaone](http://twitter.com/DeItaone) ^at ^2022-02-28 ^12:50:39 ^EST-0500
How about Japanese bank. Shinsei bank, will they be converted to SBI holdings stock? I sure as heck hope so. BBVA is another bet for me with crypto implications I anticipate.
SP00 Sector SPDRS XLK TECHNOLOGY ETF +2.65% XLV SBI HEALTHCARE ETF +2.05% XLU SBI INT-UTILS ETF +1.64% SPY SPDR S&P500 +1.56% XLRE RL EST SEL SEC ETF +1.48% XLY SBI CONS DISCR ETF +1.27% XLP SBI CONS STPLS ETF +1.01% XLC COMMUNICATION ETF +1.05% XLI SBI INT-INDS ETF +0.87% XLF FINANCIAL ETF +0.28% XLB SBI MATERIALS ETF +0.22% XLE ENERGY ETF -0.49%
Read the WIKI and FAQ in r/dividends. Then look at the following books: [http://www.mhinvest.com/files/pdf/SBI\_Single\_Best\_Investment\_Miller.pdf](http://www.mhinvest.com/files/pdf/SBI_Single_Best_Investment_Miller.pdf) Stocks for the Long Run, and The Future For Investors, both by Jeremy Siegel; Dividends Still Don't Lie, by Kelley Wright, and The Ultimate Dividend Playbook, by Josh Peters. (for the process, not recommendations for actual stocks to buy today) Also read the three articles about "Chowder" posted here for ideas on how to select and manage such a portfolio: [https://dgiforthediy.com/resources/](https://dgiforthediy.com/resources/) He has 2 blogs and some articles posted on Seeking Alpha, one tracking a "Young Folk's" portfolio and the other an "Old Folks." He stopped updating them two months ago when Seeking Alpha started removing moderation tools from bloggers, but he does still comment there in other dividend-related blogs. Also note that while SA is locking down articles now, blog posts are (supposed to be) still freely accessible. There are also good articles here, particularly by David Van Knapp and Mike Nadel: [https://dailytradealert.com/](https://dailytradealert.com/) and [https://dividendsandincome.com/](https://dividendsandincome.com/) One of the best tools for researching dividend-paying stocks is the U.S. Dividend Champion spreadsheet posted here (top of the left column): [https://www.dripinvesting.org/Tools/Tools.asp](https://www.dripinvesting.org/Tools/Tools.asp) Note that the spreadsheet posted currently posted here is maintained by Dividend Radar ([https://www.portfolio-insight.com/dividend-radar](https://www.portfolio-insight.com/dividend-radar)) and is in a different form than the earlier David Fish version, which is still available here as the Dividend Champions [https://www.widemoatresearch.com/idiv-products/](https://www.widemoatresearch.com/idiv-products/) While using it in your due diligence to select what companies to partner with don't forget parameters like financial strength (credit rating) of BBB+ or better. For even more confidence, only look at those that have increased their dividends for over 12 years, which covers the last long recession. Look for credit ratings here: [http://finra-markets.morningstar.com/BondCenter/Default.jsp](http://finra-markets.morningstar.com/BondCenter/Default.jsp)
Read the WIKI and FAQ in r/dividends. Then look at the following books: [http://www.mhinvest.com/files/pdf/SBI\_Single\_Best\_Investment\_Miller.pdf](http://www.mhinvest.com/files/pdf/SBI_Single_Best_Investment_Miller.pdf) Stocks for the Long Run, and The Future For Investors, both by Jeremy Siegel; Dividends Still Don't Lie, by Kelley Wright, and The Ultimate Dividend Playbook, by Josh Peters. (for the process, not recommendations for actual stocks to buy today) Also read the three articles about "Chowder" posted here for ideas on how to select and manage such a portfolio: [https://dgiforthediy.com/resources/](https://dgiforthediy.com/resources/) He has 2 blogs and some articles posted on Seeking Alpha, one tracking a "Young Folk's" portfolio and the other an "Old Folks." He stopped updating them last month when Seeking Alpha started removing moderation tools from bloggers, but he does still comment there in other dividend-related blogs. Also note that while SA is locking down articles now, blog posts are (supposed to be) still freely accessible. There are also good articles here, particularly by David Van Knapp and Mike Nadel: [https://dailytradealert.com/](https://dailytradealert.com/) and [https://dividendsandincome.com/](https://dividendsandincome.com/) One of the best tools for researching dividend-paying stocks is the U.S. Dividend Champion spreadsheet posted here (top of the left column): [https://www.dripinvesting.org/Tools/Tools.asp](https://www.dripinvesting.org/Tools/Tools.asp) While using it in your due diligence to select what companies to partner with don't forget parameters like financial strength (credit rating) of BBB+ or better. For even more confidence, only look at those that have increased their dividends for over 12 years, which covers the last long recession. Look for credit ratings here: [http://finra-markets.morningstar.com/BondCenter/Default.jsp](http://finra-markets.morningstar.com/BondCenter/Default.jsp)
I am a bot from /r/wallstreetbets. You submitted one or more banned tickers: SBI. Message /u/zjz if they're above 1.5 billion-ish market cap and not related to crypto/pennies/OTC/SPACs.
Jeff bezos laughing https://youtu.be/bImOwJ-WMds Jeff Bezos is Dr Evil https://youtu.be/SBI295pTK4w Austin powers Looks like a enormous Jeff Bezos https://youtu.be/Dy7rCpUJ7Dw Jeff Bezos you are a Astronaut now Jeff Bezos tuns into Dr Evil https://youtu.be/ZDoPUrUAclU animated bo burnhams bezos song 4k 60fps https://youtu.be/O4\_ScDq0b24 Jeff Bezos Hunts mark zuckerberg , warren buffett , Bill Gates 4K 60FPS -Dan Henig Danger Snow https://youtu.be/TLtakIRwdbU Bo Burnham When 4000 calls start printing Jeffrey Jeffrey Bezos 🎵 https://youtu.be/ONV0Ya7wm4M
Go to r/Dividends and read their WIKI and FAQ. Then look at the following books: [http://www.mhinvest.com/files/pdf/SBI\_Single\_Best\_Investment\_Miller.pdf](http://www.mhinvest.com/files/pdf/SBI_Single_Best_Investment_Miller.pdf) Stocks for the Long Run, and The Future For Investors, both by Jeremy Siegel; Dividends Still Don't Lie, by Kelley Wright, and The Ultimate Dividend Playbook, by Josh Peters. (for the process, not recommendations for actual stocks to buy today) Also read the three articles about "Chowder" posted here for ideas on how to select and manage such a portfolio: [https://dgiforthediy.com/resources/He](https://dgiforthediy.com/resources/He) has 2 blogs and some articles posted on Seeking Alpha, one tracking a "Young Folk's" portfolio and the other an "Old Folks." He stopped updating them last month when Seeking Alpha started removing moderation tools from bloggers, but he does still comment there in other dividend-related blogs. Also note that while SA is locking down articles now, blog posts are (supposed to be) still freely accessible. There are also good articles here, particularly by David Van Knapp and Mike Nadel: [https://dailytradealert.com/](https://dailytradealert.com/) and [https://dividendsandincome.com/](https://dividendsandincome.com/) One of the best tools for researching dividend-paying stocks is the U.S. vidend Champion spreadsheet posted here (top of the left column): [https://www.dripinvesting.org/Tools/Tools.asp](https://www.dripinvesting.org/Tools/Tools.asp) While using it in your due diligence to select what companies to partner with don't forget parameters like financial strength (credit rating) of BBB+ or better. For even more confidence, only look at those that have increased their dividends for over 12 years, which covers the last long recession. Look for credit ratings here: [http://finra-markets.morningstar.com/BondCenter/Default.jsp](http://finra-markets.morningstar.com/BondCenter/Default.jsp)
For dividend investing read the following books: http://www.mhinvest.com/files/pdf/SBI_Single_Best_Investment_Miller.pdf Stocks for the Long Run, and The Future For Investors, both by Jeremy Siegel; Dividends Still Don't Lie, by Kelley Wright, and The Ultimate Dividend Playbook, by Josh Peters. (for the process, not recommendations for actual stocks to buy today) Also read the three articles about "Chowder" posted here for ideas on how to select and manage such a portfolio: https://dgiforthediy.com/resources/He has 2 blogs and some articles posted on Seeking Alpha, one tracking a "Young Folk's" portfolio and the other an "Old Folks." He stopped updating them last month when Seeking Alpha started removing moderation tools from bloggers, but he does still comment there in other dividend-related blogs. Also note that while SA is locking down articles now, blog posts are (supposed to be) still freely accessible. There are also good articles here, particularly by David Van Knapp and Mike Nadel: https://dailytradealert.com/ and https://dividendsandincome.com/ One of the best tools for researching dividend-paying stocks is the U.S. vidend Champion spreadsheet posted here (top of the left column): https://www.dripinvesting.org/Tools/Tools.asp While using it in your due diligence to select what companies to partner with don't forget parameters like financial strength (credit rating) of BBB+ or better. For even more confidence, only look at those that have increased their dividends for over 12 years, which covers the last long recession. Look for credit ratings here: http://finra-markets.morningstar.com/BondCenter/Default.jsp For set-it-and-forget-it ETF investing look to Bogleheads: https://www.bogleheads.org/wiki/Getting_started
Open a NISA account with a main broker like Rakuten/SBI/Monex and consider investing a small amount in a global market index fund like (this)[https://www.rakuten-sec.co.jp/web/fund/smartphone/products/fund/detail/?ID=JP90C000H1T1]. While learning, you can increase your position and decide your future investment strategy.
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In addition to reading the wiki and posts in r/dividends , read the following books: [http://www.mhinvest.com/files/pdf/SBI\_Single\_Best\_Investment\_Miller.pdf](http://www.mhinvest.com/files/pdf/SBI_Single_Best_Investment_Miller.pdf)Stocks for the Long Run, and The Future For Investors, both by Jeremy Siegel; Dividends Still Don't Lie, by Kelley Wright, and The Ultimate Dividend Playbook, by Josh Peters. (for the process, not recommendations for actual stocks to buy today) Also read the three articles about "Chowder" posted here for ideas on how to select and manage such a portfolio: [https://dgiforthediy.com/resources/](https://dgiforthediy.com/resources/)He has 2 blogs and some articles posted on Seeking Alpha, one tracking a "Young Folk's" portfolio and the other an "Old Folks." He stopped updating them last month when Seeking Alpha started removing moderation tools from bloggers, but he does still comment there in other dividend-related blogs. Also note that while SA is locking down articles now, blog posts are (supposed to be) still freely accessible. There are also good articles here, particularly by David Van Knapp and Mike Nadel: [https://dailytradealert.com/](https://dailytradealert.com/) and [https://dividendsandincome.com/](https://dividendsandincome.com/) One of the best tools for researching dividend-paying stocks is the U.S. vidend Champion spreadsheet posted here (top of the left column): [https://www.dripinvesting.org/Tools/Tools.asp](https://www.dripinvesting.org/Tools/Tools.asp) While using it in your due diligence to select what companies to partner with don't forget parameters like financial strength (credit rating) of BBB+ or better. For even more confidence, only look at those that have increased their dividends for over 12 years, which covers the last long recession. Look for credit ratings here: [http://finra-markets.morningstar.com/BondCenter/Default.jsp](http://finra-markets.morningstar.com/BondCenter/Default.jsp)
HDFC and ICICI are safe bets, RBI have listed them along with SBI as "too big to fail" banks.
If I keep hedging it with dollar INR index, can avoid this. But yeah, as you said SBI rates won't be enough, but bharat bonds seems to be lucurative with 7-8% return per annum. That might work. bw, Thanks for this, I fucking forgot about rupee decay xDDDD
But all debt is subject to inflation concerns, and "better payout", implies higher risk. Junk bonds will pay well, but there's a reason the world buys US govt debt instead. It's not just safer, but very good liquidity. An example I read earlier... "SBI Mutual Funds, India's Biggest, Goes Long Cash Amid Rates Volatility" https://www.ndtv.com/business/sbi-mutual-funds-indias-biggest-goes-long-cash-amid-rates-volatility-arising-from-turmoil-in-bonds-2393227 I think many billions are being sold off in both bonds and stocks, and lots of cash is waiting.
This is SBI Securities. I suggest you use either SBI / Rakuten. I use SBI because I have a bank account there as well and has other benefits connecting the accounts. If you already use another bank, I recommend Rakuten since they seem to have more American stocks available for trade than SBI.
Read the Wiki and FAQ in [r/dividends](https://www.reddit.com/r/dividends/) to get some more information to round out your plan. You can also read the following books: [http://www.mhinvest.com/files/pdf/SBI\_Single\_Best\_Investment\_Miller.pdf](http://www.mhinvest.com/files/pdf/SBI_Single_Best_Investment_Miller.pdf) Stocks for the Long Run, and The Future For Investors, both by Jeremy Siegel; Dividends Still Don't Lie, by Kelley Wright, and The Ultimate Dividend Playbook, by Josh Peters. (for the process, not recommendations for actual stocks to buy today) Also read the three articles about "Chowder" posted here for ideas on how to select and manage such a portfolio: [https://dgiforthediy.com/resources/](https://dgiforthediy.com/resources/)Then look at the two blogs he runs on Seeking Alpha, one tracking a "Young Folk's" portfolio and the other an "Old Folks." Note that while Seeking Alpha is locking down articles, blog posts are still freely accessible. There are also good articles here, particularly by David Van Knapp and Mike Nadel: [https://dailytradealert.com/](https://dailytradealert.com/) and [https://dividendsandincome.com/](https://dividendsandincome.com/) One of the best tools for researching dividend-paying stocks is the U.S. Dividend Champion spreadsheet posted here (top of the left column): [https://www.dripinvesting.org/Tools/Tools.asp](https://www.dripinvesting.org/Tools/Tools.asp) While using it in your due diligence to select what companies to partner with don't forget parameters like financial strength (credit rating) of BBB+ or better. For even more confidence, only look at those that have increased their dividends for over 12 years, which covers the last recession. Look for credit ratings here: [http://finra-markets.morningstar.com/BondCenter/Default.jsp](http://finra-markets.morningstar.com/BondCenter/Default.jsp)
Ahhh, a fellow user of SBI Shoken. Fine choice. Opened my account to get started in investing with AMD.
Well well well, first time I see another SBI user around. Any reason you didn’t out this on the NISA account? Or you don’t have one?
Read the Wiki and FAQ in r/dividends to get some more information to round out your plan. You can also read the following books: [http://www.mhinvest.com/files/pdf/SBI\_Single\_Best\_Investment\_Miller.pdf](http://www.mhinvest.com/files/pdf/SBI_Single_Best_Investment_Miller.pdf) Stocks for the Long Run, and The Future For Investors, both by Jeremy Siegel; Dividends Still Don't Lie, by Kelley Wright, and The Ultimate Dividend Playbook, by Josh Peters. (for the process, not recommendations for actual stocks to buy today) Also read the three articles about "Chowder" posted here for ideas on how to select and manage such a portfolio: [https://dgiforthediy.com/resources/](https://dgiforthediy.com/resources/) Then look at the two blogs he runs on Seeking Alpha, one tracking a "Young Folk's" portfolio and the other an "Old Folks." Note that while Seeking Alpha is locking down articles, blog posts are still freely accessible. There are also good articles here, particularly by David Van Knapp and Mike Nadel: [https://dailytradealert.com/](https://dailytradealert.com/) and [https://dividendsandincome.com/](https://dividendsandincome.com/) One of the best tools for researching dividend-paying stocks is the U.S. Dividend Champion spreadsheet posted here (top of the left column): [https://www.dripinvesting.org/Tools/Tools.asp](https://www.dripinvesting.org/Tools/Tools.asp) While using it in your due diligence to select what companies to partner with don't forget parameters like financial strength (credit rating) of BBB+ or better. For even more confidence, only look at those that have increased their dividends for over 12 years, which covers the last recession. Look for credit ratings here: [http://finra-markets.morningstar.com/BondCenter/Default.jsp](http://finra-markets.morningstar.com/BondCenter/Default.jsp)
Lot of good advice! Cheatsheet: Go for SBI or Rakuten. Get NISA or Tsumitate NISA Get iDeco For index funds, emaxis slim, sbi voo, Rakuten vti are the best lazy ones. Ideco is the most limited, next is Tsumitate, while regular NISA is fairly open to anything. Sbi and Rakuten also allow you to buy from foreign stock markets but it's delayed and don't offer everything so it's better if you are planning long term. My japan index funds are lagging fairly behind my world/us stuff so I wouldn't really suggest it. However single stocks are fairly good even with dividends and 優待. I got Aeon last summer and I'm up like 80,000 yen for 100shares, plus I get money back from purchases at aeon.
Thanks I was looking into SBI, from my understanding I create an account with SBI I can invest in bothe NISA and iDECO aswell as normal investing window that’s separated from NISA?
u/remrinds If English is your preferred language to research in, and not Japanese I suggest you look at https://www.retirejapan.com/blog/retirejapan-forum/ The general advice is to setup a NISA and iDeco. Setup a free account with either Rakuten, SBI or Monex. Cheers.