How to Analyze Balance Sheets to Pick Stocks?
The balance sheet shows three things: assets (what company owns), liabilities (what it owes), and equity (what’s left for shareholders). […]
The balance sheet shows three things: assets (what company owns), liabilities (what it owes), and equity (what’s left for shareholders). […]
Earnings reports are financial scorecards companies release quarterly showing revenue, expenses, and profit per share. Think of it as a
What Are Earnings Reports and Why Do They Matter? Read Post »
Here’s the simplest difference between fundamental analysis and technical analysis: Fundamental analysis asks “Is this company worth buying?” Technical analysis
What is Fundamental Analysis and Technical Analysis ? What is the difference ? Read Post »
Candlestick Charts show four prices in one visual: open, high, low, close. Green candle = price closed higher than it
Support and resistance aren’t magical concepts—they’re simply price levels where buyers and sellers consistently show up. Support acts as a
What is Support and Resistance in Stock Trading? Read Post »
Moving averages smooth out price chaos by showing what average price traders paid over specific days. Stop fighting daily noise—see
What Are Moving Averages and How to Trade With Them? Read Post »
Stock prices alone mean nothing. The P/E ratio—price-to-earnings—answers the real question: How much are investors paying for every rupee of
The real question isn’t whether technical analysis works—it’s whether traders actually watch what the charts show before jumping in. Most
Risk and volatility—often confused, but technically worlds apart. Risk means potential for permanent capital loss, like a company going bankrupt
What Is the Difference Between Risk and Volatility? Read Post »
Statistically? Almost nobody succeeds at timing markets. Data spanning 21 years (January 2000-2021) reveals investors buying Nifty 50 at all-time