Balrampur chini announces a investment in polylactic acid.
Amount used 2000cr
Out of which 800cr internal
Debt 1200cr
Expected project completion 2.5yrs
Capacity 75000 t/a
It will be India’s first industrial bio plastic plant
Balrampur chini announces a investment in polylactic acid.
Amount used 2000cr
Out of which 800cr internal
Debt 1200cr
Expected project completion 2.5yrs
Capacity 75000 t/a
It will be India’s first industrial bio plastic plant
Peak pessimism about a fundamentally strong company typically augurs well for a stock. As every one can’t get rich at the same time (reason why stocks with strong consensus buys seldom generate superior returns), same goes the other way. Infy at 1300 last year had seen similarly record bearish bets and stock has since then risen 30% even with slowness in IT sector recovery.
A different take on PVR’s prospects from top down perspective. I am not invested in PVR stock or have any opinion about it. But I like tracking this stock given that I am a movie buff.
PVR’s revenue consists of 50% in movie tickets, 30% F&B and rest miscellaneous (advertising etc). At first glance it may seem that they have diversified revenue stream but it’s all actually driven from single factor- customer footfall. So if a movie is flop they will lose revenue in all these categories.
Their current topline is 6000 crores so for them to grow at even 15% rate, they need to be pulling in around 900 crores next year, roughly 1000 crores year after and so on. PVR-INOX combined accounts for 40% of total screen revenue in India, so the total market also needs to grow by 2000 crores next year, 2300 crores next year and so on. Which means there has to be at least 4-5 massive blockbusters every year to generate that kind of total market revenue.
Stock did well last quarter because we had some mega hits in the form of Jawaan, Pathan and Salaar, each doing 500-600 crores business in india. But this quarter has been quite lackluster so far with none of the big releases (e.g. Fighter) bringing solid ticket sales in india. So clearly market is waiting for another spate of blockbusters.
In addition, PVR’s presence in South is mostly limited to Karnataka with small market share in Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh, which have produced most of the blockbusters. Also competition there from single theaters is quite tough there and regulations there prevent PVR from taking price hikes.
I believe this is what makes taking any long term call on PVR so difficult. They have absolutely no control over the quality or quantity of the products they are distributing while carrying a high fixed cost. The fact that these days all the blockbusters are available on OTT within 2-3 weeks of their releases is also a dampener.
So 2-3 mega hits are what PVR stock needs right now to trigger a fresh rally.
That’s good to know @aadhar.aggarwal. Thanks. If it is as simple as providing a different bank account, Paytm need not lose most of the merchants.
I continue to wonder how well the merchants understand the situation, as there seems to be a lot of misinformation, some of them motivated.
This is my recent experience at a barber shop. He has Paytm QR code (and no other). I asked him if it is okay to scan this QR code as recently there is some bad news about paytm. He confidently told me that it is only issue with the paytm bank, and there are no problems with payments; then he let me scan paytm QR to pay.
Yes, this cannot be sufficient evidence to assume that the majority of merchants are similarly well-informed. Please do share your experiences in this regard, as there is constant news about competitors taking advantage of the situation. It is still not clear how much disruption paytm’s business is facing.
MPS Limited revenue guidance of 1500 Crore in FY 2027 from current 500 Crore.
Sometimes unnecessary greed to make money left right and centre can lead to a downfall of an otherwise humongous multi billion dollar business. Such idiocy is prevailing and very well acceptable of otherwise very dignifying business managers who claim “corporate governance” in every public appearance they make.
If you see the chart over a year, soy prices and corn prices are inversely related to cattle prices.
But venkys is not.
But if you see the chart over 5 years venkys was following the relation but off late it’s not. I don’t know why but there is more to it than just soya and corn prices
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