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Balkrishna Paper Mills Ltd posts Rs 3 77 crore loss in Q1FY22

Balkrishna Paper Mills Ltd posts Rs 3 77 crore loss in Q1FY22
equitybulls.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from equitybulls.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Balkrishna Paper Mills Ltd reports Q4FY21 loss of Rs 4 26 crore

Balkrishna Paper Mills Ltd reports Q4FY21 loss of Rs 4 26 crore
equitybulls.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from equitybulls.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Why India can t have a wild stock party like GameStop, and why it s a lesson for the world

Text Size: A+ Mumbai: For regulators hoping to rein in wild moves in small stocks like the 17-fold surge in GameStop Corp. last month, India has a system worth studying. Rules created by the Securities and Exchange Board of India together with the nation’s exchanges are aimed at preventing unwarranted price swings and manipulation of stocks with a market capitalization below 250 million rupees ($3.4 million). The so-called graded surveillance measure (GSM), which was introduced in 2017, is unique and helps prevent GameStop-like surges in small caps, according to Bhargavi Zaveri, a researcher at the Mumbai-based Finance Research Group. “The measure targets firms whose returns are believed to be out of sync with their fundamentals, and puts them under a level of scrutiny that stops everyone from trading in it,” Zaveri, who co-authored a paper on the mechanism, said in an interview. “We tracked practices by regulators in 30 jurisdictions around the world and didn’t f

How Sebi s warning system curbs GameStop-like gains in Indian stock markets

For regulators hoping to rein in wild moves in small stocks like the 17-fold surge in GameStop Corp. last month, India has a system worth studying. Rules created by the Securities and Exchange Board of India together with the nation’s exchanges are aimed at preventing unwarranted price swings and manipulation of stocks with a market capitalization below Rs 25,000 crore ($3.4 million). The so-called graded surveillance measure (GSM), which was introduced in 2017, is unique and helps prevent GameStop-like surges in small caps, according to Bhargavi Zaveri, a researcher at the Mumbai-based Finance Research Group. “The measure targets firms whose returns are believed to be out of sync with their fundamentals, and puts them under a level of scrutiny that stops everyone from trading in it,” Zaveri, who co-authored a paper on the mechanism, said in an interview. “We tracked practices by regulators in 30 jurisdictions around the world and didn’t find anything that linked sur

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