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INDA in upward trend: price expected to rise as it breaks its lower Bollinger Band on November 06, 2025. INDA may jump back above the lower band and head toward the middle band. Traders may consider buying the stock or exploring call options. In 40 of 46 cases where INDA's price broke its lower Bollinger Band, its price rose further in the following month. The odds of a continued upward trend are 87%.
Climate change is a defining issue of the next 20, 50, 100 years and beyond. The question, in my view, is whether corporations and governments ultimately do enough to temper alarming trends in carbon emissions. So far, efforts have fallen woefully short. One British hedge fund billionaire is taking a new approach to bring urgency -- and the potential for financial repercussions -- into the...
Economic growth worldwide has taken a hit, and India is not outside the softening growth projections.A fair comparison could be made with China for whom the Sino-American trade war is proving hazardous.
The Indian rupee, one of Asia's worst performing currencies last year, has surged more than 3 percent since February on the back of election hopes.READ MORE...
Two global banking behemoths have strongly optimistic outlooks on Indian markets. James Sullivan, JP Morgan’s head of equity research for Asia excluding Japan, dubbed India as the “best growth story” among global emerging markets.JP Morgan predicts that the Indian economy will grow at 15%, while markets are expecting a 20% growth for the nation, as told to CNBC. One of the factors that influenced Sullivan’s outlook is stabilizing oil prices, which is a potentially significant factor since India is a net importer of crude. Sullivan also seems hopeful that Indian markets will be able to weather the potential volatility due to the nation’s April-May general elections. Goldman Sachs, too, seems bullish on India.
 Through this foreign-exchange swap, the RBI apparently hopes to boost the economy, as the additional funds supplied in local currency would allow banks to have more cash at their disposal to lend and/or invest with. The move is expected to also curb the Indian rupee’s appreciation.A strong rupee is a potential headwind to India’s exports. RBI has scheduled the dollar-rupee buy-sell swap auction to take place on March 26.    
Japan’s shut, most other Asian equity markets aren’t doing much, and you can read about the big exception -- China -- here. So we’re going to use this opportunity to talk about India, where an unpredictable election looms.Even before the ballot takes place, a host of worries is raising questions about whether the country’s benchmark stock index can repeat last year’s outperformance. READ MORE...
An official survey that has been withheld by the government shows India’s unemployment rate rose to its highest level in at least 45 years in 2017/18, the Business Standard newspaper reported on Thursday, delivering a blow to Prime Minister Narendra Modi months before a general election.READ MORE...
By pumping 830 billion Indian rupees (around $12 billion) into state-run banks by March, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s administration intends to help a sector bludgeoned by bad loans.Following a recent parliament-approved additional capital infusion of 410 billion rupees, India’s state-run banks are set to receive a total of 1.06 trillion rupees this fiscal year. India’s banks are saddled with more than $210 billion of stressed debt, causing them to have the world’s worst bad loan ratio after Italy, and posing challenges to their lending capacity.
That being said, there is a technical pattern in the iShares MSCI India ETF (Amex: INDA) that suggests that India’s index might be turning lower again. If we look at the daily chart we see that the fund dipped down to the $32.50 level in May and in June, but bounced each time.How and why does this happen? The thought process behind why this seems to happen goes something like this.
At one point in the day, the rupee crossed  74 against the US dollar (for the first time ever), following the Indian central bank's stance to hold off  an interest rate hike  – a decision that went against the general expectation. So far, the Indian rupee has plunged around -15% against the dollar this year.This happened even as the Indian government made efforts to ease foreign purchase of rupee bonds and also increased tariffs on imported goods.