The company posted a multifold jump per cent in consolidated net profit to Rs 230 crore as compared to Rs 46 crore a year ago
Loans booked by consumer financier Bajaj Finance jumped 20 per cent YoY to 7.6 million in Q4FY23, taking the total loans booked by the lender in FY23 to 29.6 million, its highest-ever in a year
In the past six months, the stock has plunged 23 per cent as compared to a 3.4 per cent fall recorded by the Sensex
On the daily scale, Bajaj Finance is witnessing a fresh breakout which indicates a short term reversal
The consumer financier reported its highest-ever quarterly profit at Rs 2,973 crore in Q3FY23, up 40% YoY, aided by a healthy rise in NII and drop in provisions and contingencies
Performance was aided by healthy rise in net interest income, drop in provisions and contingencies
The broader trend in Bajaj Finance and Bajaj Finserv stocks has turned weak and if both these stocks fail to rebound overcoming key levels, the sell-off could intensify.
Bajaj Finance acquired 3.1 million new customers (v/s 2.6 million acquired in Q2FY23). The new customer acquisition run-rate was healthy in Q3FY23.
Coal India, SBI and Adani Enterprises continue to trade with a robust bullishness, while TVS Motor and Bajaj Finance seem to be struggling to hold their ground, technical charts show.
In terms of sectors, Wood remains bullish on the real estate sector and suggests the Indian realty market to be one of Asia's hottest investment bets, besides Singapore
The technical analyst from Anand Rathi has reiterated the Buy call on Redington (India) with a higher price target of Rs 210; Also, expects Bajaj Finance to rally to Rs 7,060.
Among prominent stocks, ITC, Dixon Technologies, Axis Bank and Bajaj Finance seem poised to rally up to 14 per cent; whereas Asian Paints is seen testing the crucial 200-DMA level at Rs 3,131.
The company booked 6.76 million loans in Q2FY23, up 7 per cent YoY compared to 6.33 million loans booked in the year-ago period
The gross non-performing asset ratio, a measure of asset quality, eased to 1.17% at the end of September from 2.45% a year earlier