Well written, what I think in this context is to wait and watch. For near term technically it looks bearish, fundamentally better to watch out for a couple of quarters till the number changes positively.
The financial sector is highly interconnected, and when one bank gets exposed for misreporting, it raises serious concerns about others. Historically, we’ve seen similar patterns—one weak link often exposes hidden cracks in the entire system.
RBI might now tighten scrutiny on other private banks to ensure similar errors or fraudulent activities aren't lurking beneath the surface. If IndusInd’s issue is systemic rather than isolated, this could be just the beginning of a bigger shake-up in the banking sector.
A better way to handle such situations is to go for a long straddle to make some decent amount of money given that this stock is going to be volatile for sometime atleast, make the most of it while you can! Stock market is all about seeing opportunities and seize it with minimal risk
I can't openly give investment advice, as that would be against policies. However, I have clearly expressed my stance on the events surrounding IndusInd Bank in this newsletter. The biggest factor to consider is trust—when it breaks in the banking sector, recovery isn’t just about stock price rebounds; it's about whether confidence can be restored.
If you're considering investing, I’d suggest analyzing past cases (like YES Bank), looking at how RBI is responding, and keeping an eye on whether institutions are buying or still exiting. The key isn’t just whether a stock has fallen, but why it fell and what could still come next.
Well written, what I think in this context is to wait and watch. For near term technically it looks bearish, fundamentally better to watch out for a couple of quarters till the number changes positively.
Right Mainak.
If IndusInd Bank is hiding things, do you think other banks are clean?
The financial sector is highly interconnected, and when one bank gets exposed for misreporting, it raises serious concerns about others. Historically, we’ve seen similar patterns—one weak link often exposes hidden cracks in the entire system.
RBI might now tighten scrutiny on other private banks to ensure similar errors or fraudulent activities aren't lurking beneath the surface. If IndusInd’s issue is systemic rather than isolated, this could be just the beginning of a bigger shake-up in the banking sector.
A better way to handle such situations is to go for a long straddle to make some decent amount of money given that this stock is going to be volatile for sometime atleast, make the most of it while you can! Stock market is all about seeing opportunities and seize it with minimal risk
Would you invest in IndusInd after this crash or stay away?
I can't openly give investment advice, as that would be against policies. However, I have clearly expressed my stance on the events surrounding IndusInd Bank in this newsletter. The biggest factor to consider is trust—when it breaks in the banking sector, recovery isn’t just about stock price rebounds; it's about whether confidence can be restored.
If you're considering investing, I’d suggest analyzing past cases (like YES Bank), looking at how RBI is responding, and keeping an eye on whether institutions are buying or still exiting. The key isn’t just whether a stock has fallen, but why it fell and what could still come next.