If you had applied at 73.05 and above, you would have been allotted all the shares by now. They will be credited to your account latest by next Tues day. Not if you had applied at cut-off.
I bought it on 25th, the listing day, and today in my Demat, I can only see T1 quantity, so since it has listed under T group, please explain who are selling? I don''t think it''s the buyers of the listing day.
When Most of the IPO listed, they come in to the GROUP of T, that means trade to Trade(not on same day). when you buy any stock of T group it took almost 3 days to come to your account in duration of 1 to 2 days you can see T1 ( quantity Zero.). on 3rd day you will see your quantity of stock in place of T1. Note :- Better to invest in any stock Check It''s Group on BSE Site.
Those who bought on first day would be raring to sell tommorow, as their shares will be credited in demat a/c. But if UC till EOD, then 300+ is achievable in coming days.
There is an upward freeze in both NSE and BSE. However the rate shown in BSE is Rs 285.70 and Rs 275.6 in NSE.
Can any of the seniors tell me as to why someone should buy at BSE or sell at NSE, when there is no difference in the way the 2 exchanges work. Why pay more at BSE and get less at NSE??
Please for the benefit of newcomers to the market like me, some answers welcome.
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July 26, 2017 3:41:31 PM
IPO Guru (1300+ Posts, 500+ Likes)
I too have the same query in my mind ... if it continues upper circuit for a few days rate diff between exchange will be huge ... can some experienced boarder explain this behavior????
My Question is who trades on NSE ? Isnt NSE losing out on the business because of this? Shouldnt there be a mechanism for new issues to make the price adjustment faster....... What is a point of 10 days of 5% filter ?
whats meaning of "salasar technology declared a stock split in ratio of 10:10?" the facevalue is already 10 right? is it good news for share holders or it doesn''t make any different?
@Kiran A stock split is a decision by the company''s board of directors to increase the number of shares that are outstanding by issuing more shares to current shareholders. For example, in a 2-for-1 stock split, an additional share is given for each share held by a shareholder.
When a company declares a stock split, the number of shares of that company increases, but the market cap remains the same. Existing shares split, but the underlying value remains the same. As the number of shares increases, price per share goes down.