Amit Agarwal

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Amit Agarwal

Amit Agarwal

@SpangleAdvisors

Investor, Learner, Listener, Invest in Businesses having Value+Growth+Quality Management+Sound Balance Sheet. Like Cyclical & Turnaround Stocks.

Mumbai Beigetreten Haziran 2017
847 Folgt17.3K Follower
Amit Agarwal
Amit Agarwal@SpangleAdvisors·
Vaibhav Suryavanshi In Investing Terminology Great transition from Nano Cap >Micro Cap>Small Cap Have enough potential to be Mid Cap & Large Cap #VaibhavSuryavanshi
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Amit Agarwal
Amit Agarwal@SpangleAdvisors·
FDI going out FIIs going out High time for our Government for Introspection & course correction. जब जागो तभी सवेरा
Steve Hanke@steve_hanke

#IndiaWatch🇮🇳: Net foreign direct investment (FDI) into India was a NEGATIVE $1.4B in January. That marks 5 STRAIGHT MONTHS of negative flows. INDIA’S MOUNTAIN OF GOVERNMENT RED TAPE = REPELS FDI = BIG PROBLEM.

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Amit Agarwal
Amit Agarwal@SpangleAdvisors·
History Suggests Markets always survived & thrived from any Situation. No need to Panic Stay Calm Hold the Nerves
Amit Agarwal tweet mediaAmit Agarwal tweet media
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Amit Agarwal
Amit Agarwal@SpangleAdvisors·
Crude may be US$ 50/bbl in a Year May remain there for long.
Niraj Shah@niraj_shah

Oil at $500/bbl in 2030? Possible? Read on (Courtesy a note posted by @riteshmjn ) -Currency Research associates came out with a note in October, where they predicted a $500/bbl oil price in 2030, which was posted by Ritesh Jain a few days earlier. They argued that their bullish long-term outlook for oil prices (predicting a potential +60% rise in the gold/oil ratio, and extreme scenarios like oil reaching $500/barrel by 2030) did not rely on unexpected geopolitical events, such as the unforeseen attack on Iran on February 28, 2026, which caused a recent oil surge. Critically, the IEA highlights an imminent risk of "Global Peak Oil" supply due to natural decline in existing fields (geophysical limits after ~50% extraction, with accelerating decline rates averaging ~6% per year across thousands of fields). They argue, without massive new investments in production and extraction methods, global oil output would decline sharply. For reference, in 2024, 80% of oil and 90% of gas production came from post-peak fields, with declines accelerating and already equating to a ~6 million b/d annual loss relative to global needs (106 million b/d). This supply-demand mismatch (demand growing or stable, supply at risk of peaking/declining without huge capex) supports the view that oil prices could rise dramatically in 2025–2026 and beyond, with historical precedents for +1,150% gains occurring twice since 1970.

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