
Hardik Devmurari
20 posts

Hardik Devmurari
@HardikDev90
Hi There I'm Hardik and I help your business grow via Website & Social Media Marketing to build relationships with new customers to reach your full potential.







Quality Power 313 ➡️ 630+ More than Doubles in 3 Months Markets were cruel, But Strong Companies ultimately find their correct value Hope everyone got benefitted 🙏😀




The government can easily give #Idea a lifeline, as precedents exist. @_anujsinghal @CNBCTV18News & @aseemmanchanda, you call it “shooting the messenger,” but isn’t it time to address the real issue? The Reliance Group has consistently leveraged government policies to its advantage. Between 2003 and 2007, Reliance Infocomm acquired CDMA spectrum at nominal fees. Later, by manipulating policy, it converted these into dual-technology licenses, allowing it to offer GSM services for just ₹50 crore—far less than what other operators paid—resulting in undue gains of ₹40,000-50,000 crore. By 2019, RCOM owed ₹46,000 crore to banks, which was effectively written off. Despite this, it managed to trade its spectrum with Reliance Jio. The same @DoT_India that now demands bank guarantees for spectrum dues had then overlooked such requirements. @JM_Scindia Even RCOM’s AGR dues remain uncollected despite a Supreme Court ruling. Eventually, RCOM went bankrupt, and its assets—including towers and fiber networks—were sold to @reliancejio for ₹5,000 crore, significantly lower than the ₹11,000 crore offer from Brookfield Infrastructure. Reliance’s strategy extended beyond telecom. Jio’s free unlimited voice calls from September 2016 to March 2017—despite resistance from @airtelnews, #Idea, and #Vodafone—crippled competitors. Yet, market forces have their way of correcting imbalances. Eventually, Reliance had to sell a 33% stake in Jio Platforms for ₹1.52 lakh crore. While officially claimed to reduce debt, many believe these funds covered oil losses during COVID-19. This pattern isn’t new. @reliancepower, despite having little real business, was once valued at ₹1.15 lakh crore and allowed to raise ₹10,000 crore at an inflated premium. The bubble burst, and by 2020, its market cap had plunged to ₹950 crore. SEBI talks about regulating financial influencers, yet top bankers and regulators endorsed this overvaluation without scrutiny. To this day, no one has been held accountable. @AseemManchanda, @AnujSinghal, @CNBCTV18News—don’t you have a duty to expose such systemic manipulation? Shouldn’t the wrongdoings of bureaucrats, compromised judges, and dishonest promoters be addressed? This is our country—we owe it to our motherland to uphold fairness. Even market analysts like @PrakashGaba, a regular on your channel, advised buying Idea at ₹16-17 with targets of ₹28 and ₹42, only to later recommend selling at ₹7-8. Is this responsible journalism? While the Ambanis have exploited systemic loopholes, the media should not mislead the public. The rest, I believe, will be judged by a higher power. And no, this is not just about “shooting the messenger”—it’s about exposing a well-orchestrated game.@AdityaBirlaGrp present your case properly and manage Media , I am sure #Idea will win and so will 60lac + small investors whose hopes are alive . @narendramodi we expect a lot more from you .












