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Super Stocks

@superstocks101

Equity Investor since last 18 years. Micro, Small and Mid Cap investor & Student of Market (Not a SEBI registered Advisor, just sharing the learning)

Mumbai, India Katılım Ağustos 2020
2.4K Takip Edilen1.2K Takipçiler
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Frontier Indica
Frontier Indica@frontierindica·
Absolutely shocking. An IIT Bombay grad's brother was left in a coma after a botched surgery for what was just a minor hand fracture in MP. And we still ask why IITians don't want to stay in India.
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Super Stocks@superstocks101·
@Preeti7739 भाजपा का अगला विधायक
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R.k .yadav
R.k .yadav@Preeti7739·
🚨 बिहार का चर्चित DSP निकला Luxury King. शिक्षक पत्नी घर संभालती रही, और साहब 5 गर्लफ्रेंड्स की VIP लाइफ सेट करते रहे। जांच में खुलासा हुआ कि हर गर्लफ्रेंड के लिए अलग मकान, गाड़ी और शाही ठाठ थे। दारोगा से DSP बनने तक दौलत इतनी बनाई कि बंगाल तक कोठी खड़ी कर दी। किशनगंज पोस्टिंग के दौरान शुरू हुई जांच ने पूरा खेल खोल दिया। अब भ्रष्टाचार की परतें खुल रही हैं और DSP साहब के “काले कारनामों” की कहानी बिहार में चर्चा का सबसे बड़ा विषय बन चुकी है।
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Harmeet Kaur K 🇮🇳
Harmeet Kaur K 🇮🇳@iamharmeetK·
We are a distraction-driven nation- feeding propaganda to the nation At every interval when people start questioning , we discover the natural resource which govt states will change the equation.... Lithium in Kashmir, 2023. Gold in Sonbhadra, 2020. Diamonds in MP, 2004. Uranium in Meghalaya, 2000. Offshore oil in Kerala, 2010s. Gas in KG basin, 2005. And now gas in Rajasthan.
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Super Stocks@superstocks101·
@IndianTechGuide Just to calm the nerves of the citizens, so that they don't question why we start digging when fire occurs.
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Indian Tech & Infra
Indian Tech & Infra@IndianTechGuide·
🚨 India has successfully discovered a new natural gas reserve in Dandewala, Rajasthan.
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H S Phoolka
H S Phoolka@hsphoolka·
2nd Flying Sikh is BORN! Gurindervir Singh has shattered the national record, 100M in 10.09 seconds.Very close to Usain Bolt’s 9.58s world record, Just half second away from history! Congratulations champion. Waheguru ji kripa rakhan sher putt te! #GurindervirSingh #FlyingSikh
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The Forgotten ‘Man’ 👨‍⚖️
INDIA’S JUDICIARY: Every 3rd High Court Judge is an “Uncle” This 2010 exposé on Punjab & Haryana High Court is damning proof of deep-rooted nepotism and shameless family favoritism. Sons, nephews, wives, brothers, sisters & in-laws — all practicing as advocates in the SAME court where their relative sits as a Judge. A list of 16 such “Uncle Judges” was officially forwarded to the Union Law Ministry. Just look at this table. Clear, blatant conflict of interest. How the can justice be delivered fairly when family members argue cases before their own “Uncle”? The Law Commission and Bar Council flagged this years ago. Nothing changed. This uncle culture has destroyed public faith in the judiciary. Merit is dead. Nepotism rules. We need ruthless reforms NOW: - Ban close relatives from practicing in the same court - Mandatory public declaration of family links - Strict penalties for violations Enough is enough. The temple of justice has become a family business.
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Upamanyu Acharya
Upamanyu Acharya@upamanyuacharya·
"India is overcrowded" is the most successful gaslighting campaign Indian babus ever ran on their own citizens. They underbuilt the country for forty years and convinced 1.4B Indians to blame themselves for it. Every overcrowded space you've ever queued in is a supply failure the state engineered, not a demographic accident. Five lifts in a hospital, one working. Seven railway counters, one ticketer. Toll plazas, water boards, municipal offices: built once in 1972, patched once in 1996, abandoned ever since. The only exception is airports, and even those lounges are gigafried at peak. Why did this happen? 4 reasons, none of them are "too many people." 1. Cost of capital. Rupee down 60% against the dollar in two decades. Inflation 5-7% on paper, 8-10% in reality. Risk-free rates above 7%. No rational allocator underwrites a hospital with a 30-year payback under those conditions. Capital flows into software and consumer brands; anything with a 3-5 year ROI window. Parks, ports, metros, dams, schools need multi-decade underwriting that India's macro structurally cannot support. 2. The regulatory stack is engineered to prevent construction. 50+ clearances across municipal, state, and central bodies for any large project, each with its IAS gatekeeper extracting rent. Real builders give up. The only construction happening at scale is therefore illegal, which is exactly why slums mushroom while sanctioned housing projects sit at 15% completion for a decade. 3. The corruption tax. Budget 15-20% of project cost in bakshish before pouring a single slab. Stacked on top of GST, stamp duty, capital gains, property tax, labour cess. Software shops escape it; they ship from a laptop. Anyone touching cement, steel, or land pays the surcharge in cash, off the books, with zero recourse and zero deductibility. 4. State capacity has collapsed into pure friction. GST portal crashes on filing deadlines. MCA21 is a relic. Every regulator (SEBI, RBI, IRDAI, FSSAI, BIS) optimises for CYA, never throughput. Babus paid 1990s salaries to administer 2026 complexity respond rationally by doing nothing. India's perpetual undercapacity is a capital allocation story the political class would rather you never learn. The 1.4B is a feature. The people running the country are the bug. Until cost of capital drops, the regulatory fat gets gutted, and the corruption surcharge gets squeezed out, the lifts and the counters and the hospitals will stay exactly as broken as they were when your grandfather first complained about them in 1987.
Pankaj Arora 🇮🇳@Panks_Arora

Every single place in India is just so overcrowded. - Want to go to a park? Hundreds are already there, not enough space. - Want to go to a temple? You won’t even get five minutes of peace. - Want to visit a hill station? Not a single hotel is available. - Same with Ladakh, Uttarakhand, and everywhere else. It feels like the calmest place is your own house.

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Ihtesham Ali
Ihtesham Ali@ihtesham2005·
A 22-year-old graduate student in Kazakhstan got so angry at journal paywalls in 2011 that she built a pirate website holding 88 million scientific papers, and last month she turned the whole thing into an AI that lets you ask one question and get the actual research as the answer. Her name is Alexandra Elbakyan, and the website is called Sci-Hub. The AI she just launched is called Sci-Bot. It lives at sci-bot.ru and almost nobody outside academia knows it exists yet. Here is the story, because it is one of the strangest things to happen in science publishing in the last 50 years. Elbakyan was born in Almaty in 1988, the year the Soviet Union started to collapse. She taught herself programming at 12. She read Soviet science books that explained things her family used to call miracles. She got into computer security at university and graduated in 2009 with a degree she barely needed because by then she was already a serious hacker. Alexandra moved to Moscow that fall. Then Germany. Then a research internship in the United States. She was working on brain-computer interfaces, the kind of research that requires you to read hundreds of papers a year just to keep up with the field. And every single one of those papers was locked behind a journal paywall that cost between 30 and 50 dollars to read once. She did the math. A graduate student in Kazakhstan could not afford to read science. The first thing she did was learn how to get around the paywalls one paper at a time. She passed the trick around to other students. They asked her for papers constantly. She got tired of doing it manually. So in September 2011, in three days, she wrote a script that automated the whole thing. A user pastes a DOI. The script logs in through a donated institutional credential. The paper comes back free. The website caches it. The next person who asks for that paper gets it instantly because the previous request already saved a copy. That was Sci-Hub. Three days of code. One graduate student. Done. 15 years later, the cache holds 88 million scientific papers. Almost every piece of scholarly literature published before 2020 is sitting on her servers. Researchers in 190 countries use it. Studies in Nature have shown that roughly half of all academic paper downloads worldwide now go through Sci-Hub, not the publishers who actually own the copyrights. Elsevier sued her in 2015 and won a 15 million dollar judgment. She did not pay. The American Chemical Society sued her and won an injunction. She did not comply. Courts in India, France, Russia, and the UK have tried to block the domain. She just moves it. Sci-hub.se. Sci-hub.ru. Sci-hub.ee. The site has had over 20 domains and is still up. Nature put her on its list of the 10 people who mattered most to science in 2016. The New York Times compared her to Edward Snowden. The Verge called her the pirate queen of science. She has not been to the United States in over a decade because she would be arrested at the airport. The Sci-Bot launch in April 2026 is the part that nobody is talking about. She took the 88 million paper database and put a small language model on top of it. You ask a question in plain English. The model searches the entire shadow library, pulls the relevant papers, synthesizes an answer grounded in real citations, and links you to the full text of every source. Free. No login. No institutional credential. No paywall. Three real scientists tested it for a Chemical and Engineering News article last month. They asked it medical and chemistry questions. The radiologist said the answer he got was usable. The chemist said the gaps in recent literature were obvious but the older science was solid. The publisher community is furious. What she built is what the paid academic AI tools are trying to build. Except the paid ones are limited to what their parent publisher legally owns. Hers is limited to almost nothing. Alexandra still lives somewhere in Russia. She does not give her address. She does not do video interviews. She gives talks over Skype with the camera off. She runs the largest illegal library in human history from a laptop and a donation page. A graduate student who could not afford to read science built the system the entire scientific community now quietly depends on. The publishers have spent a decade trying to shut her down. She just shipped an AI that makes their entire business model outdated.
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dejanira
dejanira@dejanirasilveir·
🚨🚨Kenia SE RETIRA de la OMS porque descubrió que la vacuna contra el tétano estaba combinada con un agente esterilizante. “Ya no podemos darnos el lujo de confiar en la Organización Mundial de la Salud” “Las vacunas han disminuido la fertilidad” El Tribunal Supremo también suspendió la inmunidad procesal de Bill Gates 🔥
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Shubham Mishra
Shubham Mishra@brahma_4u·
India trains the engineer. America files the patents. Gurtej Sandhu was raised in Amritsar and trained at IIT Delhi. He now holds 1,299 US patents at Micron, Edison topped out at 1,093. Sandhu is the 7th most prolific inventor in American history. His titanium nitride deposition work is why every DRAM cell in your phone and every GPU training a foundation model actually holds charge. Micron, Samsung, and SK Hynix own 95% of global DRAM. None of them are Indian. We export the inventor. We import the chip.
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Grok
Grok@grok·
**Verified.** Giorgia Meloni worked as a bartender at Rome’s famous Piper Club, as a waitress, and as a babysitter/nanny to help her single mother. She graduated high school from a hospitality institute (Istituto Amerigo Vespucci) in 1996 but never attended university. The claims in the post are accurate.
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Prakash Dadlani
Prakash Dadlani@prakdadlani·
I’m an NRI born & residing in Hong Kong. 7 years ago, I put my money on India to start manufacturing and exports. So when I read posts like this, I honestly laugh. Is the system perfect? No. Are there delays sometimes? Yes. Do problems happen? Of course. But this “every shipment needs bribes” story is complete nonsense. We have been exporting from Bharat for 7 years now. Most containers are never even opened. There are proper systems, registrations, trusted exporter schemes, and processes for faster clearance. Yes, the first few months can feel confusing. GST, IEC, bank setup, approvals. Paperwork does exists. But after that? Things become smooth. And every year it just gets better. People sitting outside India love calling Bharat “impossible for business.” Meanwhile 1000s of manufacturers here are quietly building global companies every single day. If India was really this broken, exports would not be growing year after year. Truth is simple: People who fail in Bharat blame the system. People who stay, learn the system, build patiently and usually win big. So if you want to start manufacturing or exports in Bharat, don’t get scared by such ragebait sensational hit job posts. There are obstacles. But the opportunity is far bigger than the obstacles. And if you have cold feet, DM me. I’m an open book. More than happy to share: * my real experience * practical ways to get things done * mistakes to avoid * contacts and guidance wherever I can help Because Bharat is still one of the biggest opportunities in the world for builders. Build in Bharat🇮🇳💪
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Super Stocks@superstocks101·
@frontierindica Most of the tourists that india gets are the NRI coming for vacation once a year.
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Frontier Indica
Frontier Indica@frontierindica·
The mystery was always a marketing pitch and the pitch required tourists who had not seen poor crowded hot places before. That demographic no longer exists in most of the West because now anyone with an internet connection has now seen what a sub four $4K GDP per capita country actually looks like, and the romance evaporates somewhere between the airport touts, the price discrimination, the public infrastructure that visibly does not function, and an entire restaurant economy whose opening move is figuring out how much they can take you for. None of this was a secret to people who lived there, it was just sold as exotic to people who didn't. Gen Z scrolls Instagram and sees what the locals see. They also notice that every interesting cultural export from these places (such as Yoga, Vipassana, Meditation, etc) has been better operationalised abroad, with proper instruction, working facilities and a teacher who speaks their language. So the marketing pitch collapses to coughing up thousands of dollars to fly somewhere to receive an inferior version of a service you can buy at home, while also being scammed.
(• ˕ •マ.ᐟ ★@Y40IFRQTTING

Millennials were probably the last generation that actually wanted to go to India, Egypt, and Pakistan. These places got heavily demystified with the internet, they used to be regarded with some mystery and allure to them. Gen Z just isn't buying it.

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ASAN
ASAN@Atulsingh_asan·
2014 में जब मोदी जी भारत के प्रधानमंत्री बने थे तब उनका उम्र 63 साल था , और रुपया भी डॉलर के मुक़ाबले 63 पर था । आज मोदी जी 75 साल के है और रुपया 96 plus हो चुका है । मोदी सरकार अभी तक इसको हल्के में ले रही थी , इनका ध्यान जितना पिछले एक सालों में भारत का एक्सपर्ट बढ़ाने पर और इंपोर्ट घटाने पर है उतनी बेचैनी पहले कभी थी ही नहीं । सबसे बड़ा गलती इन्होंने Long term capital gains tax लगाकर किया , तब रुपया 63 से सीधे 73 पर पहुँच गया क्योंकि उन दो सालों में FII ने लगातार बिकवाली किया और high taxation के कारण अब तक बिकवाली चल ही रहा है । उसके बाद सीतारमण ने मास्टरस्ट्रोक निर्णय लिया गोल्ड पर कस्टम ड्यूटी घटाकर जुलाई 2024 में इससे इंपोर्ट बढ़ा और तब से रुपया का गिरना अब तक जारी है, क्योंकि रही सही कसर ट्रम्प ने ईरान के साथ युद्ध लड़कर कर दिया । #inr #usd #stockmarket
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Sandeep
Sandeep@SandeepUnnithan·
Dear Parle, you’ve just been handed the biggest global launch for any Indian confectionery brand…build on it, become the next Ferrero Rocher.
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`@OxygenKohlii18·
Akash Ambani was seen suggesting Hardik to take a review from outside, while Neeta Ambani had already signaled it was out. Akash Ambani telling Bumrah, “You don’t have the guts in your ass to ask for a review for your own wicket,” came across as very rude 🤯
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CA. Surendra Reddy
CA. Surendra Reddy@surendrareddyca·
Paradeep Phosphates Ltd #Paradeep 1. Business Model & Product Portfolio PPL is India’s second-largest private sector phosphatic fertilizer manufacturer. Its business model revolves around the "Port-to-Farm" approach, leveraging strategic coastal locations to import raw materials and distribute finished goods efficiently. Flagship Product: NPS 20:20:0:13 (sold under the brand Jai Kisaan Navratna). It is highly preferred for oilseeds and pulses due to its high sulphur content. Key Products: Complex Fertilizers (NPK/DAP): DAP (18:46), NPK 10:26:26, NPK 12:32:16, and the unique NPK 19:19:19 (PPL is a pioneer in this grade). Urea: Catering primarily to the Goa and Karnataka regions. Industrial/By-products: Phospho-gypsum (used in cement and soil conditioning) and Zypmite. Customers: Primarily 12+ million farmers across North, East, West, and now South India (post-MCFL merger).
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