Tuesday, March 1, 2022

RUSSIA-UKRAINE CRISIS : BUT NIFTY & OIL PRICES RISE

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On Monday, oil stocks were up about 4% and Asia-Pacific stocks were mixed as investors eye the Russia-Ukraine crisis and related sanctions. Global markets were volatile last week following Russia's invasion of Ukraine. US stocks rose before closing on Friday, but futures fell in overnight trading on Sunday. Russia continued its advance into Ukraine over the weekend, with reports of fighting in the streets and troops encircling Kyiv.
President Vladimir Putin on Sunday placed his country's deterrent forces, which reportedly include nuclear weapons, on high alert in response to the international response to the Russian invasion. The US and its allies announced new sanctions and measures against Russia, such as: B. Rapid removal of selected Russian banks from the interbank messaging system. On the diplomatic front, representatives of the governments of Ukraine and Russia have agreed to meet without preconditions at the Ukraine-Belarus border. Belarus, which borders both Ukraine and Russia, has close ties with Moscow.

Oil & Gas Stocks: Traveling. Stocks like GAIL - up 4.93%; GSPL – up 4.53%; Petronet – up 4.13%; BPCL - up 2.87%; MGL – up 2.26%; MRPL - up 2.15% and Hindustan Petroleum - up 1.98% traded at decent gains.
These are the oil and gas stocks with the lowest trailing price-to-earnings ratios over the last 12 months. A low price-to-earnings ratio shows that you're paying less for every dollar of profit made. Profits can be returned to shareholders in the form of dividends and share buybacks. These are the top oil & gas stocks ranked by a growth model that rates companies based on a 50/50 weight of their most recent quarterly annual percentage sales growth and their most recent quarterly YOY earnings per share growth. Both sales and earnings are crucial factors for the success of a company. Therefore, ranking companies by just one growth metric makes a ranking vulnerable to that quarter's accounting anomalies (e.g., changes in tax laws or restructuring costs), which can cause one number or another to not be representative of the company in general. Companies with quarterly EPS or revenue growth greater than 2,500% were excluded as outliers.

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