VituVingiSana wrote:MaichBlack wrote:obiero wrote:obiero wrote:Please remember, tamaa iliuwa fisi. It is prudent that you consider offload of some of the stocks on nearest offer, ONO
1. KQ. NBV KES (31.16). (Start Price: Ksh 3.30; Current Price KES 7.58. Target/ONO Exit Price range Ksh 8.52 by Dec 31st 2026); About 150% Upside
Speculative. Primary appreciation factor is the anticipated KES 69B capital injection by a strategic investor. A high risk play, where the share could face a fresh suspension
2. JUB. NBV KES 783 (Start Price: Ksh 345; Current Price KES 398. Target/ONO Exit Price range Ksh 420 by Dec 31st 2026); About 21% Upside
Dominance in corporate insurance business. Strong sales in run up to the 2027 general election
3. DTB. NBV KES 310 (Start Price: Ksh 117; Current KES 150. Target/ONO Exit Price range Ksh 200 by Dec 31st 2026); About 70% Upside, excluding dividend gain
Grossly undervalued tier 1 banking stock.
4. IMH. NBV 60.4 (Start Price: Ksh 44.90; Current KES 51 Target/ONO Exit Price range Ksh 54 by Dec 31st 2026); About 20% Upside, excluding dividend gain
Emerging giant with steep ROI. Over 20% YoY PBT growth projection in near to mid term
5. TPSEA. NBV KES 60.99 (Start Price: Ksh 15.75; Current KES 16.85. Target/ONO Exit Price range Ksh 30 by Dec 31st 2026); About 90% Upside
Recovering tourism industry should restore lost glory.
You have made a significant gain. It is safe to exit IMH. Thank me later
When this was posted a week ago, we were at 60/= Now at 66.25/=. Clearly the advise was not good for either traders or investors.

I hope you did NOT listen to @Obiero though given your skepticism with his pronouncements you probably did not.
Of course NOT!!
I am an investor not a trader. My timelines are way longer. I do proper analysis of companies before I get in and once I am in I don't get over excited/ nervous by price swings. I will notice them of course but will not act unless fundamentals have changed. This has served me very well.
I am not in the business of making brokers richer while engaging in zero sum maths of +10%, -15%, +20%, -5%, -10%. That is what we used to call kalongo(go) as kids!! And even then we didn't engage in it!
Never count on making a good sale. Have the purchase price be so attractive that even a mediocre sale gives good returns.