Wipro intent guide
A search-intent guide for verifying Wipro’s long-term wealth story with raw prices, bonus history, dividends, and current LTP logic.
Direct answer
The honest answer depends on whether you are quoting a share-count illustration, a rupee investment backtest, or a total-return view that includes dividend cash. These are not the same number, and mixing them is why Wipro stories often go viral for the wrong reason.
Bonus history guide
Understand how Wipro’s bonus chain affects shares held, why that still needs current price, and how to avoid inflated long-term return claims.
Direct answer
Wipro’s bonus history matters because it changes the number of shares held, but bonus history alone is not the current value. The current value is shares held today multiplied by today’s price, plus any accumulated dividend cash if you include payouts.
Reliance IPO guide
A guide to answering the Reliance IPO return question with one explicit window, one venue, and separate handling of raw price, corporate actions, and dividends.
Direct answer
A truthful Reliance IPO answer is not one timeless headline number. You need one venue, one start price, one endpoint date, and a clear rule for whether dividends and corporate actions are included. Once those assumptions are fixed, the result becomes auditable instead of anecdotal.
TCS IPO guide
A practical way to evaluate TCS from IPO to today using one dated window, an unadjusted price path, and a full owner-return view with dividends.
Direct answer
TCS looks different depending on whether you measure price only or owner return. For a fair answer, keep the raw chart unadjusted, add dividend cash separately, and attach the result to one explicit endpoint date.
Infosys intent guide
Use action-aware math to see what an Infosys IPO-era investment is worth now and where the return actually came from.
Direct answer
For Infosys, the key is not just the final multiple. The more useful question is how much of the return came from the price regime, how much from corporate actions, and what the current price says about where the cycle stands now.
HDFC Bank guide
A guide to checking HDFC Bank’s IPO-to-today return with one clean window, one endpoint, and a full owner-return view instead of price-only storytelling.
Direct answer
HDFC Bank is usually discussed as a price-compounding story, but the honest answer still needs dividend cash, exact start-date assumptions, and one explicit endpoint. Without those, the headline result is cleaner than reality.
Index return guide
A practical guide to the Nifty 50 PR vs TRI question, so investors know when price return is enough and when total return is the only fair benchmark.
Direct answer
If the question is investor outcome or benchmark fairness, total return is usually the right answer. Price return is still useful, but it should describe index-level move, not the full owner experience.
Claim audit guide
A practical guide for checking whether a multibagger claim is real, exaggerated, or mixing incompatible baselines.
Direct answer
Start by asking what exactly was multiplied. If the claim is switching between shares, rupees, price moves, and current value without clear labels, it is not yet a trustworthy multibagger claim.
Corporate action guide
A practical guide to the three most-confused corporate actions in Indian equities: what each event changes, what it does not, and how to audit the result properly.
Direct answer
A bonus changes units held, a split changes denomination and share count, and a dividend creates cash per share. None of them should be treated as the same thing, and none should be presented as free return without a dated ledger.
Return method guide
A practical landing page for investors who want the real answer after splits, bonuses, and dividends instead of a misleading adjusted chart shortcut.
Direct answer
The actual return comes from three layers combined correctly: raw price change, share-count change from splits/bonuses, and cash received from dividends. If one layer is missing, the answer is incomplete.
IT comparison guide
A comparison-intent page for investors deciding between Infosys and TCS using the same action-aware methodology and current endpoint logic.
Direct answer
There is no single timeless winner. The better answer depends on start year, payout treatment, and current endpoint date, which is exactly why side-by-side action-aware comparison matters.