As the year draws to a close, the overall impression given by the market through its benchmark indices, the Sensex and Nifty, seems to be good, as the two appreciated by about 15 per cent and returns were much higher for many stocks.
At the same time, investors lost money on many of the big traditional names and returns were below average for stocks of many other companies -- irrespective of whether they belonged to big industrial groups.
Returns have been negative over the past one-year period for at least three Anil Ambani group firms -- Reliance Communications, Reliance Infra and Reliance Capital -- as well as Mukesh Ambani group heavyweight Reliance Industries and Tata group's Tata Power.
At the same time, other big names such as Tulsi Tanti-led Suzlon, JP Associates, K P Singh-led DLF, Sesa Goa and Sterlite Industries of Anil Agarwal group, car major Maruti and Jindal Steel, besides PSU majors like NTPC, PowerGrid and Bhel, also saw negative returns for the year.
Things weren't great either for names such as Anil Ambani group's Reliance Power, Tata Group's Tata Steel, Sunil Mittal-led Bharti Airtel and other giants like Cipla, Ranbaxy, Hindustan Unilever, as well as government-run ONGC and BPCL, where returns were below average.
This marks a significant departure from earlier years when big names were considered by investors as a guarantee for good returns.
"Auto, banking sectors performed well in 2010... and most of the posterboys' firms are not present in these sectors... 2011 should be a great year for all these companies when we will see India's growth getting stabilised," Networth Stock Broking head of institutional business Prakash Diwan said.
Punters also burnt their fingers on a host of mid-cap and small-cap companies as a number of regulatory actions and reports, including those speculative in nature, against wrongdoings by many such companies hit their stock performance.
However, all was not bad for investors when it came to big names. Tata Group's Tata Motors has so far been the best performer of 2010, registering the highest rise of 75 per cent among the 50 stocks that make up the Nifty index.
At the same time, names like Bajaj Auto, Hindalco, Sun Pharma and TCS, which have been mostly considered as defensive stocks where returns are steady but not extraordinary, have also unexpectedly given returns of over 50 per cent.