• Invest
    Investment Suite
    Stocks
    Mutual Funds
    Future and Options
    IPO
    Exchange Traded Funds
    Commodity
    Stockcase (Stock Baskets)
    Currency
    Non Convertible Debentures
    Sovereign Gold Bond
    Exclusive
    NRI Account
    Private Client Group
    Features
    SipIt
    MTF
    Investment Suite
    Exclusive
    Features
  • Platform
    Product Suite
    Kotak Neo App & Web
    Nest Trading Terminal
    NEO Trade APIs
    Features and Tools
    MTF
    Securities Accepted as Collateral
    Margin Requirements
    Equity Screeners
    Payoff Analyzer
    Calculators
    SIP Calculator
    Lumpsum Calculator
    Brokerage Calculator
    Margin Calculator
    MTF Calculator
    SWP Calculator
    CAGR Calculator
    Simple Interest Calculator
    ELSS Calculator
    Step up SIP Calculator
    All Calculators
    Product Suite
    Features and Tools
    Calculators
  • Pricing
  • Research
    Research Calls
    Long Term calls
    Short Term calls
    Intraday calls
    Derivatives calls
    Pick of the week
    Top Monthly Picks
    Research Reports
    Fundamental Research Report
    Technical Research Report
    Derivative Research Report
    Research Calls
    Research Reports
  • Market
    Stocks
    Market Movers
    Large Cap
    Mid Cap
    Small Cap
    Indices
    Nifty 50
    Bank Nifty
    FinNifty
    Nifty Midcap India
    VIX
    All Indian Indices
    Mutual Funds
    SBI Mutual Funds
    HDFC Mutual Funds
    Axis Mutual Funds
    ICICI Prudential Mutual Funds
    Nippon India Mutual Funds
    All AMC's
    IPO
    Upcoming IPO
    Current IPO
    Closed IPO
    Recently Listed IPO
    Stocks
    Indices
    Mutual Funds
    IPO
  • Learn
    Resource
    Market Ready
    Kotak Insights
    Infographic
    Podcast
    Webinars
    Youtube Channel
    Quarterly Results
    Investing Guide
    Demat Account
    Trading Account
    Share Market
    Intraday Trading
    IPO
    Mutual Funds
    Commodities
    Currency
    Futures & Options
    Derivatives
    Margin Trading
    Events
    Budget 2024
    Muhurat Trading
    Share Market Holiday
    Market Outlook 2025
    Resource
    Investing Guide
    Events
  • Partner
    Business Associates
    Fund Expert
    Kotak Connect Plus
    Startup connect
  • Support
    FAQs
    Circulars
    Bulletins
    Contact Us
    Forms Download
    Get your Statement

3 Things About Circuit Filters

  •  3 min
  • 0
  • 21 Feb 2023

Here are three key things to know about circuit filters:

What Are Circuit Filters:

Circuit filters are basically a range provided for each index. It contains an upper limit and a lower circuit limit. The index cannot fall below the lower limit or climb above the upper limit. These limits are based on the previous day's closing price. Circuit limits are just for indices; stocks have price bands, which act in the same way. However, price bands are only available for stocks which have no derivative contracts. Even if the stock has no derivative, but is part of an index which has its own derivative contract, it will not have price bands. Also, price bands are controlled by the stock exchange, while circuit filters are set by SEBI. The market regulator has set circuit filters only for the Sensex and Nifty benchmarks.

Breaching A Limit:

If the stock or index touches any of the upper or lower limits, trading is suspended. The amount of time for which trading is stopped depends on the extent of breach. The greater the change in prices, the longer the halt. The Sebi has set circuit breaker limits at 10%, 15% and 20% for the indices. If the 10% limit is hit, trading can be halted between 15-45 minutes depending on the time of breach. The 15% limit leads to a halt in trading for 45-75 minutes, while the 20% limit leads to closure of markets for the rest of the day. If the circuit limit is breached before 1 pm, then the trading is closed for a longer period of time - 45 minutes for the 10% limit and 75 minutes for the 15% level. If the breach happens after 2.30 pm, in the last leg of the trading session, then there is no halt.

Need For Filters, Bands:

Stocks and indices move on the basis of buy and sell trades in the market. However, in the event of news - either negative or positive - the stock or index can move by a great amount. This, however, increases volatility in the market, and may put retail investors at a disadvantage. This is because retail investors are almost always the last to react to news and sell or buy a stock. To avoid such volatility, the SEBI has instituted circuit filters and price ranges in the market. These also help limit speculative trading, which could result in big losses. The upper limit is to ensure that a stock does not rise indefinitely. Otherwise, short sellers - those who borrow stocks to sell in anticipation of a fall in prices, and later buy back at the end of the market session - do not face severe losses. Thirdly, even long-term investors benefit from such limits. Imagine, if you bought a stock at Rs 100 five years back. You are comfortable that it has touched Rs 500 today, only to let it fall back to Rs 100-levels in the course of one single day. A circuit limit avoids such drastic crashes.

Also Read

SEBI attempts to strengthen market-wide circuit breaker systems Read more

What Circuit Filters in Stock Markets Mean Read more

Did you enjoy this article?

0 people liked this article.

What could we have done to make this article better?

Enjoy Free Demat Account Opening
+91 -

personImage
Enjoy Free Demat Account Opening
+91 -

N
N
[object Object]
[object Object]
[object Object]
[object Object]
[object Object]
[object Object]
[object Object]
[object Object]
[object Object]
[object Object]
[object Object]
[object Object]
[object Object]
[object Object]
[object Object]
[object Object]
[object Object]
[object Object]
[object Object]
[object Object]
[object Object]
[object Object]