| Company | Market Price | Market Cap | 52W Low | 52W High |
|---|---|---|---|---|
317.75 -11.60 (-3.52%)▼ | 3,06,843.67 | 194.8 | 368.45 | |
1,147.80 -30.70 (-2.61%)▼ | 1,11,593.30 | 936.25 | 1314.3 | |
0.00 -38.80 (-2.52%)▼ | 1,21,270.69 | 1335 | 1673 | |
0.00 -8.20 (-2.38%)▼ | 3,26,729.17 | 292.8 | 415.45 | |
0.00 -58.70 (-1.99%)▼ | 1,96,785.96 | 2276.95 | 2977.8 | |
731.85 -14.75 (-1.98%)▼ | 1,57,793.18 | 584.3 | 820.75 | |
0.00 -45.90 (-1.82%)▼ | 2,86,352.24 | 2025 | 3070 | |
5,625.00 -100.00 (-1.75%)▼ | 2,17,456.26 | 3830 | 6232.5 | |
0.00 -35.00 (-1.64%)▼ | 4,18,049.82 | 1679.05 | 2301.9 | |
847.85 -13.50 (-1.57%)▼ | 1,90,531.10 | 546.45 | 864 |
Within Nifty 50, top losers are the constituents that register the largest percentage declines over a defined period. The calculation is straightforward: price change divided by the previous close, ranked from lowest to highest. The label is descriptive rather than diagnostic. A stock can appear because of firm-specific news, sector moves, macro headlines, or simple mean reversion after a strong run. The list helps market participants see where sentiment has turned, but it does not reveal whether the fall is justified by fundamentals. Interpreting the move requires context such as earnings revisions, guidance, volumes, and ownership flows.
Data providers compute the percentage return for each constituent relative to the prior close and order the results from the steepest decline upward. Some dashboards update continuously with last-traded prices; others display official rankings at the close based on the closing price or the volume-weighted average. Filters may exclude names with negligible volumes to avoid distortions. Because intraday rankings can change quickly, professional users pair the list with alerts on news, earnings, or corporate actions to link price to an identifiable driver. Always confirm whether the methodology is intraday or end-of-day and whether corporate actions have been adjusted in the price series.
Downside leaders reveal where risk is accumulating and where assumptions are being questioned. Monitoring the list helps traders manage exposure, set tighter stops, and avoid averaging into weakness without evidence. For portfolio managers, day-after-day appearance can flag a deteriorating theme that warrants de-risking. For fundamental investors, sharp declines often create a research queue: some names will prove to be value traps, but others may be oversold relative to medium-term prospects. Tracking also clarifies index dynamics. When a handful of heavyweights dominate the losers list, the benchmark may fall even if the broader market is stable, signalling concentration risk.
Treat the list as a screen rather than a signal to buy or sell. Start by classifying the driver: results and guidance, regulatory outcomes, commodity or currency effects, management changes, or one-off events. Review earnings transcripts and consensus estimates to see whether the decline aligns with a downgrade cycle. Evaluate balance-sheet strength, cash conversion, and competitive position to judge resilience. For trading, define stops and position sizes in advance and avoid chasing gaps without consolidation. For investing, stage entries, demand confirmation through subsequent disclosures, and write down invalidation points. Documenting the thesis, the driver, and the risk will reduce reactive decisions.
You can view live or delayed rankings on the exchange website and on reputable broker platforms such as Kotak Securities. The page shows price, percentage change, volume, deliverable %, and sector with a visible timestamp. Use alerts to track thresholds (for example, −3% with volume spikes) and link to each stock’s news page for immediate context. Always verify whether the list is intraday or closing-basis before acting.