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Consecutive Circuits

NSE · India

Stocks that hit upper or lower circuit for consecutive trading days

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Consecutive Days
Last session only
Circuit Type
Search
Upper Circuit
1d consecutive
Lower Circuit
1d consecutive
Avg Upper Move
1d cumulative
Avg Lower Move
1d cumulative
Upper Circuit
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Lower Circuit
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How Consecutive Circuits Work

What does "consecutive" mean?

A stock appears here only if it hit the same circuit (upper or lower) on every one of the last N trading sessions you selected. For example, selecting 3 days shows stocks that hit circuit on 3 consecutive trading days — no gaps allowed.

Why does this matter?

Consecutive circuit hits signal extreme momentum — either strong buying pressure (upper) or panic selling (lower). These stocks often have low liquidity, wide spreads, and high volatility. Always check the circuit band and volume before trading.

Upper Circuit

Close equals the day's high. No sellers at this price — demand exceeds supply. Stocks can stay locked in upper circuit for multiple days if there are no sellers.

Lower Circuit

Close equals the day's low. No buyers at this price — supply exceeds demand. Stocks locked in lower circuit for multiple days indicate severe distress or bad news.