Name | LTP | Change (%) | Market Cap(Cr.) | Today's Low |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vishnu Prakash R Punglia Ltd | ₹36.33 | -0.79 | ₹456.82 | ₹35.99 |
| Mep Infrastructure Developers Ltd | ₹0.92 | -1.08 | ₹17.50 | ₹0.92 |
| Mcon Rasayan India Ltd | ₹40.00 | -1.23 | ₹29.68 | ₹40.00 |
| Cedaar Textile Limited | ₹24.00 | -1.23 | ₹33.72 | ₹23.50 |
| Sis Ltd | ₹273.45 | -1.37 | ₹3,937.96 | ₹271.55 |
| Dar Credit and Capital Ltd | ₹35.00 | -1.69 | ₹50.82 | ₹35.00 |
| Ikio Lighting Ltd | ₹118.50 | -1.84 | ₹938.19 | ₹117.21 |
| Saraswati Saree Depot Ltd | ₹55.20 | -1.95 | ₹222.99 | ₹55.20 |
| Ce Info Systems Ltd | ₹869.90 | -1.97 | ₹4,856.00 | ₹866.30 |
| Teerth Gopicon Ltd | ₹36.95 | -1.99 | ₹45.24 | ₹36.95 |
A stock at its all time low has fallen below every price it has ever traded at. That is not a routine pullback. It means the market has consistently rejected this stock at every level above where it sits today. Before you do anything, you need to understand what got it there.
All time lows are rarely sudden. They build up over time, months of selling, failed recoveries, and lower highs. At some point the stock just stops finding buyers at any meaningful level. When you see this pattern, it usually means something deeper is wrong, not just a bad quarter or a rough patch in the market.
Sometimes the business is the actual problem, bad earnings, heavy debt, weak management, or a regulatory issue. But sometimes a perfectly fine company just gets caught in a broader market crash or a sector-wide fall and drops without any real fault of its own. These are two completely different situations and they call for two completely different responses. One could be worth exploring. The other is better left alone. Working out which one you are looking at takes time and honest research but it is the most important step you can take before touching any stocks at all time low.
People mix these two up quite a bit. A 52 week low simply means the stock is at its lowest point in the past year. It may have traded even lower a few years back. An all time low means the stock has gone below every single price it has ever traded at since listing. That is a far more serious situation. Stocks near record low on a yearly basis tend to bounce back more often. Stocks at a genuine all time low have a much harder recovery ahead of them.
Buying something at its lowest price ever feels like the right call. But stocks at all time low are not always the bargain they appear to be. A cheap price means very little if the problems that pushed it there are still very much alive. It is worth slowing down and thinking before you put real money in.
Some stocks land at all time low because something went wrong temporarily, a rough quarter, an overblown market reaction, or a short-term setback the company can realistically recover from. The business itself is still holding up. Those cases can be genuinely interesting. But plenty of stocks at all time low are sitting there because the business has been quietly falling apart for years. They look cheap, and then they get cheaper. All time low meaning is not the same thing as undervalued. The price is just a number, what drove it there is the real story.
When you are looking at stocks hitting an all time low today, go beyond the price chart. Has the selling started to slow down? Are the recent quarterly numbers looking any better than before? Has the company actually done something, paid off some debt, brought in new leadership, or landed a decent order? If you cannot find anything concrete that has changed, what feels like a bottom might just be a rest stop before the next drop. Stocks near record low need real proof of change, not just hope.
Most people skip this part and wish they had not. Before you consider any stock at all time low, sit with the financials for a bit. How much debt is the company carrying? Is cash flow positive? Are earnings showing even a small sign of steadying? A company that is financially solid but temporarily out of favour with the market is a completely different situation from one that is genuinely struggling to stay in business. Stocks at all time low backed by a clean balance sheet have a real shot at turning around. Without that financial base, a low price is not an opportunity, it is just a warning dressed up as one.
A stock sitting at its lowest price ever does not mean the worst is behind it. That is honestly where most people go wrong. All time low stocks can look like a bargain from the outside, but the risks hiding underneath are very real. Here is what you should know before you consider getting in.
When a stock breaks its all time low, there is nothing underneath it to break the fall. No old support zones, no previous buyers ready to come back in. It is open ground and the stock can keep sliding further than anyone expects. A lot of investors jump into stocks hitting all time low convinced they have found the bottom, only to watch it fall another 30 or 40 percent from there. The truth is nobody knows where the actual bottom is until it is already behind them. Give the price time to settle and show some real stability before you think about entering.
By the time a stock gets to all time low territory, most of the bigger investors have long since packed up and left. Volumes shrink, the order book gets very thin, and the gap between buying and selling prices grows wider. In that kind of market, even a relatively small sell order can knock the price down quite a bit. And if you need to get out in a hurry, you will likely find it harder and more expensive than you planned. Smaller stocks at all time low on NSE and BSE tend to feel this the most since they never had deep liquidity in the first place.
Not every all time low stock falls off a cliff. Some just quietly sit near the bottom for years and go absolutely nowhere. That slow, silent drain on your capital is easy to overlook but it adds up over time. Every year that money sits in a stock going nowhere is a year it could have been working somewhere else. And in cases where a company eventually hits insolvency or gets delisted, you could lose most or everything you put in. With stocks at all time low, always keep your position size reasonable and have a stop-loss set from the start. It is a simple step but it is the one thing that keeps a bad trade from turning into a serious loss.
When a stock hits its all time low, it has fallen below every price it has traded at since listing. This usually triggers more selling as confidence drops further.
It depends on why the stock is there. If the business is solid and the fall is sentiment-driven, it can work. If the company has real problems, stocks at all time low can keep falling no matter how cheap they look.
Some do, many do not. Recovery needs something real to change, better earnings, lower debt, or returning investor confidence. Without that, a stock can stay at all time low levels for years or eventually get delisted.
It is the lowest price a stock has ever traded at since listing on NSE or BSE. Screeners flag the stock the moment its current price touches or breaks that historical low.
A 52 week low covers only the past twelve months. An all time low goes back to the stock's very first day of listing. A stock can be at a 52 week low and still sit well above its all time low. The all time low is the more serious signal by far.
Yes. Broad market crashes or sharp sector sell-offs can drag even healthy companies to all time low prices. There may be an opportunity in those cases but always confirm the fundamentals are still intact before acting.