Stock Name | LTP (₹) | % Change | Volume | Market Cap (₹ Cr) | P/E Ratio | EPS (₹) | 52W High | 52W Low | 1M Return | 3M Return | 1Yr Return | 3Yr Return | 5Yr Return | Dividend % |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mrf Ltd | ₹1,22,405.00 | -0.28 | 4,705 | ₹52,076.04 | 21.46 | ₹4,408.68 | ₹1,63,600.00 | ₹1,22,000.00 | -4.78 | -10.59 | -10.95 | +24.03 | +49.38 | +0.15 |
| Elcid Investments Ltd | ₹1,17,495.00 | +0.00 | 8 | ₹2,343.80 | 21.60 | ₹7,649.78 | ₹1,37,000.00 | ₹1,11,670.00 | -4.64 | -12.17 | -12.17 | -12.17 | - | +0.02 |
| Page Industries Ltd | ₹37,975.00 | -2.39 | 17,525 | ₹43,360.85 | 56.77 | ₹653.70 | ₹50,590.00 | ₹29,805.00 | +7.34 | +23.37 | -16.64 | +1.99 | +28.73 | +1.26 |
| Bosch Ltd | ₹37,850.00 | +0.08 | 48,362 | ₹1,11,527.25 | 40.22 | ₹683.12 | ₹41,945.00 | ₹28,610.00 | +1.35 | +17.89 | +19.89 | +99.11 | +139.57 | +1.41 |
| Honeywell Automation India Ltd | ₹36,025.00 | +2.56 | 13,721 | ₹31,044.40 | 59.13 | ₹595.00 | ₹41,450.00 | ₹26,220.00 | +19.72 | +14.17 | -9.89 | -14.37 | -14.36 | +0.29 |
| Hitachi Energy India Ltd | ₹33,235.00 | -3.97 | 2,16,463 | ₹1,54,217.70 | 156.12 | ₹86.09 | ₹38,785.00 | ₹16,111.00 | +4.82 | +37.21 | +93.84 | +780.95 | +1,771.52 | +0.03 |
| 3M India Ltd | ₹31,615.00 | -0.53 | 1,220 | ₹35,830.41 | 58.61 | ₹422.60 | ₹38,030.00 | ₹28,275.00 | +0.33 | -6.45 | +8.02 | +19.86 | +22.14 | +1.53 |
| Abbott India Ltd | ₹26,520.00 | +1.59 | 9,497 | ₹55,557.79 | 35.80 | ₹665.62 | ₹37,000.00 | ₹25,150.00 | -6.08 | -2.63 | -17.51 | +18.87 | +62.08 | +1.60 |
| Shree Cement Ltd | ₹23,850.00 | +1.86 | 54,483 | ₹84,500.03 | 48.46 | ₹311.19 | ₹32,490.00 | ₹22,550.00 | -7.10 | -2.27 | -21.49 | -8.95 | -17.04 | +0.53 |
| Ptc Industries Limited | ₹18,456.00 | -1.26 | 11,575 | ₹28,000.08 | 275.70 | ₹40.72 | ₹19,851.00 | ₹13,251.00 | +9.58 | +5.86 | +27.38 | +407.36 | - | +0.00 |
Key Points:
The most common reason behind very high share prices in India is that companies have not split their stock.
However, this is only part of the story. Understanding the underlying factors helps interpret these stocks correctly.
Key Points:
A stock split increases the number of shares while proportionally reducing the price. For example, a ₹90,000 stock
undergoing a 1:10 split becomes ₹9,000 per share, while total value remains unchanged.
Some companies choose not to split their stock to discourage short-term speculation and maintain a long-term investor base.
As a result, their per-share prices become very high over time.
Key Points:
Stocks that have compounded consistently over decades can reach very high price levels without any splits.
A stock growing at 15% annually over 30–40 years can naturally move into the ₹1,00,000+ range.
These prices are a reflection of long-term value creation rather than short-term speculation.
Key Points:
Some companies maintain a low number of outstanding shares. When combined with strong profitability,
this leads to high earnings per share (EPS), which directly impacts stock price.
For example, a company with ₹5,000 EPS trading at a P/E of 30 will have a share price of ₹1,50,000.
Key Points:
Key Points:
A stock split increases the number of shares while reducing the price proportionally.
The overall value of holdings remains unchanged.
This is a strategic choice and does not indicate business quality.
Key Points:
Price filters allow investors to compare stocks within similar ranges, improving decision-making.
Key Points:
EPS represents profit per share, and P/E shows how much investors are paying per unit of earnings.
For example:
The same price can represent very different valuations. A high-priced stock can be cheaper in valuation terms than a
low-priced stock, depending on earnings.
Key Points:
A stock near its 52-week high suggests strong performance or positive sentiment, while a stock near its low may
indicate weakness or negative expectations.
However, the range matters more than the absolute price. Two stocks at the same price can have completely different
trends based on their high-low range.
Key Points:
These stocks often reflect long-term management thinking and stable ownership structures.
Helps investors understand which stocks fit their capital constraints.
Some high-priced stocks are smaller companies with low float and strong promoter holding.
Helps determine whether price growth is driven by earnings or valuation expansion.
MRF Limited has historically held the position of the highest-priced stock on Indian exchanges, with a share price that has exceeded ₹1,00,000 per share at various points. MRF has never undergone a stock split since listing, which is the primary reason for its very high per-share price. The ranking changes over time as prices move, so the screener above reflects the current real-time ranking updated with a 15-minute delay during market hours.
Share price and valuation are not the same thing at all.A stock at ₹2,00,000 isn’t automatically expensive, just like a ₹200 stock isn’t automatically cheap. What really matters is how much you’re paying for its earnings — for example, a P/E of 12 versus 60 can completely change the picture. The sticker price per share doesn’t tell you value on its own. That’s why investors look at ratios like P/E, P/B, and EV/EBITDA — they help show whether a stock is actually cheap or expensive underneath the surface. The screener shows both price and P/E together so you can see the difference clearly instead of getting misled by share price alone.
Some management teams and promoters believe that a high per-share price attracts a more patient, long-term-oriented shareholder base and discourages short-term speculation. Others simply haven’t felt the need to split because liquidity hasn’t been a problem. The decision to split or not split is a capital management choice that has no direct impact on the business’s earnings, market cap, or intrinsic value. It does affect accessibility for small retail investors, which is one reason many growing companies eventually choose to split.
Market capitalisation is just share price multiplied by the total number of shares a company has issued. Take two companies, both worth ₹10,000 crore on paper. One has a share price of ₹1,00,000 but only 10 lakh shares in existence. The other trades at ₹100 but has 100 crore shares floating around. Same size. Completely different price tags. That 1,000x gap in share price tells you nothing about which company is bigger — which is exactly why market cap, not the number on the ticker, is the right way to measure a company's size.
EPS (Earnings Per Share) is basically the company’s total profit over the last 12 months divided by the number of shares. In simple terms, it tells you how much profit each share actually made in a year. This screener uses TTM EPS because it helps you quickly see the real earnings power of a stock. When you look at it alongside the share price, you can instantly figure out the P/E ratio and understand whether a stock is truly expensive or just has a high price because it has fewer shares and strong earnings per share.
It simply means the stock is hovering near the highest price it has touched in the last year. That usually suggests things have been going well — buyers have steadily pushed the price up, either because the business is doing better or because confidence around it is strong. But a 52-week high by itself doesn’t tell you if the stock is expensive. Price alone isn’t value. That’s why you still need to check earnings, P/E, and EPS. Some of India’s strongest wealth creators have stayed near their 52-week highs for long stretches — not because they were overhyped, but because their earnings kept rising and the market kept adjusting upwards with them.
Neither, really. The per-share price doesn't tell you anything useful about whether a stock is worth owning. A ₹50 stock can be a terrible investment. A ₹50,000 stock can be a fantastic one. What actually matters is the business behind it — how fast it's growing, what it earns relative to what you're paying, whether management has a track record of creating value, and whether the company has a durable edge over its competitors. None of that shows up in the share price. The price is just the number on the ticket. The business is the thing you're actually buying.
Price data and the resulting LTP ranking update with a 15-minute delay during NSE and BSE trading hours. Since the list is sorted by LTP in real time, the ranking can shift during market hours as prices move. The 52-week high and low update daily based on the closing price. Fundamental data including EPS and P/E updates quarterly after each results season, within 24 hours of BSE and NSE filings.
Use the price filters to cut straight to what you care about. If ₹50,000-plus stocks aren't relevant to your portfolio size, filter them out. If you're only looking at the premium tier, filter everything else out. Sector and market cap filters work the same way, and you can flip between NSE and BSE whenever you need to. This screener lists all NSE and BSE stocks ranked by Last Traded Price in descending order, updated with a 15-minute delay during market hours. The ranking reflects per-share price only and does not imply any assessment of company quality, valuation, or investment suitability. All information is for reference purposes only and is not a recommendation to buy or sell any security. Please conduct your own research or consult a SEBI-registered investment advisor before making any investment decision.