Daily Archives: February 25, 2026

ipo-subscription-status
IPO Subscription Status

IPO Subscripton Status 

🕗 Last Updated @ 6.01 AM, 25 February 2026
by Chanakya – Research-Grade Media
Next Update @ 12.01 PM

Chanakya Subscription Barometer 8 PM Edition of 21.01.2026

Chanakya IPO Lab-Subscription Dissection EOD 21.01.2026

PNGC Reva Diamond IPO – D – 1
Size Rs.380 Cr.
Open  24/02 Close 26/02
QIB B HNI S HNI HNI RII Total
0.96 0.06 0.10 0.07 0.41 0.63
Subscription Review- 9,555  applications received
Initial flow of subscription has been weak, may due to overall weak sentiment of the market

Clean Max Enviro IPO – D – 2
Size Rs.165 Cr.
Open  23/02 Close 25/02
QIB B HNI S HNI HNI RII Total
1.27 0.63 0.04 0.44 0.04 0.47
Subscription Review- 22,844  applications received
Because of few QIB applications, the IPO appears to have received good subscription.
Retail flow is very weak
Shri Ram Twistex IPO – D – 2
Size Rs.110.24 Cr.
Open  23/02 Close 25/02
QIB B HNI S HNI HNI RII Total
0.00 2.88 2.61 2.70 3.49 0.76
Subscription Review-  23,398 applications received
Kiaasa Retail -SME- IPO D – 2
Net Size – Rs.69.72 Crore
Q-50%,NII-15% RII-35%
Open  23/02 Close 25/02
QIB NII x RII x Total x Applications
1.00 0.61 0.59 0.60 951
Applications- With few large amount-QIB applications, IPO appears to have receive good subscription. Trend is weak.
GMP – 0
Mobilise App -SME- IPO D – 2 
Net Size – Rs.20.10 Crore
Q-50%,NII-15% RII-35%
Open  20/02 Close 24/02
QIB NII x RII x Total x Applications
0.64 20.03 17.08 13.03 5375
Applications- With help of few large HNI applications, the IPO appears to be fully subscribed. In realisty the trend is not so impressive.
GMP – 0
Accord Tranformer -SME- IPO D – 2 
Net Size – Rs.25.59 Crore
Q-50%,NII-15% RII-35%
Open  23/02 Close 25/02
QIB NII x RII x Total x Applications
1.08 49.47 59.74 40.78 20,948
Applications-
GMP – 0

Gaudium IVF IPOClosed
Size Rs.165 Cr.
Open  20/02 Close 24/02
QIB B HNI S HNI HNI RII Total
1.62 12.71 16.73 14.05 7.60 7.27
Subscription Review-  249,109 applications received
Manilam Industries -SME- IPO Closed
Net Size – Rs.7.53 Crore
Q-50%,NII-15% RII-35%
Open  20/02 Close 24/02
QIB NII x RII x Total x Applications
2.24 12.49 5.88 6.25 3,739
Applications-
GMP – 0

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Understanding IPO Subscription Trends and Their Link with Grey Market Premium (GMP)

The subscription pattern of any IPO has always been a key indicator of investor confidence and market appetite. In the Indian primary markets, investors track three elements closely: Grey Market Premium (GMP), overall subscription status, and market fancy for the sector or company. These three forces constantly influence each other and collectively determine the sentiment around any upcoming IPO. Understanding how these factors interact helps investors make more informed decisions, especially when the markets are volatile.

1. How Grey Market Premium Influences IPO Subscription

The Grey Market Premium is an unofficial indicator of expected listing gains. Although it is not regulated and has no formal link with the exchanges, it shapes early sentiment in a powerful way. GMP acts as a leading indicator because it begins to develop even before the IPO opens for subscription. Traders and operators start evaluating the company’s fundamentals, market conditions, peer valuations, and demand from large investors to estimate a tentative premium.

When the GMP is strong, retail investors and small HNIs generally become more enthusiastic, assuming that the issue may deliver attractive listing gains. As a result, the early hours of the IPO often witness higher participation from these categories. This surge in participation further creates visibility on social media, Telegram channels, and brokerage updates, reinforcing the belief that the IPO is “hot.”

However, strong GMP is not a guarantee of high subscription. Institutional investors, especially QIBs, rely less on grey market cues and more on the company’s financials and long-term prospects. Still, a high GMP often builds a positive environment, which indirectly influences overall subscription interest.

2. Role of Market Fancy and Sector Sentiment

Market fancy plays a decisive role in determining how strongly an IPO gets subscribed. For example, sectors like renewable energy, fintech, specialty chemicals, and defence recently attracted significant attention. When the broader market trend favors a sector, investors treat related IPOs with more confidence. A company that operates in a fashionable sector often enjoys better brand perception even if its financials are moderate.

In bullish phases, fancy alone can push subscription numbers up despite not-so-attractive valuations. Conversely, in bearish markets, even fundamentally strong companies struggle to attract retail participation if the overall market sentiment is negative. This is why IPOs that were expected to do well sometimes receive only average subscription when the index experiences sudden corrections.

The timing of the IPO compared with market conditions matters greatly. If the IPO opens during a sharp market fall, the GMP may decline intraday because traders become risk-averse. Retail investors also hold back their bids until the final day, waiting to observe QIB interest.

3. How Subscription Status Impacts GMP

Just as GMP influences subscriptions, the reverse is equally true. Once the IPO opens, the subscription numbers start dictating the premium in the grey market. The QIB quota is watched the closest because institutional investors are considered more rational and data-driven. A strong QIB bid on the second or third day often pushes the GMP sharply higher.

If QIBs bid aggressively early, operators usually interpret this as a sign of heavy institutional confidence, prompting them to quote a higher premium. This positive momentum quickly spreads across the market, encouraging HNIs and retail investors to participate more actively.

Similarly, the NII (HNI) category plays a critical role, especially in SME and mid-sized mainboard issues. Large HNIs typically wait until the last day to place leveraged bids. When the NII book crosses 20–30 times, the grey market usually reacts instantly, as traders believe that leveraged interest will lead to stronger demand and a premium listing.

On the other hand, if the subscription numbers remain weak on the first two days, or if QIBs show no interest until the final hours, the GMP softens. Traders interpret slow subscription as a lack of institutional conviction. Retail investors also turn cautious, and the grey market premium drops until strong bids appear.

4. Final-Day Subscription Spike and GMP Reaction

The last day of the IPO often sees the biggest movement in subscription numbers. Retail participation peaks during the final hours, and HNIs deploy leveraged funds. This sudden rise in demand often leads to an increase in GMP either during the afternoon session or immediately after the market closes. If QIB interest is strong on the final day, the GMP may jump dramatically, sometimes even doubling from the day before.

However, if the QIB portion remains undersubscribed until close, GMP collapses quickly. A falling GMP on the final day becomes a warning signal for short-term investors expecting listing gains.

Conclusion

IPO subscription trends and GMP are deeply interconnected. GMP builds early sentiment, market fancy shapes broader expectations, and subscription numbers finally determine the direction of GMP. Understanding this cycle helps investors interpret grey market signals more intelligently instead of blindly following them. While GMP provides a useful reference for short-term expectations, the subscription pattern—especially QIB response—remains the strongest indicator of likely listing performance.

IPO Subscription Status Live Bidding

Retail, HNI & QIB Subscription data

Grey Market Premium

Grey Market Premium

🕗 Last Update: 25 February 2026, 6.00 AM

Frequently Asked Questions:

What is Grey market?

A Grey Market also know as a parallel market, is an unofficial stock and applications market.

In this market, the investors trade for shares or applications before the shares are officially listed for trading in the stock exchange. Trading in grey market stocks in India is done in cash and in person.

No third-party firms such as Stock Exchanges or SEBI back this transaction. Kostak and Grey Market Premium are the two well-known terms in the Initial Public Offering (IPO) Grey Market.

Grey markets in India have existed as a parallel market for stocks for a long time, and traders and investors verify their authenticity.

What is Grey market Premium?

Grey Market Premiu is popularly known as GMP. The amount at which the IPO shares are traded is known as grey market premium. The company’s stock that will come up with the IPO is bought and sold outside the stock market. The live grey market premium is believed to reflect how the IPO will react on its listing day.

Lets understand with an example

Let’s assume that the issue price of Stock WIN is Rs. 100. And the grey market premium is Rs. 300. This suggests that investors are ready to purchase the shares of Company WIN for Rs.400 (100+300).

What is Subject to rate in an IPO?

Subject to Sauda price is an extension to the IPO Kostak rate. In subject to sauda, the buyer of the application agrees to pay a fixed price against the IPO application only if the seller of the IPO application receives allotment in the IPO. The subject-to-Sauda rates are generally higher than the Kostak rates.

Considering the above example, the buyer of the applicant agrees to pay an additional Rs 4,000 for the entire application provided the IPO applicant receives the allotment.

In this case, if the applicant secures no allotment, the deal gets cancelled. However, if the IPO applicant receives the allotment the buyer of the IPO application pays Rs 4,000 as the premium. The seller of the applicant either passes the listing gains to the seller or shares to the buyer of the IPO application for Rs 11,500 (7,500 + 4,000).

Note: Rs 7,500 is the amount for 15 shares bought at Rs 500. Rs 4000 is the premium buyer paid for the entire application.

What is Kostak & Sauda rates?

The IPO Kostak price is an agreed-upon price at which IPO applications are sold and purchased, regardless of their allotment status. The Kostak Price is the fixed price paid by the buyer of the IPO Application to the seller of the IPO Application.

The Kostak rate is the price for the entire IPO application and not per share. It is a price mutually agreed between the buyer and seller.

For example, an investor has applied for 15 shares at Rs 500 in an IPO amounting to Rs 7500. Now there is another investor who is bullish about this upcoming IPO and agrees to pay Rs 1,000 as the premium to purchase the entire IPO application. In this case, the seller of the IPO application secures a fixed profit of Rs 1,000 irrespective of whether he secures an allotment or not.

If the seller receives allotment and the listing happens at a premium, the seller is required to pass the listing gains to the buyer or credit the shares to the purchaser against Rs 8,500 (7,500 +1,000).

If the seller does not receive the allotment, still the buyer of the IPO application needs to pay Rs 1,000 to the seller of the IPO application.

How GMP is calculated?

There are many variables which determine the price of an IPO on the grey market.

The Grey market Premium (GMP) over an above the IPO issue price is determined by demand and supply statistics, similar to stock prices. I expect the grey market pricing to be lower. The players in the grey market estimate the listing price for an IPO and the difference between the estimated listing price and the issue price is considered as GMP.

The profitability of an Issuer company and the valuation as which the shares are offered also affect the estimate of listing price.

Types of Trading in Grey market?


There are two types of trading in the grey market-

1.Trading of Applications, i.e., selling or buying IPO applications at a particular rate or premium.
2. Trading of Allotted Shares, i.e., selling or buying the allocated IPO shares before they get listed in the stock exchanges.

How do you calculate listing price from GMP?

GMP or Grey market Premium is rough indication of the premium/discount over the IPO-issue-price. At this juncture, we shall not go into the nitty gritty of how GMP is arrived at or quoted in the Grey market.
The players add up GMP to the IPO-Issue-price and estimate the IPO listing price.

Let’s understand:
The GMP of an IPO of company SUCCESS is Rs. 25 and the shares are offered at Rs. 50. Then the shares are estimated to get listed at Rs 75 (Rs. 50+ Rs. 25 GMP)

Is trading in grey market illegal?

Yes, in simple words, the trading in the grey market is not legal and disapproved by the market regulator SEBI.
Under normal circumstances, market factors determine the GMP, so the chances of fraud are not high in such IPOs. However, many a times, the grey market operator in connivance with the IPO-promoter/its lead manager manipulates the GMP, to attract the gullible and innocent investors to apply for the IPO and the investors incur losses. 
To prevent such frauds, the market regulator discourages grey market trading.

Who should you contact to trade in Grey Market?

As we know trading in a grey market is not legal, the trading in the grey market is often carried out over phone calls.
There are no such official registered persons or traders for grey market trading.
An investor willing to trade in the grey market needs to find a local dealer who will help find the buyers and sellers.

Quicklinks

How Subject to & Kostak rate is calculated?

What is Grey Market Premium?

What is Grey Market Premium & Subject to rates?

Frequently Asked Questions:

🕗 Last Update: 25 February 2026, 6.00 AM

What is Grey market?

A Grey Market also know as a parallel market, is an unofficial stock and applications market.

In this market, the investors trade for shares or applications before the shares are officially listed for trading in the stock exchange. Trading in grey market stocks in India is done in cash and in person.

No third-party firms such as Stock Exchanges or SEBI back this transaction. Kostak and Grey Market Premium are the two well-known terms in the Initial Public Offering (IPO) Grey Market.

Grey markets in India have existed as a parallel market for stocks for a long time, and traders and investors verify their authenticity.

What is Grey market Premium?

Grey Market Premiu is popularly known as GMP. The amount at which the IPO shares are traded is known as grey market premium. The company’s stock that will come up with the IPO is bought and sold outside the stock market. The live grey market premium is believed to reflect how the IPO will react on its listing day.

Lets understand with an example

Let’s assume that the issue price of Stock WIN is Rs. 100. And the grey market premium is Rs. 300. This suggests that investors are ready to purchase the shares of Company WIN for Rs.400 (100+300).

What is Subject to rate in an IPO?

Subject to Sauda price is an extension to the IPO Kostak rate. In subject to sauda, the buyer of the application agrees to pay a fixed price against the IPO application only if the seller of the IPO application receives allotment in the IPO. The subject-to-Sauda rates are generally higher than the Kostak rates.

Considering the above example, the buyer of the applicant agrees to pay an additional Rs 4,000 for the entire application provided the IPO applicant receives the allotment.

In this case, if the applicant secures no allotment, the deal gets cancelled. However, if the IPO applicant receives the allotment the buyer of the IPO application pays Rs 4,000 as the premium. The seller of the applicant either passes the listing gains to the seller or shares to the buyer of the IPO application for Rs 11,500 (7,500 + 4,000).

Note: Rs 7,500 is the amount for 15 shares bought at Rs 500. Rs 4000 is the premium buyer paid for the entire application.

What is Kostak & Sauda rates?

The IPO Kostak price is an agreed-upon price at which IPO applications are sold and purchased, regardless of their allotment status. The Kostak Price is the fixed price paid by the buyer of the IPO Application to the seller of the IPO Application.

The Kostak rate is the price for the entire IPO application and not per share. It is a price mutually agreed between the buyer and seller.

For example, an investor has applied for 15 shares at Rs 500 in an IPO amounting to Rs 7500. Now there is another investor who is bullish about this upcoming IPO and agrees to pay Rs 1,000 as the premium to purchase the entire IPO application. In this case, the seller of the IPO application secures a fixed profit of Rs 1,000 irrespective of whether he secures an allotment or not.

If the seller receives allotment and the listing happens at a premium, the seller is required to pass the listing gains to the buyer or credit the shares to the purchaser against Rs 8,500 (7,500 +1,000).

If the seller does not receive the allotment, still the buyer of the IPO application needs to pay Rs 1,000 to the seller of the IPO application.

How GMP is calculated?

There are many variables which determine the price of an IPO on the grey market.
The Grey market Premium (GMP) over an above the IPO issue price is determined by demand and supply statistics, similar to stock prices. I expect the grey market pricing to be lower. The players in the grey market estimate the listing price for an IPO and the difference between the estimated listing price and the issue price is considered as GMP.
The profitability of an Issuer company and the valuation as which the shares are offered also affect the estimate of listing price.

How Subject to & Kostak rate is calculated?

Types of Trading in Grey market?

Types of Trading in Grey Market
There are two types of trading in the grey market-

1.Trading of Applications, i.e., selling or buying IPO applications at a particular rate or premium.
2. Trading of Allotted Shares, i.e., selling or buying the allocated IPO shares before they get listed in the stock exchanges.

How do you calculate listing price from GMP?

GMP or Grey market Premium is rough indication of the premium/discount over the IPO-issue-price. At this juncture, we shall not go into the nitty gritty of how GMP is arrived at or quoted in the Grey market. The players add up GMP to the IPO-Issue-price and estimate the IPO listing price.
Let’s understand:
The GMP of an IPO of company SUCCESS is Rs. 25 and the shares are offered at Rs. 50. Then the shares are estimated to get listed at Rs 75 (Rs. 50+ Rs. 25 GMP)

Is trading in grey market illegal?

Yes, in simple words, the trading in the grey market is not legal and disapproved by the market regulator SEBI. Under normal circumstances, market factors determine the GMP, so the chances of fraud are not high in such IPOs. However, many a times, the grey market operator in connivance with the IPO-promoter/its lead manager manipulates the GMP, to attract the gullible and innocent investors to apply for the IPO and the investors incur losses.  To prevent such frauds, the market regulator discourages grey market trading.

Who should you contact to trade in Grey Market?

As we know trading in a grey market is not legal, the trading in the grey market is often carried out over phone calls. There are no such official registered persons or traders for grey market trading. An investor willing to trade in the grey market needs to find a local dealer who will help find the buyers and sellers.

Quicklinks

  •  

What is grey market premium?

What is subject to rates?

What is GMP?

grey market premium

intraday trading
Intraday Trading-complete guide

Intraday Trading Made Practical – Levels, signals, Checklist

What is Intraday Trading?

Intraday simply means “within the same trading day.” You buy and sell before the market closes, so no positions are carried to the next day. The aim is to capture intra-day price swings in equities, index futures/options, or select commodities.

🕗 Last Update: 25 February 2026, 6.00 AM

What are “intraday calls”?

They are time-bound trading recommendations—buy or sell—based on technical levels (price, volume, momentum, support/resistance). Entries and exits are both executed on the same day. Discipline is everything: predefined entry, target, and stop-loss are mandatory.

How it works (in practice)

  • Instrument: Stocks, indices, or liquid derivatives.

  • Clock: Positions opened and closed within market hours.

  • Method: React to breakouts, reversals, or mean-reversion signals on short-interval charts.

  • Risk control: Tight stop-loss, realistic targets, and strict position sizing (leverage magnifies gains and losses).

Intraday highs & lows

During the session, a stock/index prints a day’s high and low. A “new intraday high” means price has just surpassed all earlier ticks for that session (it may or may not match the day’s closing price).

One-minute example

A stock opens at Rs. 490. Your intraday call is Buy above Rs. 500, Target Rs. 508–512, Stop-loss Rs. 496.
If price triggers 500 and momentum holds, you book out in the 508–512 zone the same day. If it reverses to 496, you exit immediately—no overnight risk, no hope trades.

Basic Rules of Intraday Trading — Chanakya Playbook

Intraday = speed + discipline. Cooked down to rules you can actually follow on a live screen.

A) Pre-Market Groundwork

  1. Trade only liquid names
    Pick stocks/indices with tight spreads and depth. Avoid illiquid SME/TT stocks for day trades.

  2. Mark levels before the bell
    Prior day high/low, day’s pivots, VWAP, gap zones, and event timings (results, policy, data).

  3. Define your risk per trade
    0.5%–1.0% of your trading capital. Example: Capital Rs. 5,00,000 → risk per trade Rs. 2,500 (at 0.5%).

  4. Position size = Risk ÷ Stop size
    If your stop is Rs. 5, size = 2,500 ÷ 5 = 500 shares. Never “adjust” the stop to fit size; adjust size to fit stop.

B) Entries (Only on your terms)

  1. Wait for confirmation
    Avoid the first 10–15 minutes churn. Enter on a trigger: breakout above resistance, pullback to support, or VWAP reclaim—never on impulse.

  2. Trade with the day’s bias
    Above VWAP and higher highs → favour longs; below VWAP and lower lows → favour shorts. Counter-trend trades = smaller size and quicker exits.

  3. One reason, one trade
    Enter only if your setup conditions are all present (price + volume + structure). No setup, no trade.

C) Exits (Protect first, then aim)

  1. Hard stop, no negotiation
    The stop is placed when you enter. If hit, exit. Do not average down a loser intraday.

  2. Scale out at logical targets
    Partial at R1/R2/previous swing, trail rest behind higher lows or VWAP. If momentum dies, book.

  3. Time stop
    If the idea doesn’t move within your planned window, exit flat/small. Capital is oxygen.

  4. Flat before the bell
    Intraday = no overnight risk. Close positions well before market close (avoid last-minute liquidity traps).

D) Risk & Mindset

  1. Daily loss cap
    Stop for the day at −2R/−3R or when you hit your pre-defined drawdown. Tomorrow is another market.

  2. Limit simultaneous exposure
    Correlated positions amplify risk. Two similar longs often behave like one bigger long.

  3. Journal every trade
    Setup, entry, stop, target, rationale, screenshot. Review weekly; keep what works, drop what doesn’t.

  4. News awareness
    Know the calendar (inflation, policy, results). During releases, reduce size or step aside.

E) Quick Tools That Help

  • VWAP for intraday bias and pullback entries.

  • Structure: Higher-high/higher-low vs lower-high/lower-low.

  • Volume: Breakouts without volume are suspects.

  • ATR: Sets realistic stops/targets based on volatility.


10-Second Intraday Checklist 

  • Is the stock liquid and in play today?

  • Do I have a clear level and a reason to trade?

  • Entry, Stop (pre-placed), Target defined?

  • Position size = Risk ÷ Stop size?

  • Any event risk in next 30–60 minutes?

  • Above/below VWAP and in alignment with structure?

  • If stop hits, I’m out—no averaging.

  • If it stalls, I time-stop.

  • Daily loss cap respected?

  • Flat before close.

Bottom line: Intraday success is less about prediction and more about process—tight risk, clean levels, patient entries, and unemotional exits.

Top Intraday Trading Strategies

Intraday Trading Indicators — Chanakya Playbook

Use indicators to frame the day (bias), time entries, and manage exits. Keep it simple: 2–3 tools in confluence beat a crowded screen.

1) Bias & Mean: VWAP (Volume Weighted Average Price)

  • What it tells you: The day’s “fair” price.

  • How to use:

    • Above VWAP with higher-highs → long bias; below with lower-lows → short bias.

    • VWAP reclaim/failure is a high-quality trigger after a trend pullback.

    • Add VWAP bands (±1/±2 SD) as dynamic support/resistance.

  • Pitfall: Don’t counter-trend fade a strong “band walk.”

2) Structure & Trend: EMAs (9/20/50/200)

  • What they tell you: Direction and rhythm of the move.

  • How to use:

    • 9/20 EMA: momentum lane; price riding above = trend intact.

    • 20/50 EMA cross confirms shift; 200 EMA marks big-picture intraday bias.

    • Buy pullbacks to rising 20 EMA in an uptrend; sell rallies to falling 20 EMA in a downtrend.

  • Pitfall: Crossovers lag—avoid late entries in a mature move.

3) Momentum: RSI (14 or 7) & Stochastic / Stochastic RSI

  • What they tell you: Strength and exhaustion.

  • How to use:

    • RSI range shift: Bull sessions hold >40–45, bear sessions cap <55–60.

    • Divergences near key levels (VWAP/pivots) = early warnings.

    • Stoch/ Stoch RSI: faster turns—good for timing around support/resistance.

  • Pitfall: Overbought/oversold can stay extreme in trends—use with structure.

4) Trend + Turn: MACD (12,26,9)

  • What it tells you: Momentum turns via crossovers & zero-line tests.

  • How to use:

    • Bullish when MACD > Signal, best above zero; bearish below zero.

    • Histogram inflection (shrinking red) often precedes a bounce at support.

  • Pitfall: Lagging in chop; combine with VWAP/levels.

5) Volatility & Risk: ATR (Average True Range)

  • What it tells you: Typical intraday move.

  • How to use:

    • Size stops by 0.5–1.0× ATR from entry.

    • Targets at 1–1.5× ATR; trail when realized move ≈ ATR.

  • Pitfall: Fixed rupee stops ignore volatility—ATR fixes that.

6) Levels: Floor Pivots (PP, R1/R2, S1/S2)

  • What they tell you: Pre-set magnets used by many intraday traders.

  • How to use:

    • Opening Range (first 15–30 min) + pivots sets the day’s map.

    • Breakout above ORH with rising volume to R1/R2; fade only if momentum/volume fail at level.

  • Pitfall: Blind fades at R1/S1 when trend is strong.

7) Bands & Squeeze: Bollinger Bands (20, 2)

  • What they tell you: Volatility expansion/compression.

  • How to use:

    • Squeeze → Expansion: trade the break with VWAP/EMA alignment.

    • Band walk signals trend continuation; mid-band is dynamic pullback zone.

  • Pitfall: Mean-reversion mindset kills you during band walks.

8) Participation: Volume / Relative Volume (rVol) & OBV

  • What they tell you: Commitment behind the move.

  • How to use:

    • rVol >1.5 post-open = credible breakouts.

    • OBV higher highs while price tests resistance = breakout probability rises.

  • Pitfall: Low-volume breaks often fail—trim size or skip.


High-Probability Intraday Setups (ready-to-use)

  1. VWAP Reclaim + 9/20 EMA Sync

    • Price dips below VWAP, reclaims with rising volume, 9 EMA crosses above 20 EMA.

    • Entry on first higher low above VWAP; stop = below VWAP/20 EMA (≈0.5–1× ATR).

  2. ORB + Pivot Drive

    • Break above Opening Range High with rVol>1.5; target R1 → R2 trail on higher lows; stop below ORH.

  3. Bollinger Squeeze + MACD Flip

    • Tight bands, MACD histogram turns up from negative; enter on band break in VWAP’s direction.

  4. RSI Range Shift Pullback

    • RSI flips >50 and holds 45–50 on dips; buy pullbacks to 20 EMA/VWAP; exit near prior swing high/pivot.

  5. Trend Exhaustion Fade (advanced)

    • Extended band walk into R2/R3 with RSI divergence + rVol fades. Small, quick counter-trend with tight stop above high.


Do’s, Don’ts & Defaults

Do

  • Use 2–3 indicators only: e.g., VWAP + EMAs + RSI (add rVol).

  • Align timeframes (5-min for triggers; 15-min for bias).

  • Pre-define entry–stop–target and size via ATR.

Don’t

  • Average losers intraday.

  • Trade against a strong VWAP/EMA trend without confirmation.

  • Chase breakouts with falling volume.

Suggested Defaults (start, then fine-tune):

  • VWAP (session), EMAs 9/20/50/200, RSI 14, MACD 12-26-9, Bollinger 20,2, ATR 14, Floor Pivots, rVol.


Quick Intraday Checklist

  • Bias: Above/below VWAP? EMAs aligned?

  • rVol > 1.5 on your trigger?

  • Clear level (ORB/pivot/band)?

  • Stop = 0.5–1× ATR; position size = Risk ÷ Stop.

  • Time stop if it doesn’t move. Flat before close.

Bottom line: Indicators don’t predict—they organize probabilities. Trade confluence (VWAP + structure + volume), keep risk tight, and let the tape confirm your idea.

Intraday Margin & Risk Management

Best Stocks for Intraday Trading – How to Choose 

1) Liquidity first

  • ADTV ≥ Rs. 150–200 crore (cash) or in NSE F&O list.

  • Bid–ask spread ≤ 0.05% of price; depth visible on both sides.

2) Tradable volatility (not chaos)

  • ATR% (14) between 2%–5% for largecaps, 3%–7% for midcaps.

  • Avoid illiquid names hitting circuits or with erratic ticks.

3) Fresh catalysts

  • Results, upgrades/downgrades, sector news, policy/data prints, block deals.

  • Look for rVol > 1.5 in first 30–60 minutes.

4) Clean technical structure

  • Respecting VWAP/9/20 EMA; clear levels (previous day High/Low, ORB, pivots).

  • Avoid messy gaps with overlapping candles and no volume confirmation.

5) Low overlap / correlation

  • Pick 3–5 symbols across different sectors; don’t take five autos or five banks together.

6) Derivatives & data (optional, if you use F&O)

  • Rising Open Interest with price (long build-up) or falling with price (short build-up).

  • Avoid near-expiry illiquidity in far OTM options.


Chanakya Pre-Market Scan (ready-to-use)

  • Universe: NSE F&O + top ADTV cash.

  • Filter: ADTV ≥ Rs. 150 cr, ATR% in band, gap ±0.5% to 2%, rVol pre-open > 1.2.

  • Mark levels: PDH/PDL, ORB, VWAP, pivots.

  • Trade only when price + volume + VWAP/EMA align; skip if two filters disagree.

Bottom line: The “best” intraday stocks are liquid, active, and level-respecting with just-right volatility—pick few, know their levels, and let volume confirm.

 

Mistakes to Avoid in Intraday Trading — Chanakya Quick Note

  1. No plan, no trade — Entering without a defined entry, target, and stop-loss.

  2. Averaging losers — Adding to a losing position intraday is the fastest way to blow up.

  3. Moving the stop — Widens loss; respect the original risk.

  4. Oversizing — Position size must come from Risk ÷ Stop; not from confidence.

  5. Chasing breakouts — Buying far from level with falling volume/rVol leads to whipsaws.

  6. Counter-trend heroics — Fading strong VWAP/EMA trends without signal.

  7. Overtrading — Too many symbols/timeframes; focus on 3–5 liquid names.

  8. Ignoring volatility — Fixed rupee stops in a high-ATR day = random exits; size via ATR.

  9. Trading news blindly — Results/data releases can gap through stops; reduce size or wait.

  10. Holding overnight — Intraday = flat before the bell; avoid carry risks.

  11. Revenge trading — After a loss streak, stop for the day (−2R/−3R rule).

  12. No journal — Not tracking setups, slippage, and emotions prevents improvement.

Pocket checklist (before each trade):

  • Is there a clear level with volume?

  • Entry–Stop–Target pre-defined?

  • Size = Risk ÷ Stop (ATR-aware)?

  • With trend/VWAP or fighting it?

  • Any event risk in next 30–60 minutes?

Bottom line: Intraday trading is a speed + discipline game. Catch the move, respect the stop, and close the book before the bell.

FAQs on Intraday Trading

What is intraday trading?

Buying and selling within the same day to capture price swings; no overnight positions

Which indicators work best for intraday?

VWAP for bias, 9/20 EMA for trend rhythm, RSI/MACD for momentum, ATR for stops, Floor Pivots for levels.

How do I choose stocks for day trading?

High liquidity, tight spreads, ATR% in a tradable band, fresh catalysts, and clean technical levels

What’s a good risk rule for intraday?

Risk 0.5%–1% of capital per trade; position size = Risk ÷ Stop (ATR-based). Daily loss cap at −2R/−3R

What is VWAP and how do I use it?

Day’s volume-weighted average price—above it with higher highs favors longs; below it favors shorts.

What is the Opening Range Breakout (ORB)?

A trade on a break of the first 15–30 min range, ideally with rising relative volume toward R1/S1 pivots.

How do I place stop-loss and targets in Intraday trading?

Stops 0.5–1.0× ATR from entry; targets 1.0–1.5× ATR or prior swing/pivot; trail if momentum persists.

Common mistakes to avoid in Intraday trading?

Averaging losers, moving stops, chasing low-volume breakouts, overtrading, and holding overnight.

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Chanakya Niti

Chanakya niti Chanakya Niti – Teachings, Quotes & Life Lessons for Success

Chanakya Niti Strategies for Success

Chanakya, also known as Kautilya or Vishnugupta, was one of the greatest teachers, philosophers and strategists of ancient India. His wisdom, preserved in the Chanakya Niti, continues to inspire generations. These teachings are not limited to politics and economics but extend to family life, morality, education, time management, and self-discipline. Below, we present Chanakya Niti Strategies for success – some of the most powerful verses and their meanings — timeless lessons for success and inner peace.

🕗 Last Update: 25 February 2026, 6.00 AM

Chanakya Niti: 5 Qualities That Matter More Than Beauty in a Woman

Beauty may attract attention, but life is not lived on first impressions. Chanakya observed that attraction can begin a relationship, yet only inner strength sustains it. When responsibility, pressure, and time test bonds, beauty fades—but character remains.

Chanakya Niti looks beyond appearance and asks a deeper question: Who remains steady when life becomes difficult? According to Chanakya, a woman’s true worth is revealed not when circumstances are easy, but when choices are hard.

1. Emotional Balance in Difficult Times
Chanakya believed uncontrolled emotions weaken judgment. A woman who maintains emotional balance during stress protects trust and stability. This does not mean suppressing feelings, but preventing anger, fear, or insecurity from dictating actions. A calm mind avoids temporary emotions creating permanent damage.

2. Thinking Before Speaking
Careless words, Chanakya warned, can destroy years of effort in moments. A thoughtful woman understands timing, context, and impact. She speaks with purpose, not impulse. Over time, such restraint builds respect—because wisdom often speaks softly.

3. Strong Character Under Pressure
Character is not proven in comfort but in adversity. A woman with strong character remains consistent even when tempted or pressured. Her values do not change with convenience. This reliability, Chanakya taught, is more valuable than charm.

4. Self-Respect and Clear Boundaries
Self-respect is the foundation of dignity. Without it, even intelligence and beauty lose meaning. A woman who respects herself does not tolerate disrespect or seek validation at the cost of her peace. Clear boundaries protect her from manipulation and emotional exhaustion.

5. Long-Term Thinking
Chanakya admired foresight. A wise woman looks beyond momentary emotion and considers long-term consequences. She chooses with awareness of her future, her responsibilities, and her inner peace. This ability separates wisdom from impulse.

Chanakya’s Final Insight
Beauty may open doors, but these qualities build homes. According to Chanakya, lasting respect, trust, and stability are earned not through appearance—but through discipline of mind, clarity of values, and strength of character.

Chanakya Niti on Parenting

  • “Fondle your child for five years”

  • “For the next ten, teach him discipline”

  • “Truth supports the earth, sustains the sun, wind and all beings.”

  • “Treat him as a friend, on his sixteenth year onwards”

Chanakya Niti on Wicked

  • “Avoid contact with wicked people”

  • “Choose the company of good people”

  • “Perform good deeds day and night”

  • “Remember always that life is ephemeral”

Life is short, donot forget that. Make the best use of it. What use is regretting things that you could have done better? Chanakya advises us to avoid the evil-minded people. The can ruin your life with their negative influences. Therefore choose the company of  noble people. This will help you cultivate a positive outlook and thereby transform your life for good.

Chanakya Niti on Practical Life Lessons

  • Control over senses = control over the world.

  • Handle people differently: greedy with money, proud with courtesy, fools with flattery, scholars with truth.

  • Speak according to occasion, deeds within capacity, anger in proportion to power.

  • True success = generosity, kindness, shrewdness, courage and humility combined.

Chanakya Niti on Wisdom & Knowledge

  • “Truth is my mother, knowledge is my father…” → stresses values as family.

  • Importance of prayerful mindset: wise man compared to a tree with deep roots.

  • Education as the true wealth: beauty and riches are incomplete without learning.

  • Scholars are honored everywhere; knowledge brings respect and gain.

Chanakya Niti on Unity

  • Togather we stand and diveded we fall.

  • When people are united, they have strength to withstand any calamity that comes their way.

  • Notice how a village comes togather during a natural disaster.

  • Never fight a battle along, says Chanakya

🌸 Want Goddess Lakshmi to Stay Forever? Chanakya’s Timeless Secrets to True Prosperity

Every person dreams of a life filled with peace, happiness, and wealth, yet only some homes truly radiate abundance. According to Chanakya, prosperity doesn’t depend on luck — it depends on our daily behavior and inner purity. He taught that Goddess Lakshmi, the divine symbol of wealth, blesses homes filled with respect, honesty, discipline, and kindness, but quietly leaves where negativity, deceit, or disrespect reside.

1️⃣ Respect Women, Invite Divine Energy

A home where women are honored and heard becomes a true temple of Goddess Lakshmi. Respect is not just in words — it’s reflected in actions, tone, and empathy. When women feel valued, harmony fills the house, and abundance flows naturally.

2️⃣ Honesty Builds Unshakable Wealth

Chanakya warned that wealth gained through deceit never stays. Money earned with truth and integrity brings peace, self-respect, and divine blessings. “Wealth earned with truth shines like sunlight,” he said — spreading warmth, never darkness.

3️⃣ Speak Gently, Prosper Deeply

Harsh words drive away peace and opportunity. Gentle, positive speech heals hearts and attracts goodwill. The person who controls their tongue controls their destiny — kindness in words is the language of prosperity.

4️⃣ Cleanliness Attracts Abundance

An unclean home disrupts the energy of wealth. A tidy home and pure kitchen keep energy positive and minds calm. Cleanliness reflects respect for divine forces and invites stability and success.

5️⃣ Small Habits, Big Results – The Chanakya Way

Prosperity grows through small daily acts — honesty, politeness, gratitude, and cleanliness. Even lighting a lamp with devotion creates vibrations of wealth and peace.

💫 Chanakya’s message: Prosperity is not a miracle — it is a mirror of how we live. When our home, mind, and habits are pure, Goddess Lakshmi stays forever.

 

Chanakya Niti on Family & Society

  • Good family builds character, bad family spreads grief.

  • Company matters: befriending immoral people leads to ruin.

  • Parents are enemies if they don’t give education.

  • Respect women: another’s wife as mother, another’s money as clay.


Chanakya Niti on Morality & Conduct

  • A gentleman’s character does not change even in catastrophe.

  • Stupidity cannot be corrected; good company is wasted on fools.

  • Do not be too upright; practical wisdom is more important than rigid honesty.

  • Good conduct sustains family ties, anger is seen in the eyes.


Chanakya Niti on Time, Destiny & Karma

  • Time matures and destroys all; time is unbeatable.

  • Destiny determines lifespan, wealth and education before birth.

  • Karma carries forward across lifetimes; good or bad deeds always bear fruit.

  • Fate can turn rich into poor, kings into beggars, and vice versa.

Chanakya Niti on Peace & Contentment

  • Contentment is nectar; greedy people can never be happy.

  • Calmness is the highest austerity.

  • Joy of detachment: love brings fear, detachment brings true happiness.

  • Peace, compassion, and forgiveness make a complete family of virtues.

Chanakya Niti Quotes (Highlights)

  • “No one can defeat a powerful mind.”

  • “It is enough to live for a moment if spent doing good deeds.”

  • “Truth supports the earth, sustains the sun, wind and all beings.”

  • “The eyes of the beholder decide the value of an object.”

Conclusion

Chanakya’s teachings are not just historical wisdom; they are practical strategies for modern life. Whether in family, career, or society, these timeless principles can guide us towards a disciplined, successful and contented life.

Chanakya Preachings

FAQ on Chanakya Niti

What is Chanakya Niti?

Chanakya Niti is a collection of aphorisms and teachings by Acharya Chanakya covering ethics, strategy, governance and personal conduct.

Why is Chanakya Niti relevant today?

Its guidance on discipline, self-control, truth, time and decision-making remains practical for modern life, careers and leadership.

Is Chanakya Niti only about politics?

No. It covers family values, education, morality, peace, contentment, and personal success in addition to statecraft.

What are the key themes in Chanakya Niti?

Wisdom and learning, good conduct, time and destiny, self-control, right company, contentment, and practical decision-making.

How can students use Chanakya Niti?

By focusing on discipline, practice, respect for knowledge, choosing good company and controlling the senses to improve concentration.

What does Chanakya say about time and destiny?

Time matures and tests everyone; use time wisely. Destiny matters, but effort, prudence and right conduct are essential.

What is Chanakya’s view on company and friendships?

Avoid immoral and crooked company; it leads to ruin. Keep wise, ethical friends who elevate your character.

How can Chanakya Niti improve daily life?

Apply small, consistent actions: speak appropriately, act within capacity, practice calmness, show compassion, and pursue truthful conduct.

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Chanakya Community

India’s Most Trusted Circle of Investors! 💼

In the fast-growing world of Indian stock markets, every investor wants early information, sharp stock ideas, and trustworthy IPO insights. That is exactly why the Chanakya Community has become the most reliable destination for serious investors. Whether you trade daily or invest selectively, the chanakya community gives you an unmatched edge through timely data, actionable analysis, and decades of market wisdom.

🔹 Why Join the Chanakya Community?

✨ 🕗 Early-morning stock recommendations
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✨ 🧠 Actionable insights from India’s leading investment weekly
✨ 📲 Updates via WhatsApp, Telegram & Email
✨ 🔍 100% research-backed – no hype, only facts

Whether you’re a beginner or a seasoned trader, Chanakya is your trusted financial companion. 🤝📘

🚀 Join Now – It’s Free!
🔗 In your mobile, open your WhatsApp and Click [Join the Community] (⏳ Limited spots available for early-access members)

The Chanakya Community is built for investors who want to stay ahead of the crowd. Members receive early-morning stock recommendations, real-time IPO GMP trends, and fast updates on subscription numbers, grey market movement, and listing expectations. These insights help you take confident decisions because the Chanakya Community focuses only on research-backed data, not market rumors.

Investors today follow multiple channels, but only a few offer genuine substance. The chanakya community stands out because it combines the strength of India’s oldest investment weekly with modern digital delivery. Every important update reaches you on WhatsApp, Telegram, and Email, ensuring you never miss a crucial opportunity. From listing estimates to sector trends, from breakout stocks to risk management ideas, the Chanakya Community keeps you equipped for every market condition.

What makes the Chanakya Community special is its culture of informed investing. Members interact, learn, and grow together with guidance backed by decades of credibility. Whether you are a beginner looking for clarity or an experienced trader searching for precision, this platform strengthens your decisions with disciplined market thinking.

Joining is simple and free.
Open your WhatsApp and click Join the Community (limited early-access spots).

Be where the smart money is.
Be with Chanakya.

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Unlisted Shares

Unlisted Zone of Shares with Buy & Sell Quotes

Unlisted Zone of Shares with Buy & sale Quotes

Unlisted shares can be traded, enabling investors to buy into companies before they go public. Various platforms facilitate the buying and selling of these shares, often requiring a minimum investment. These platforms offer online access to trade, including opportunities for pre-IPO shares. Investments are usually secured quickly after payment. This type of trading provides an opportunity to diversify investment portfolios.

🕗 Last Update: 25 February 2026, 6.00 AM

Which are Unlisted Shares?

What does Unlisted mean in stocks?

Where can I sell unlisted shares?

Unlisted Share of the Week:  Oyo (Oravel Hotels ltd)

Two way quotes for Unlisted shares

List of Unlisted Shares – 
Sr.No. Shares Name Tentative Price
1 AITMC Ventures 55-60
2 Anheuser-Buschp  InBev 525-530
3 Anugraha Valve Castings 725-730
4 Apollo Fashion International 80-85
5 Apollo Green 180-190
6 Arohan Financial Services 250-260
7 Assam Carbon 575-590
8 Auckland Jute 90-100
9 Axles India 770-780
10 Bharat Hotels 340-350
11 Bharat Nidhi 15000-15500
12 Bira91(B9 Beverages) 390-400
13 BLSX 23-24
14 BOAT (Imagine Marketing) 1675-1700
15 Bootes Impex Tech 2800-2900
16 BVG India 295-300
17 Capgemini Technology Services 12500-12800
18 Care Health Insurance 165-170
19 Carrier Airconditioning &  Refrigeration 515-525
20 Chennai Super Kings 182-185
21 Cochin International Airport 415-425
22 Cochin Plantation 150-160
23 Dalmia Bharat Refractories 200-220
24 Delta Galaxy 55-60
25 Digvijay Finlease 1500-1550
26 Ecosure Pulpmolding Technologies 50-55
27 Elofic Industries 2500-2600
28 Empire Spices and Foods 525-535
29 ESDS Software Solutions 370-375
30 ESL Steel 35-40
31 Fino paytech 105-110
32 Flysbs Aviation 370-375
33 Frick India 2800-2900
34 GKN Driveline 1500-1550
35 Goodluck Defence 215-225
36 Greenzo Energy India 590-600
37 Gynofem Healthcare and Pharmaceuticals 60-65
38    
39 HDFC Securities 9500-9600
40 Hero Fincorp 1300-1325
41 Hicks Thermometers India 1600-1650
42 Hinduja Leyland Finance 210-220
43 Hindustan Engineering & Industries 1300-1350
44 Hira ferro Alloys 175-180
45 ICL Fincorp 23-24
46 IKF Finance 280-290
47 Incred Holding 155-160
48 India Carbon 800-820
49 India Exposition Mart 110-120
50 Indian Commodity Exchange 3.75-4
51 Indian Potash 2950-3000
52 Indofil Industries 1125-1150
53 Inkel 18-19
54 Inox Leasing and Finance 14000-14500
55 JK Urban Space 160-170
56 Kannur International Airport 130-132
57 KLM Axiva 15-16
58 Kurlon Enterprises 480-490
59 Lakeshore Hospital & Research Centre 100-105
60 Lava International 40-45
61 Lords Mark 90-100
62 Maharashtra Knowledge Corporation 415-425
63 Manipal Housing Finance Syndicate 80-85
64 Manjushree Technopack India 820-830
65 Market Simplified India 28-30
66 Martin & Harris Laboratories 850-875
67 Matrix Gas 300-325
68 Maxvalue Credits and Investments 5-6
69 Mayasheel Retail India 20-22
70 Merino Industries 3100-3200
71 Metropolitan Stock Exchange of India 7-7.50
72 Mohan Meakin 2100-2150
73 Motilal Oswal Home Finance 14-14.25
74 National Commodity and Derivatives Exchange 200-250
75 National Stock Exchange 1650-1675
76 Nayara Energy 1550-1600
77 NCL BuildteK 210-220
78 Onix Renewable 14000-14500
79 ORBIS Financial Corporation 410-425
80 OTIS Elevator India 4000-4100
81 OYO Rooms* (Oravel Stays Ltd) 47-48
82 Pace Digitek 210-220
83 Parag Parikh Financial Advisory 7800-8000
84 Paymate india 425-450
85 PharmEasy* (API Holdings) 7.25-7.50
86 Philips India 910-920
87 Polymatech Electronics 55-56
88 Ramaraju Surgical Cotton Mills 230-240
89 Ring Plus Aqua 590-600
90 RRP S4E Innovation Private 240-250
91 Sambhv Steel tube 105-110
92 SBI Mutual Fund 2500-2550
93 Signify Innovations India 1250-1300
94 Spray Engineering Devices 410-425
95 Sterlite Grid 290-300
96 Sterlite Power Transmission 510-520
97    
98 Tata Capital 920-930
99 TRL Krosaki 1525-1550
100 U P Asbestos 130-135
101 Urban Tots 65-70
102 Utkarsh CoreInvest 200-210
103 Veeda Clinical Research 475-480
104 Versuni 570-580
105    
106 Xerox 150-155
* SHARES IN BOLD LETTER IS GOOD FOR INVESTMENT &
AVAILABLE AT VERY ATTRATIVE PRICE 

 Contact number of a party who may provide buy or sell service: 9227204076.
Disclaimer:
Buying or selling of Unlisted shares/Delisted shares should be done at your risk. Chanakyanipothi.com or its directors are not at all responsible for profit or loss in buying or selling of unlisted/delisted shares.

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