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Price Scans52 Week Low Stocks NSE Today — New Low Scanner
Stocks hitting fresh 52-week lows — potential reversal candidates or continued weakness.
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What Is the 52 Week Low Stocks Scan?
This scanner identifies stocks on NSE and BSE that have touched or breached their lowest traded price over the preceding 52 weeks — specifically, stocks where today's low equals or falls below the rolling 52-week low threshold. The condition fires when price discovery extends into territory that has not been visited in an entire calendar year. This is not a near-low scan — the stock must be printing a fresh extreme, not simply trading in the lower quartile of its annual range.
For a stock to appear here, the current session's low must be less than or equal to the minimum low across the previous 252 trading sessions. Stocks in F&O, mid-cap, and small-cap segments all appear together, which is critical context. The scan is agnostic to sector, market cap, or underlying fundamentals — it is a pure price-structure signal indicating that every buyer over the past year is now sitting at a loss. That is the precise technical state this scanner is capturing.
How Does the 52 Week Low Stocks Signal Work?
When a stock hits a 52-week low, 100% of participants who bought within the last year are underwater. This creates a specific market microstructure: there is no overhead supply from recent buyers seeking breakeven exits — but there is maximum pain, and capitulation volume often spikes as trailing stop-losses and stop-limit orders cluster just below the prior 52-week low.
Institutional holders — mutual funds, FIIs, DIIs — who benchmark on calendar-year performance face mark-to-market pressure at these levels, often triggering programmatic selling that accelerates the move. Delivery percentage on these candles frequently drops, signalling speculative short-sellers piling in rather than genuine long liquidation — a nuance that matters for reversal trades.
Meanwhile, RSI on weekly charts at 52-week lows typically reads below 30, sometimes sub-20 in severe cases, indicating deeply oversold conditions. The signal matters because it is binary — either capitulation selling exhausts and a mean-reversion bounce follows, or the breakdown continues with momentum, making it equally useful for reversal plays and continuation shorts.
How to Trade 52 Week Low Stocks Stocks on NSE
1. Entry Trigger: Do not enter the moment a stock appears in this scanner. Wait for a bullish reversal candle on the 15-minute or daily chart — a hammer, bullish engulfing, or morning star pattern — forming at or immediately above the 52-week low level. Entry is taken only on the close of that confirmation candle, not on anticipation.
2. Stop-Loss Placement: Place stop-loss 0.5% to 1% below the 52-week low print. This is a structural stop — if price breaks and closes below the year's low, the thesis is invalid and the trade must be exited without negotiation.
3. Target Calculation: Use the nearest prior consolidation zone or resistance as Target 1 — typically 5% to 8% above entry for swing trades. Target 2 is the 20-day EMA. Avoid projecting Fibonacci extensions from a single low candle; use visible price structure instead.
4. Timeframe: Primarily swing (3 to 10 days) or positional. Intraday scalping at 52-week lows is a low-probability game due to wide spreads and erratic volume profiles in distressed stocks.
5. Volume Confirmation: Look for above-average delivery volume on the reversal candle — minimum 1.5x the 10-day average delivery percentage. This separates institutional accumulation from retail bounce-trading.
6. Position Sizing: Given elevated volatility at 52-week lows, limit individual position size to 2% to 3% of total trading capital. These stocks can gap down 5% to 10% on news, so sizing conservatively is non-negotiable.
When Does the 52 Week Low Stocks Scanner Work Best?
This scanner produces the highest-quality reversal setups when Nifty itself is not in a free fall — specifically when the broader index is range-bound or mildly correcting while select stocks hit 52-week lows due to stock-specific reasons. Sector rotation phases, where money moves out of one sector into another, create excellent individual 52-week low setups even in a bull market.
The first hour of NSE trading (9:15 to 10:15 AM) and the last 30 minutes often see the most decisive moves at these levels — either capitulation selling or sharp reversals on institutional buying.
Ignore this signal entirely when Nifty is in a confirmed downtrend below its 200-day MA, when the stock has triggered a corporate governance red flag, a promoter pledge default, or an auditor resignation. Also ignore it when the stock is operator-driven small-cap with average daily volume below ₹1 crore — those 52-week lows are traps, not opportunities.
Common Mistakes Traders Make with 52 Week Low Stocks
Buying purely because it looks cheap: This is the single most destructive mistake. A stock at ₹40 that was ₹200 is not cheap — it is broken. Price anchoring to 52-week highs has wiped out countless retail traders who averaged down into fundamentally deteriorating businesses like mid-cap NBFCs or small-cap infra companies during their respective cycles.
Ignoring the reason for the low: Traders scan the list, see a familiar name, and jump in without checking why the stock is here. A profit warning, promoter selling, or sectoral regulatory hit changes the entire risk profile. This is not a reversal — it is value destruction.
Entering without a reversal candle: Buying the moment the scan fires, hoping to catch the exact bottom, results in riding a falling knife. Experienced traders wait for price to confirm — not anticipate.
Not accounting for circuit filters: Several stocks hitting 52-week lows on BSE and NSE are in lower circuits — 5% or 10% — making exit nearly impossible once trapped. Always check the circuit filter status before entering any position from this scan.
Risk Management for 52 Week Low Stocks Trades
Maximum loss per trade should not exceed 1.5% of total trading capital — these stocks carry binary risk (news, circuit hits, promoter developments) that standard stop-loss logic cannot fully protect against.
Structural stop sits just below the 52-week low — typically 0.5% to 1% below. If the stock closes below this level on any day, exit the next morning at market open without waiting for recovery.
Exit early — before the stop is hit — if the stock fails to hold the reversal candle's low on the very next session. Weak follow-through at 52-week lows is the earliest warning that the bounce thesis is failing. Never average down on a 52-week low trade.
Pro Tip
The highest-probability trades from this scanner are not the stocks hitting 52-week lows for the first time — they are the stocks appearing in this scan for the second or third time after a failed bounce. The first 52-week low often sees aggressive bottom-fishing that temporarily lifts the price. When that bounce fails and the stock retests the low with lower volume and tightening price action — a classic low-volume retest — it signals smart money has quietly absorbed supply. That second-test entry, with a tight stop below the prior low, produces significantly better risk-reward than the panic-day entry that most retail traders chase.
Disclaimer: This content is for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute investment advice and is not a SEBI registered research or advisory service. All trading involves risk. Traders should conduct their own due diligence, consult a SEBI registered investment advisor if required, and take full responsibility for their own trading decisions.