StockTalk NSE Sensex Lower Upper Circuit Breakers

What is a Circuit Breaker in Stock Markets

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What is a lower or upper circuit?

Lower or upper circuit is an automatic mechanism to stop a freefall or massive surge in a security or an index during trading hours. It is used to check the volatile swings in the market.

When is circuit used?

The index-based market-wide circuit breaker system applies at 3 stages of the index movement, either way viz. at 10%, 15% and 20%. These circuit breakers when triggered bring about a coordinated trading halt in all equity and equity derivative markets nationwide. The market-wide circuit breakers are triggered by movement of either the BSE Sensex or the Nifty 50, whichever is breached earlier.

The market shall re-open, after index based market-wide circuit filter breach, with a pre-open call auction session. The extent of duration of the market halt and pre-open session is as given below:

Trigger limit Trigger time Market halt duration Pre-open call auction session post market halt
10% Before 1:00 pm. 45 Minutes 15 Minutes
At or after 1:00 pm upto 2.30 pm 15 Minutes 15 Minutes
At or after 2.30 pm  No halt Not applicable
15% Before 1 pm 1 hour 45 minutes 15 Minutes
At or after 1:00 pm before 2:00 pm 45 Minutes 15 Minutes
On or after 2:00 pm Remainder of the day Not applicable
20% Any time during market hours Remainder of the day Not applicable

Exchange shall compute the Index circuit breaker limits for 10%, 15% and 20% levels on a daily basis based on the previous day’s closing level of the index rounded off to the nearest tick size.

When was circuit breaker triggered in recent times?

Trading on the stock exchanges halted for 45 minutes on Friday, 13-Mar-2020 after benchmark indices tanked. NSE Nifty plunged 10.07 per cent or 966 points to 8,624 and BSE flagship Sensex tanked 3,090 points or 9.43 per cent to 29,687.

What is the duration of halt in trade?

It depends on the time of the breach and the quantum of fall. Trade could be halted for 15 minutes up to the whole day. A detailed mechanism is as followed: 10% trigger limit: If this limit is breached before 1 pm, trade is halted for 45 minutes. If the same is breached between 1 pm to 2.30 pm, trade is halted for 15 minutes. After 2.30 pm, there is no halt in trading. 15% trigger limit: If this limit is breached before 1 pm, trade is halted for 1 hour 45 minutes. If the same is breached between 1 pm to 2.30 pm, trade is halted for 45 minutes. After 2.30 pm, trade is halted for the remainder of the day. 20% trigger limit: If this limit is breached any time during trading hours, trading is halted for the remainder of the day.

What happens after the trading halt duration is over?

After the circuit is breached, trading is halted as mentioned above. The market re-opens, after index based market-wide circuit filter breach, with a pre-open call auction session of 15 minutes post the duration of halt. The normal trading could begin and continue as long as the next circuit limit does not activate.

Why is circuit limit used?

The circuit levels are determined by the stock exchanges so as to protect investors and brokers from an unwanted surprise moment. In case of a sudden swing investors tend to lose a massive chunk of their capital. Even traders may have to face margin calls from their brokers in case market plunges or surges too much.

Source: National Stock Exchange (NSE), Economic Times