Editorial Broker Guide·NEPSE TMS #48

    Trishakti Securities — Broker Review & How to Open an Account

    Putalisadak-based public-limited broker — a rare structure for NEPSE brokers, with a transparent share register and top-10 turnover.

    Best for:Governance-conscious clientsLong-term portfolio holdersCentral Kathmandu walk-in clients

    Quick facts

    TMS Member #

    48

    Address

    Phone

    Email

    TMS Portal

    Website

    Editorial review, not paid promotion

    These broker guides are independent editorial. Nepse Signal has no commission arrangement with any NEPSE broker. All brokerage fees in Nepal are set by NRB and are identical across TMS members — pick a broker for service quality and convenience, not for price.

    About Trishakti Securities

    Trishakti Securities Public Limited (TMS member #48) operates from Putalisadak, Kathmandu — a central commercial district. Unusually for a NEPSE broker, Trishakti is a public limited company (most NEPSE brokers are private limited), which means its own shareholder base is broader and its governance disclosures are more public than at peer private-limited brokers.

    Turnover ranks in the top-10 on most sessions, with a client book that leans toward longer-holding retail rather than active intraday traders. The public-limited structure also means the firm is accountable to a wider share register, which tends to produce more disciplined operational controls.

    Strengths

    • Public-limited structure is rare among NEPSE brokers and brings stronger governance disclosure than private-limited peers.
    • Putalisadak location is central and well-served by multiple bank branches for settlement coordination.
    • Long-holding client mix means floorsheet patterns are stable — useful peer-reference for buy-and-hold positioning.

    What to watch out for

    • Less aggressive on online-TMS marketing than newer brokers — if you want a slick mobile experience, the platform here is functional rather than polished.
    • Standard NRB-fixed brokerage (0.24%–0.36%); pricing parity with peers.
    • Public-limited governance is a benefit on paper but only translates into client value if the firm actually disclo­ses what its private-limited peers don't — read the annual report before assuming the structure alone makes a difference.

    How to open an account

    1. Open a Demat account at any commercial bank or DP (Depository Participant). This gives you a 16-digit BOID — required for every NEPSE transaction.
    2. Visit the broker's office (or download their KYC form from the TMS link below) with your citizenship certificate, PAN card, recent passport photo, and the bank-issued cheque or Demat statement that shows your BOID.
    3. Sign the broker's client agreement and the standing instruction that authorises NEPSE settlement.
    4. Once the broker activates your trading account (usually 1–3 business days), log in to their TMS portal with the credentials they email you and place your first order.

    Account opening is free; brokerage is what they earn from

    No NEPSE broker charges an account-opening fee — they earn on the per-trade commission (slid by NRB rules between 0.24% and 0.36% depending on trade size). If a 'service charge' is quoted up front, ask for the SEBON-approved fee schedule before signing.

    Today's floorsheet activity

    What Trishakti Securities — Broker Review & How to Open an Account is buying & selling

    Full analysis →
    Loading live broker activity…

    Disclaimer · Nepse Signal provides market data and analysis for informational purposes only — not investment advice. Trading securities involves risk, including loss of principal. Always make your own decisions and consult a licensed professional before acting. Read our full Terms of Use.