NEPSE Volume Analysis
Daily volume, turnover, and buy/sell pressure across every actively-traded NEPSE stock.
Market Volume
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Market Turnover
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Total Trades
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Active Symbols
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Top 10 by turnover
All actively-traded stocks
0 symbols| # | SYMBOL | VOLUME | TURNOVER | TRADES | AVG PRICE | BUYERS / SELLERS | PRESSURE |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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How NEPSE volume analysis works
Every executed contract on NEPSE is captured in the daily floorsheet — symbol, buyer broker, seller broker, quantity, price, and timestamp. Aggregating those contracts by symbol gives you three core metrics: volume (total shares traded), turnover (total rupees changing hands), and trade count (number of contracts). The page above sorts NEPSE's actively-traded stocks by each of these, so you can pivot the view depending on what kind of activity you're looking for.
The Buyers / Sellers column counts the unique brokers on each side of every contract for that stock that day. The ratio (buyers ÷ sellers) becomes the Pressure chip: Accumulation when a few hands are absorbing many sellers, Distribution when many small buyers are absorbing a few big sellers, Mixed otherwise. Combined with the price chart, it's one of the cleanest broker-flow signals NEPSE publishes for free.
Frequently asked
What does trading volume mean on NEPSE?
Volume is the total number of shares that changed hands in a session. If 100,000 shares of NABIL traded today, the day's volume for NABIL is 100,000 — irrespective of price. Volume measures activity; turnover (volume × average price) measures the rupee value of that activity.
Why is volume important for stock-market analysis?
Price moves on high volume are more credible than moves on thin volume. A 5% rally on 3× average volume signals genuine buying interest; the same rally on a quarter of average volume often retraces by the next session. Volume also reveals when institutional money is moving — large blocks concentrated through a few brokers tend to surface as a volume spike.
What's the difference between volume and turnover?
Volume = quantity of shares traded. Turnover = total rupee value of those trades (quantity × price). A penny-stock can post a huge volume number with modest turnover; a high-priced bank stock can have low volume but high turnover. Both metrics matter, and the Volume Analysis page surfaces them in separate top-list tables so you can read either lens.
How do you compute the buy / sell pressure on this page?
For each stock, we count the number of *unique* brokers that appeared on the buyer side vs the seller side of that day's floorsheet. Pressure ratio = unique buyers / unique sellers. > 1.15 = many buyers vs few sellers (distribution by a few big hands); < 0.85 = few buyers vs many sellers (accumulation by a few big hands); otherwise = mixed. It's a structural signal — not predictive on its own, but useful next to a price chart.
How can I use volume analysis when picking stocks to watch?
Two practical patterns. (1) Unusual volume on a sideways stock — if volume is 2× or more its 30-day average while price barely moves, someone is accumulating before a directional move. (2) Volume confirmation on a breakout — a stock breaking out of a multi-week base on heavy volume has much better odds than one breaking out on average volume. Neither is investment advice; combine with the trade-plan and risk checks on the company detail page.
Data sourced from NEPSE's daily floorsheet and aggregated locally. For raw row-level contracts, see the floorsheet.