NIFTY 50 stocks breaking out above their 200 DMA
These NIFTY 50 stocks closed above their 200-day simple moving average having been below it the prior session — a fresh 200 DMA breakout.
CHG today's move · GAP % distance from the MA · TREND price above 20 / 50 / 200 EMA · VOL× volume vs 20-day average
What each column means
A quick reference for reading the table above.
Stock
The NSE trading symbol of the constituent — every name here belongs to the NIFTY 50 universe. It's the exact ticker you'd type into your broker or charting platform to pull up the same stock.
Last price
The most recent traded price, in rupees. During market hours it reflects the latest scan; outside market hours it shows the day's closing price. Read it against the moving-average columns to see where price sits relative to its averages.
CHG
The stock's percentage change for the current session versus the previous close — blue for up, orange for down. It tells you whether the stock is moving up or down right now, independent of the longer-term condition that put it on this list.
200 DMA
The value of the 200 DMA this screener is built around, recomputed from daily closes. Whether the last price is above, near, or breaking through this line is the exact condition that qualifies a stock for this list.
GAP %
How far the last price sits above (+) or below (−) the moving average, as a percentage. A large positive gap means the stock is well extended above its average (strong, but possibly stretched); a small gap means price is hugging the line — a potential support or resistance test.
TREND
A multi-timeframe read of whether price is above its 20, 50, and 200-period EMA. Each badge lights up when price is above that EMA and stays grey when below. All three lit means the stock is trending up across short, medium and long horizons (the strongest confluence); only 200 lit means just the long-term trend is intact.
VOL×
Relative volume — the last completed session's volume divided by its 20-day average. 1.0× is an ordinary day; 2.0× means twice the usual activity (real conviction behind the move), while 0.5× is thin, low-conviction trade. Values of 1.5× or more are highlighted in amber as unusually heavy volume.
About this screener
A 200-DMA breakout is the session a stock closes back above its 200-day simple moving average after being below it — the simple-average equivalent of reclaiming the long-term trend. Because the 200 DMA is the headline trend line in market commentary, these breakouts often draw broad attention.
200 DMA breakout FAQ
What is a 200-DMA breakout?
The last completed session closed above the 200-day simple moving average having closed at or below it the prior session — price freshly reclaiming its long-term average.
How is it different from a 200-EMA breakout?
Same idea, different average: the DMA uses a simple 200-day mean while the EMA front-weights recent prices. The DMA reacts slightly slower, so DMA and EMA breakouts can occur on different days.
Should I act on a 200-DMA breakout immediately?
Many traders wait for confirmation (a second close above, or higher volume) because first crosses can fail in range-bound conditions. It is a heads-up that the long-term trend may be turning, not a certainty.
Educational use only — not a buy/sell recommendation. A stock appearing here means only that it currently meets the stated moving-average condition on daily data. Moving-average signals fail frequently in ranging markets.