NSE Behaviour When a Stock Hits the -10% Lower Price Limit

 When a stock at the Nairobi Securities Exchange (NSE) reaches the -10% lower price limit, trading behavior changes immediately: offers/ask/supply block the lowest price, and the bid/demand side is effectively empty.



🔵 1️⃣ SELLING During a Limit-Down (-10%)

✅ What Actually Happens

  • When a stock hits the lower limit (e.g., from 10.00 to 9.00):
    • 9.00 becomes the ONLY price buyers and sellers can use if it is the lowest price for that day and the bid/demand side is empty.
    • You cannot sell at 9.10, 9.20, or any higher price until prices move up and open up the buy-side for orders to queue.
    • The system locks the price at 9.00.

Price Range: 9.00 – 11.00 and opening price is 10

Bid PriceBid QtyOffer QtyOffer Price
120,4009.00
32,5009.10
18,2009.20
9,7509.30
6,1009.40
4,3509.50
2,9009.60
1,7009.70
9009.80
5009.90

🧊 What the Sell Queue Looks Like

  • Sellers form a queue at exactly 9.00 and the bid/demand side is empty.
  • They are matched on a first-come, first-served basis, and all sell orders are executed only at the capped lower price.
  • If buyers don’t place orders → no trades happen, even though sellers are queued.

✔ Advice for Traders During Limit-Down

  • Place a Limit Sell at the lower limit (only allowed price).
  • Queue early — pre-open gives best position.
  • Check the sell-side depth: if many units are ahead of you, chances of filling are very low.
  • Understand: you will NOT be filled unless a buyer places enough buy orders to clear the queue and orders ahead of you.

🔵 2️⃣ BUYING During a Limit-Down (-10%)

✅ What Actually Happens

  • Buyers can only place orders at the lower limit price (e.g., 9.00).
  • Bid/demand side is empty below the lower limit, meaning no buy orders can queue at lower prices since the lowest price is blocked by sell orders.
  • Any attempt to place buy orders below the lower limit is rejected by the system.
  • The system locks the highest price for buyers.

🧊 What the Buy Queue Looks Like

  • Buyers cannot queue below the lower limit.
  • Execution happens on a first-come, first-served basis at available sell orders.

🔑 Key Takeaways

For Sellers:

  • At limit-down, only one price exists: the lower limit.
  • You cannot sell at higher prices.
  • You must queue at the capped price and hope buyers appear.
  • Market orders fail if no quantity is available.

For Buyers:

  • Buying at the limit or market gives instant liquidity if demand exists.
  • Holding is a strategy, but risky if sentiment flips the next day.

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