Upper Circuit Stocks Today: Only Buyers, No Sellers!

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Upper Circuit Stocks Today: Only Buyers, No Sellers!

The market energy is back.
Some lesser-known names have hit their upper circuit today, which basically means the stock price has moved up to the maximum limit allowed for the day, and after that, there are only buyers left and no sellers. In simple words: people want to buy more, but nobody is willing to sell.

This kind of move usually happens when:

There’s strong positive sentiment,
Some bullish news is doing the rounds.
Or traders expect more upside.

Below are a few stocks that are in focus right now.

Company Name Sector Bid Qty Last Price Change %Chg
Eurotex Textiles – Spinning ~37455.00 ~18.72 ~3.12 ~20.00
The Western Ind Miscellaneous ~22.00 ~184.95 ~23.95 ~14.88
Revathi Equipment Trading ~101.00 ~921.10 ~43.80 ~4.99
Capital Trust Finance ~47465.00 ~27.84 ~1.32 ~4.98

Source: NSE/Moneycontrol | 30/10/2025 | Market figures are approximate and may change intraday.

Let’s break down what’s happening with each of these names

1. Eurotex

Eurotex is from the textiles space, especially spinning and cotton-related products. The stock is up ~20%, which is a very sharp move for a low-priced counter.

Why are traders so bullish here?

The textile theme tends to heat up whenever there’s talk of export demand picking up or lower raw material costs like cotton.

Lower input costs can improve margins quickly for spinning companies, so even a small improvement in outlook can create huge buying interest.

Also, at this price range, even retail and small traders jump in hoping for “quick percentage gains”, which can push the stock straight to the upper circuit.

In short: high demand, strong buying, and no one booking profit yet.

2. The Western Ind

The Western Ind has rallied ~15% in a single session. For a stock in the “miscellaneous” category (often diversified / niche businesses), this kind of move usually hints at either:

Buzz around expansion plans or a turnaround in one of its verticals,

Or simply operator/trader-driven interest building up.

When demand spikes and there’s very limited free-floating supply in the market (not many shares available to trade), even a few aggressive buyers can push the stock higher very fast. That seems to be what we’re seeing here.

3. Revathi Equipment

Revathi Equipment is trading near the ₹900+ zone and is up almost 5%. Even though the % change looks smaller compared to Eurotex, keep in mind: a ₹40+ jump in one day on a high-priced stock is still big money.

What’s driving it?

The stock is often watched as a play on capital goods / industrial demand.

Whenever the market builds a “capex cycle is coming” story, meaning companies will spend more on equipment, projects, and expansion, such stocks get attention.

Investors tend to believe that if infra and industrial orders rise, companies in or around industrial/trading activity could benefit.

So the buying here looks like a bet on continued growth in manufacturing and infrastructure activity.

4. Capital Trust

Capital Trust is up ~5% with strong buying interest and a healthy bid quantity. 

This company is in the finance/lending space.

Why are people lining up to buy?

NBFC and micro-lending names often see momentum when the market expects stronger credit growth in rural and semi-urban India.

If investors feel collections are improving and loan demand is rising, they treat it as a “growth story”.

Also, lower fear about defaults = higher confidence in lenders.

This stock showing steady ~5% upside suggests sentiment around smaller finance players is still positive.

Why do stocks hit the upper circuit?

Let’s simplify this.

An “upper circuit” is the maximum limit a stock is allowed to go up in a single trading session. This limit can be 2%, 5%, 10%, 20%, etc., depending on the stock.

When that limit is hit:

Trading in that stock doesn’t completely stop, but the price can’t move higher for the rest of that session.

You’ll see only “buyers” in the order book – people trying to buy at the upper circuit price.

There will be almost zero sellers at that price.

Why does this happen?

Positive news or expectations:

Maybe the company is expected to do better, or there’s talk of new orders, restructuring, better margins, promoter action, etc. Even rumours can create a rush.

Low supply in the market:

Sometimes not many shares are available to be sold. So even a small wave of buying creates a big jump.

Momentum trading:

Traders love momentum. If a stock hits the upper circuit once, it attracts more eyeballs… which can bring in even more buyers the next day. This is the classic “circuit begets circuit” behaviour you often see in small- and mid-cap names.

Important note from Stockyaari:

Upper circuit doesn’t always mean “strong fundamentals”. Sometimes it’s just hype.

A sharp move up can ALSO reverse sharply if sentiment cools or if big players decide to book profit.

Liquidity risk is real: when a stock is locked in upper circuit, you can’t easily buy it… And when it goes the other way (lower circuit), you can’t easily sell it.

So, before jumping in:

Look at debt levels.

Check recent earnings,

And always ask: is there real business improvement, or just excitement?

Final word

Today’s moves in Eurotex, The Western Ind, Revathi Equipme, and Capital Trust show how quickly money chases opportunities in specific pockets of the market: textiles, industrial plays, and NBFC-style finance.

Upper circuits are exciting to watch, no doubt.

But as always, momentum is not the same as safety.

Stay curious, stay cautious, and keep tracking the data with Stockyaari