52-Week Low stocks on December 29, 2025 | StockYaari Market Insight
The market doesn’t experience new highs and celebrations every single day. There are days when stock prices don’t consistently rise or fall, serving as a reminder to investors. One of these sessions comes on December 29, 2025, when a number of well-known Indian companies are trading close to their 52-week lows, even though the larger indices are still very placid.
If you’ve checked your portfolio and wondered,
“Market toh theek lag raha hai, phir yeh stock kyun gir raha hai?”
You’re asking the right question.
In this StockYaari blog, we’ll decode what 52-week low stocks actually signal, look at the companies currently near these levels, and understand how retail investors can interpret this data without panic or guesswork.
What Is a 52-Week Low?
The lowest price a stock has traded at in the last year is its 52-week low.
For example, if the price of a stock went from ₹1,800 to ₹2,400 in the last year, ₹1,800 is the lowest price it has been in 52 weeks.
When a stock gets close to this level, it usually means:
Sentiment is low in the short term.
Investors are putting pressure on the stock market to sell.
Worries about earnings, the outlook for the sector, or values.
But, like 52-week highs, 52-week lows don’t always mean you should buy or sell. They show stress—not permanent damage.
Stocks Trading Near 52-Week Lows on 29 December 2025
Based on approximate (≈) market data, the following stocks are trading close to their yearly lows today:
| Stock Name | Price | Day’s High | Day’s Low | Open | 52-Week Low |
| Dixon Technologies | ≈11,864.00 | ≈12,460.00 | ≈11,821.00 | ≈12,344.00 | ≈11,821.00 |
| PCBL Chemical | ≈295.20 | ≈305.60 | ≈290.20 | ≈304.25 | ≈290.20 |
| Raymond | ≈413.55 | ≈424.10 | ≈412.20 | ≈422.55 | ≈412.20 |
| Colgate | ≈2,067.60 | ≈2,088.70 | ≈2,063.00 | ≈2,080.30 | ≈2,063.00 |
| ACC | ≈1,724.00 | ≈1,738.40 | ≈1,723.00 | ≈1,735.90 | ≈1,723.00 |
| Happiest Minds | ≈474.55 | ≈481.15 | ≈471.00 | ≈479.00 | ≈471.00 |
| Godrej Agrovet | ≈562.00 | ≈575.00 | ≈560.00 | ≈566.90 | ≈560.00 |
| Clean Science | ≈883.65 | ≈885.20 | ≈863.05 | ≈883.95 | ≈863.05 |
Prices are approximate (≈) and may change during market hours.
What stands out here is that even well-established names like Colgate, ACC, Dixon Technologies, and Clean Science are part of this list. This highlights that weakness is not limited to unknown or risky stocks.
What Does This 52-Week Low Data Tell Us?
1. Selling Pressure Is Selective, Not Market-Wide
The broader market may not be crashing, but specific stocks and sectors are clearly under pressure.
Technology and electronics manufacturing (Dixon Technologies).
Specialty chemicals (PCBL Chemical, Clean Science).
FMCG and consumption (Colgate).
Cement and infrastructure (ACC).
This suggests sector rotation and stock-specific issues rather than a full-blown market panic.
2. Even good stocks go through down cycles.
One of the biggest lies about investing is that “good stocks never fall.”
The truth is different.
Companies like Happiest Minds, Colgate, and ACC have significant brand recognition and have been around for a long time, but their stocks are around their yearly lows. This is a reminder for investors that:
Prices matter.
Expectations for growth can vary.
Prices are affected by temporary slowdowns.
Quality does not mean that you won’t have to make corrections.
3. Weakness means being careful, not falling apart.
A lot of these stocks are close to their day’s low, which means that not many people are interested in buying them right now.
This happens a lot when: Investors are waiting for clearer earnings clarity.
Institutions lower their risk for a short time.
People who work in the market are careful around the end of the year.
These kinds of times test your patience more than your faith.
Why do stocks drop to their lowest levels in 52 weeks?
1. Worries about earnings or growth
When earnings growth slows down or margins come under pressure, markets change pricing to reflect this.
Even without big bad news, stocks can still drift lower.
2. Headwinds in Specific Sectors
Some sectors have short-term problems, such as: Higher input costs.
Less demand.
Changes in the rules.
Stocks in the chemical and manufacturing sectors generally react strongly to these kinds of news.
3. Resetting the Value After Big Rallies
A lot of equities that are now close to their 52-week lows had big price jumps in the past.
A correction doesn’t always mean the business is broken—sometimes it simply means expectations were too high.
How Can Retail Investors Use 52-Week Low Data?
1. Don’t Panic Sell Immediately
Seeing red numbers can be uncomfortable, but panic selling rarely helps.
First, ask:
Has the business fundamentally changed?
Is the sector facing temporary or permanent issues?
Price falling alone is not enough reason to exit.
2. Treat It as a Research Trigger
A stock near its 52-week low deserves deeper study, not blind buying.
Look at:
Earnings trends.
Debt levels.
Management commentary.
Long-term industry outlook.
Only strong fundamentals can justify patience.
3. Avoid Catching Falling Knives
Just because a stock looks “cheap” doesn’t mean it can’t fall further.
Timing matters.
If you’re a long-term investor:
Stagger your investments
Maintain position sizing discipline
Be ready for volatility
If you’re a trader, always define risk clearly.
Conclusion
Stocks that are at their lowest point in 52 weeks can be hard to look at, but they can teach us a lot about how the market works.They illustrate where people are being watchful, where things are changing, and where investors are waiting for further information.
StockYaari encourages you to see lists like “52-week low stocks” as opportunity to learn, not as advise to buy or sell immediately away.Others who are patient, disciplined, and understanding get more from the market than others who act on their feelings.
Just because a stock is going down doesn’t mean it’s terrible news. In some circumstances, it only means that the market is taking a breather to mull things over and get ready for the next move.
For more information on the stock market, stock explainers, and analysis that is easy for investors to understand, keep reading StockYaari, where perspective is more vital than panic.
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This analysis is for informational purposes only. Please consult a SEBI-registered financial advisor before investing.
– Chandan Pathak
Equity Research Analyst, StockYaari