10 June 2026
6 Minutes Read

Bonus Issues in Indian Stocks: Market Patterns and Investor Considerations

A practical, data-backed guide for Indian equity investors!

Every time a major company announces a bonus issue, social media lights up. “Buy before the record date!” “Free shares!” “Stock will double after bonus!” The excitement is real — but is the strategy behind it sound?

This article takes a hard look at bonus scalping — what it is, when it works, when it doesn’t, and what Indian retail investors need to know before acting on bonus announcements.

Bonus scalping is a short-term trading strategy where an investor buys shares shortly after a bonus issue announcement, aiming to profit from the event-driven price movement — either the run-up before the record date, the post-ex-date recovery, or both. Unlike long-term investing, the bonus scalper is not particularly interested in the underlying business. The goal is to capture a specific, time-limited price move.

When a company announces a bonus issue, it distributes additional shares to existing shareholders free of cost, funded from retained earnings or reserves.

🔹 A 1:1 bonus: you receive 1 extra share for every share you hold
🔹 A 2:1 bonus: you receive 2 extra shares for every share you hold
🔹 On the ex-bonus date, the stock price adjusts downward proportionally

A stock trading at ₹1,000 before a 1:1 bonus will open at approximately ₹500 on the ex-date. You now hold 2 shares at ₹500 instead of 1 share at ₹1,000. Total portfolio value is unchanged. This adjustment is purely mechanical — it is not a loss.

Understanding how a stock typically behaves across the lifecycle of a bonus announcement is the foundation of any scalping strategy.

PhaseDescriptionTypical MoveDriver
Phase 1Announcement Day+3% to +6%News sentiment
Phase 2Run-Up to Ex-Date (2–6 weeks)+5% to +10%Retail FOMO
Phase 3Ex-Date Drop (1:1 bonus)~−50% (mechanical)Exchange adjustment
Phase 4First 2 Weeks Post Ex-DateVolatile (−3% to −5%)Profit booking
Phase 5Recovery: 2–8 Weeks+4% to +8% on adjusted priceFresh retail buying
Phase 63–6 MonthsFundamentals drivenBusiness performance

Key insight: The announcement day is where the majority of abnormal returns are concentrated. Some studies of BSE/NSE-listed firms observed cumulative abnormal returns of approximately 5–6% in the 3-day window around the announcement, with the single largest jump on announcement day itself.

Historically, some stocks have shown price movements during this period, although outcomes vary significantly. Buy within hours of the announcement, capture the FOMO run-up, and sell before the price halves on ex-date.

Typical Return: +5% to +10% over 2–6 weeks
Price behaviour may vary depending on factors such as:

➜ You buy within hours of announcement
➜ Bonus ratio is generous (2:1 or 3:1)
➜ Broader market is bullish
➜ Company has clean fundamentals and earnings momentum

The “recovery play” — buying at or after the adjusted price and waiting for retail buying to push it back up. This window is far less reliable and depends heavily on business fundamentals, sector tailwinds, and fresh retail interest.

Verdict on Window 2
Carries meaningful risk. Should not be treated as a systematic strategy. Reserve it for high-conviction, fundamentally strong companies only.

The table below summarises price behaviour across eight major bonus events. Pre-run is measured from announcement date to ex-date. Post returns are on adjusted (post-bonus) price basis.

CompanyBonus RatioPre-Run1M Post3M PostVerdict
Varun Beverages2:1 (2023)~12%+11.8%+18.4%Strong
Persistent Sys1:1 (2023)~8.5%+8.5%+14.2%Strong
BEL2:1 (2022)~7%+7.1%+12.6%Strong
Wipro1:1 (Dec 2024)~4%+6.2%+9.1%Moderate
Bajaj Finance1:1 (2023)~5%+4.3%+0.9%⚠️ Mixed
Reliance1:1 (Sep 2024)~3%+1.4%−3.2%Weak
SRF Ltd1:1 (2022)~4%+2.1%−1.6%Weak
Wipro1:3 (2019)~2%−2.8%−5.4%Poor

Pattern that emerges: High-ratio bonuses (2:1) from companies with strong earnings momentum deliver across both windows. Low-ratio bonuses from stagnant companies fail on both counts. Big-name stocks (Reliance) are not automatically good plays — institutional ownership limits the retail-driven recovery.

This is the most misunderstood aspect of bonus scalping and the one that quietly destroys returns. Let us work through it properly.

➤ Buy 100 shares at ₹1,080 pre-bonus (after the run-up) = ₹1,08,000 invested
➤ 1:1 bonus allotted: you now hold 200 shares at adjusted price of ₹540
➤ Post-bonus recovery of 7%: all shares now trading at ₹577.80
➤ You sell all 200 shares within 12 months of bonus allotment

LotCost BasisSale ProceedsNatureTax Impact
Original 100 shares₹1,08,000₹57,780STCL₹50,220 loss
Bonus 100 shares₹0 (nil cost)₹57,780STCG₹57,780 gain
Net position after set-offNet STCG7,560
STCG Tax @ 20%1,512
Net real return on ₹1,08,000~4.7%

Conclusion: Real post-tax return ≈ 4.7% (Actual tax outcomes may vary depending on holding period, applicable tax rules, and individual circumstances)
A 7% post-bonus recovery on adjusted price translates to approximately 4.7% real return after tax. The STCL on original shares (cost ₹1,080, sale ₹577.80 = ₹50,220 loss) can be set off against the STCG on bonus shares (₹57,780), reducing net taxable gain to just ₹7,560.

By the time most retail investors hear about a bonus announcement, the stock has already jumped 3–5%. Buying at that elevated price leaves very little remaining run-up before the record date — often just 2–4% gross before brokerage and taxes.

Academic research confirms that stocks begin their abnormal price run-up before the formal announcement. Institutional investors and insiders often position ahead of the news. The filing on BSE/NSE may already reflect a stock up 5–8%.

A bonus play that looks perfect in isolation can be wiped out by a broader market correction. A 5% Nifty correction during your holding window eliminates the entire bonus run-up. You have no control over this.

Post-bonus recovery only reliably works when the underlying company has earnings momentum and sector tailwinds. Buying a weak company’s bonus to “get free shares” is one of the most common retail mistakes in Indian markets. The Wipro 2019 (1:3 ratio) and Reliance 2024 examples above illustrate this clearly.

Large PSUs where the government holds 70–90%+ of shares have thin public float. Even after a bonus doubles the share count, tradeable float remains limited — dampening the liquidity-driven price recovery that makes bonus plays work in widely-held companies.

Use this checklist before trading any bonus event:

Green Flags — Proceed🚩 Red Flags — Stay Out
• You can buy within hours of the announcement (not days)• Announcement was made more than 3–4 days ago and stock has already run up
• Bonus ratio is 2:1 or higher• Bonus ratio is stingy (1:2 or 1:3)
• Company has consistent earnings growth for 2–4 quarters• Company has weak or declining earnings
• Stock is NOT near a 52-week high• Stock has underperformed its sector for 6+ months
• Sector is in a bullish phase• Planning to hold only through ex-date and sell within 12 months (tax trap)
• Broader Nifty/Sensex trend is positive• Broader market in a downtrend

A bonus issue is not charity. Companies do it because:

🔸 They are confident in future earnings. Doubling the paid-up capital means future dividends are paid on twice the share base. Only a company confident in sustaining earnings growth would do this willingly.

🔸 They want to improve liquidity. A ₹2,000 stock becomes a ₹1,000 stock after a 1:1 bonus, accessible to a far wider retail investor base.

🔸 They are signalling health. Historical market observations suggest that companies with genuine earnings momentum disproportionately announce bonus issues. Distressed companies do not.

For long-term investors, a bonus issue from a quality company is therefore a genuine positive signal worth noting — not primarily as a scalping trigger, but as confirmation that management is confident about the future.

Bonus scalping is real, has a documented edge, and has rewarded disciplined investors in Indian markets. But it is narrow, timing-sensitive, tax-complicated, and heavily dependent on business quality.

The single most important rule
Market reactions often occur shortly after announcements, although outcomes differ across securities. Everything after that is increasingly marginal. If you missed the first few hours after the bonus announcement, the easy money is gone.

For most retail investors, the smarter approach is to use bonus announcements as a screening tool — to identify quality companies with confident management, strong earnings momentum, and improving liquidity — and hold them for 6–12 months, not 6–12 days. Bonus scalping is not a shortcut to quick profits. But understood correctly, it is a useful and legitimate addition to the toolkit of any serious Indian equity investor.

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DISCLAIMER: Investment in securities market are subject to market risks, read all the related documents carefully before investing. The securities quoted are exemplary and are not recommendatory. Full disclaimer: https://bit.ly/naviadisclaimer.