30 June 2026
6 Minutes Read

ASM in Share Market: Meaning, Purpose and What Investors Should Know

ASM in share market is a term many investors notice when a stock suddenly appears on a special watchlist. The ASM full form is Additional Surveillance Measure, and it is used by Indian stock exchanges to monitor securities that show unusual trading behavior. 

For investors, this matters because an ASM tag is not just a label; it is a signal that the stock is under tighter monitoring due to market concerns. In simple words, it helps bring more caution, more transparency, and better market discipline. 

ASM stands for Additional Surveillance Measure. It is a joint surveillance mechanism introduced by SEBI and the Indian stock exchanges (NSE and BSE) in 2018 to identify and monitor securities showing unusual price movement, abnormal volumes, or trading patterns that warrant enhanced surveillance by exchanges.

🔶 To help identify unusual trading activity and strengthen investor protection through enhanced market surveillance. 

🔶To improve market integrity by creating a visible, transparent mechanism that flags stocks under watch. 

🔶To deter manipulation by imposing economic costs (100% margin, no leverage) that make pump-and-dump schemes harder to execute profitably. 

🔶To alert market participants before a situation escalates — ASM is a pre-emptive tool, not a post-event action. 

The entry criteria for ASM are objective, quantitative, and jointly decided by SEBI and exchanges. A stock must meet specific thresholds — not subjective judgements — to be placed on the list. The list is reviewed and updated daily, with the effective date typically T+1 from the circular. 

Parameter What It Measures Indicative Surveillance Factors Considered by Exchanges Why It Matters 
Close-to-Close Price Variation Daily closing price change vs prior close more than or equal to 25% in 5 consecutive trading days (adjusted for corporate actions) Catches sudden, sustained price jumps not linked to known news 
High-Low Price Variation Intraday price range as % of price Excessive intraday swings vs market average Signals manipulation via intraday ramping and dumping 
Monthly Volume Variation Current month volume vs 3-month average Volume surge more than 500% vs 3-month average on NSE+BSE combined Sudden volume spikes without news = potential circular trading signal 
Client Concentration % of trading by top 25 unique PANs Top 25 clients account for more than 25% of combined monthly volume Few accounts driving most of volume = possible coordinated activity 
Delivery Percentage Shares actually delivered vs total traded Average delivery less than 30% of traded volume Low delivery = speculative churn, not genuine investment buying 
Market Capitalisation Total market cap of the company Various thresholds: more than Rs.500 cr, more than Rs.100 cr, less than Rs.500 cr depending on stage Larger caps use different criteria to avoid flagging established companies 
Beta-Adjusted Price Move Stock price move relative to index move Close-to-close variation greater than (100% + Beta x Nifty variation) over 60 or 365 days Removes market-wide moves; isolates stock-specific unexplained movement 

IMPORTANT: A stock satisfying even ONE of the criteria can be shortlisted for ASM — exchanges do not require all parameters to be triggered simultaneously. The combination of criteria that triggers the flag is disclosed in the exchange circular issued on the day of entry. Always read that circular first. 

The practical impact of ASM varies significantly depending on whether you are a long-term investor or an active trader. The table below covers every dimension of impact and what it means for each participant. 

Aspect What Changes Under ASM Impact on Retail Investor Impact on Trader/Speculator 
Margin Requirement Increases to 100% of trade value — full upfront payment required Must have full cash; no leverage or BTST on margin Eliminates intraday leverage; position sizing constrained significantly 
Intraday Trading Banned in ASM securities Cannot use MIS/BO order types; must take delivery Scalping and intraday trading completely unavailable 
Price Band Reduced to 5% circuit filter (from 10–20%) Limits daily gain/loss to 5%; entry/exit price range narrow Reduces risk of extreme single-day loss; also limits recovery speed 
Pledging as Collateral Not allowed for ASM stocks Cannot use ASM stock as margin collateral for other trades Portfolio margin calculations change; existing collateral may be recalled 
Liquidity Often decreases as traders avoid the stock Bid-ask spreads may widen; harder to exit large positions Slippage risk increases; market impact cost higher for bulk trades 
Derivatives Contracts Long-term ASM Stage 3-4: new F and O contracts not issued; existing contracts run to expiry F and O hedging on the stock unavailable if it escalates Option and futures strategies on the stock become unavailable or illiquid 
Sentiment and Price ASM tag itself often causes selling pressure Price may fall on the announcement day irrespective of fundamentals Creates possible dip-buying or short-selling opportunities, but with high risk 

Many investors confuse ASM with GSM (Graded Surveillance Measure). They are related but distinct frameworks targeting different risk profiles. A stock can be under ASM, GSM, both, or neither. 

Feature ASM (Additional Surveillance Measure)GSM (Graded Surveillance Measure)
Primary Focus Unusual price/volume activity — manipulation or speculation signals Price not commensurate with fundamentals — overvalued relative to financials 
Trigger Type Market-behaviour based (volume surge, price spikes, client concentration) Fundamental mismatch (P/E, book value, earnings vs market price) 
Who It Targets Any stock — including large-caps and mid-caps — showing unusual trading Typically smaller companies whose price has ‘run ahead’ of their business 
Stages Short-term (2 stages) + Long-term (4 stages) 6 graded stages from Stage I to Stage VI (progressively stricter) 
Trading Impact 100% margin, intraday banned, 5% circuit Periodic call auction, trade-for-trade, higher margins — increasingly restrictive by stage 
Severity Indicator Surveillance concern — does not imply fundamental weakness Stronger warning — suggests possible overvaluation or financial risk 
SEBI Circular Reference NSE/SURV/46557, NSE/SURV/52144, NSE/SURV/58558 Separate GSM circular framework — published independently by NSE/BSE 

ASM stands for Additional Surveillance Measure, and it is one of the ways exchanges and SEBI monitor unusual stock activity in the market. Understanding asm in share market helps investors interpret warnings more clearly and make better decisions instead of reacting blindly. 

When you see an ASM tag, treat it as a signal to conduct additional due diligence and understand the reasons for enhanced surveillance. In that sense, ASM is less about fear and more about awareness, discipline, and investor protection. 

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Frequently Asked Questions

What does ASM mean in share market? 

Can I do intraday trading in an ASM stock? 

What is the difference between ASM and GSM? 

How do I find out if a stock is under ASM? 

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.