CAMS share price: Technical levels to watch in 2026
Price snapshot on 11 May 2026
CAMS was quoted around ₹821.25 on the NSE at 09:39 AM IST on 11 May 2026, down about 1.80% versus the previous close shown in the same feed. Another tracker in the same social stream put the live price at ₹815.85 later in the morning (10:47 AM), showing the stock was moving quickly intraday. The day’s open was cited at ₹820.50, while the prior close was cited at ₹836.30 in multiple snippets. Intraday, CAMS traded between roughly ₹814-₹833, with one quote listing a low of ₹814.40 and another listing a low of ₹817.45. The intraday high was repeatedly shown near ₹833.40. One feed also listed an average traded price near ₹821.84 to ₹825.42 for the session window it tracked. The stock was tagged as Financial Services and “Small Cap” in the circulated dashboard. A “Stock Score” of 78/100 was also shared, described as average financial strength with a high growth trend and attractive valuations.
Where CAMS sits in its 52-week range
Social trackers put the 52-week low at ₹611.40 and the 52-week high at ₹875.00. Based on that high, the same feed stated the stock was about 6.78% away from its 52-week high at the time of the snapshot. On recent performance, one data card said CAMS gained 7.6% over the last six months and 20.17% over the last year. Another snippet in the same thread listed the past 1-year return as 14.29%, and a separate line referenced “18” for the 1-year return, highlighting inconsistency across sources reposted on social media. The practical takeaway for traders is that the stock is closer to its 52-week high than its 52-week low, even after the day’s dip. A few posts also referenced older price points (for example ₹625-₹640 around late March 2026), suggesting the broader conversation spans multiple dates and price zones. Because these are screenshots and reposts, readers are treating “returns” as approximate rather than a single definitive number. The cleaner, repeatable reference points in the shared data are the 52-week high and low and the current trading band on 11 May.
Moving averages: why the trend reads bullish on dashboards
A moving-averages panel shared on social media showed “Bullish Moving Averages: 16” and “Bearish Moving Averages: 0” at a price near ₹821.25. The same panel listed short-to-long EMAs below the current price: 5 EMA ₹811.30, 10 EMA ₹788.70, 12 EMA ₹781.90, 20 EMA ₹760.30, and 26 EMA ₹748.80. It also listed longer EMAs below spot: 50 EMA ₹727.50, 100 EMA ₹725.80, and 200 EMA ₹740.70. A separate technical table circulated in the thread gave simple moving averages as bullish, including 50-SMA at ₹700.66 and 200-SMA at ₹746.59. Another line in the same social stream, however, claimed the intraday trend was “Downtrend,” which can happen even when the stock remains above major moving averages. The presence of the 200-period average below spot is usually interpreted by traders as supportive of a larger uptrend, while short-term weakness is treated as a pullback within that trend. Since these numbers come from multiple dashboards, small differences in the averages are expected due to methodology and timestamp differences. What remained consistent across the reposts was the idea that price was above most commonly watched moving averages on the day.
Support, resistance, and pivot levels being tracked
One widely shared set of pivot levels put the pivot at ₹837.22. Resistance levels were listed at ₹843.98 (R1), ₹851.67 (R2), and ₹858.43 (R3). Support levels were listed at ₹829.53 (S1), ₹822.77 (S2), and ₹815.08 (S3). With spot near ₹821-₹822 in the morning quotes, price was hovering around the S2 area in that particular framework. Several traders in the thread focused on whether CAMS can reclaim the pivot zone around ₹837, because that would place it back above the day’s earlier resistance reference. At the same time, the proximity of S3 around ₹815 was highlighted because it aligned with the lower end of the day’s reported trading band. A separate social video discussion also referenced ₹813 as a resistance zone and mentioned a higher level around ₹862, showing that charters are watching similar zones but with different labels. Taken together, the crowd-sourced view is that the ₹815-₹823 band is the immediate decision area, while ₹844-₹858 is the next resistance cluster from the pivot sheet.
RSI, MFI, and Stoch: overbought signals in focus
The Relative Strength Index (RSI) value shared most often was around 75.18, and another table showed 14D RSI near 75.13. On many technical frameworks, an RSI in the mid-70s is treated as stretched, and traders in the thread used that to argue the stock may pause even if the broader trend is positive. Money Flow Index (MFI) was shared at 80.16, which is also a high reading and often cited when participants discuss near-term overheating. Stochastic (9,6) was shared at 72.05 and labelled “Neutral” in one dashboard. Stochastic RSI (14) was shown at 100.00 and labelled “Overbought,” which strengthened the “near-term froth” argument in social commentary. At the same time, a few posts referenced a “weekly stochastic crossover” that appeared on the week ending 27 Mar 2026, described as a bullish signal from an oversold region (below 20). The same snippet claimed an average price gain of 6.94% within 7 weeks of that signal in the last 10 years, which is why that date continues to be cited. The net social read is that short-term oscillators look heated now, even as some participants still point to the March crossover as part of the broader recovery narrative.
MACD, ADX, ATR, and ROC: trend strength vs volatility
Multiple MACD readings circulated, including one set with MACD at 33.14 and MACD signal at 25.64. Another technical dashboard showed MACD (12,26) at 7.51 with a “Bullish” action label, which likely reflects different scaling or calculation windows across platforms. Average Directional Index (ADX) was repeatedly shown near 28.23 and labelled as a “Strong Trend,” which generally means trend strength is present but not extreme. Average True Range (ATR) was listed at 25.88 and labelled “Less Volatile” on one table, giving traders a ballpark for typical daily movement magnitude in rupee terms on that dashboard. Rate of Change (21) was shown at 24.32 and Rate of Change (125) at 7.29, indicating stronger short-window change than the longer-window measure in that feed. These readings helped explain the split tone in commentary: the trend strength metric is supportive, but fast oscillators and high momentum readings can still produce pullbacks. Some posts also described weekly and monthly indicators as “bearish or mildly bearish,” even while daily MACD crossover snippets were called bullish. That contradiction is central to the social discussion, with many participants distinguishing between a short-term trade and a longer-term trend.
Volume and delivery snippets shared in the thread
The social context included a “Delivery & Volume” panel, but the figures were posted as rupee values without full labels, such as Day ₹10,90,538 and ₹20,87,275, Week ₹14,36,413 and ₹53,23,651, and Month ₹9,40,572 and ₹25,80,163. Because the fields were not fully explained in the reposted table, users treated these as directional rather than definitive. Another snippet showed a volume figure of 6,05,711, again without additional context on timeframe in the clipped feed. Intraday commentary in one dashboard explicitly said the “intraday trend” was downtrend on 11 May, despite the stock trading above many moving averages listed elsewhere. That type of message often shows up when the day’s price action is weaker than the previous close, which matches the morning drop from the cited prior close of ₹836.30. The same feed showed the day’s high and low as ₹833.40 and ₹814.40, implying a wide enough band for intraday traders to focus on levels rather than directional conviction. Circuit limits were also reposted as lower circuit ₹752.70 and upper circuit ₹919.90 in one card. Overall, the volume-related conversation stayed secondary to levels, RSI, and moving averages in the social thread.
Ownership and fundamentals notes that keep coming up
A shareholding snippet highlighted that promoter holding remained unchanged at 0.00% in the Mar 2026 quarter. The same clarifications panel circulated widely stated CAMS is not promoter-owned and is widely held by institutions and the public, consistent with the 0% promoter figure. Another “expert verdict” card reposted in the thread said experts maintain a “Buy” rating, and claimed the stock entered a buy zone on 10 Aug 2023 at ₹482.60 with an indicated move of 72.93% since then. That same card described the company as almost debt-free and said FIIs increased holding in the recent quarter, but it did not provide exact FII percentages in the snippets shared. Separately, a Hindi video excerpt discussed Q4 FY26 results and mentioned total revenue at 367.88 in its narration, along with a quarter-on-quarter dent and year-on-year decline, and an EPS figure of ₹3.99 versus ₹4.93 in the past quarter and ₹4.29 in the year-ago quarter. Since the thread did not include a full results table, most of the market discussion stayed anchored to technicals rather than detailed financial reconciliation. A notable feature of the social stream is that it mixes today’s ₹800-range quotes with older reposted headlines showing prices in the ₹3,000-₹4,800 range, so readers are cross-checking timestamps before drawing conclusions. The most consistent ownership fact in the discussion remained the promoter holding at 0% and its unchanged status in Mar 2026.
Key levels and indicators cited on social trackers
Frequently Asked Questions
Did your stocks survive the war?
See what broke. See what stood.
Live Q4 Earnings Tracker