Solar Industries share price drops 4% on July 9, 2026
Solar Industries India Ltd
SOLARINDS
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What happened to SOLARINDS on July 9
Solar Industries India’s share price traded lower on Thursday, July 9, 2026, with different market snapshots showing a sharp intraday decline. One live update pegged the stock at ₹17,170 on NSE, down ₹801 or 4.46% at 10:59 AM. Another feed put the price at ₹17,087 as of July 9, 2026, highlighting how quickly the quote was moving during the session. A separate snapshot also showed SOLARINDS at ₹17,377 with a fall of ₹594 or 3.31%, indicating that the drawdown was building through the day. These variations typically reflect different timestamps and data sources, but they point to the same theme: a clear risk-off session in the stock.
Trading range and key levels during the session
According to the July 9 update, the stock opened at ₹17,994 after closing at ₹17,971 the previous day. During the trading session, Solar Industries India moved between ₹17,116.00 and ₹18,059.00. The average price for the day was reported at ₹17,587.50, suggesting wide two-way movement rather than a steady drift. For traders, that range captures both the dip-buying attempts near ₹17,116 and the selling pressure closer to ₹18,059. It also placed the stock below the prior close for a large part of the session.
July 8 close: a softer setup going into July 9
The decline on July 9 followed a weaker tone on July 8. One market update for July 8, 2026 (8:27 pm IST) showed the price at ₹17,874, down ₹394 or 2.16%. That same snapshot listed a day’s range of ₹17,802.00 to ₹18,312.00, with the previous close at ₹18,268.00 and the open at ₹17,847.00. Another intraday quote on July 8 at 15:29:52 PM IST showed the stock at ₹17,966, down 1.67% versus the last close.
A separate July 8 trading update said Solar Industries traded in the range of ₹18,310.50 and ₹17,796.95 and was 1.67% lower compared with its previous closing price of ₹18,271.15. While the exact “previous close” differs slightly across feeds, the direction was consistent: the stock ended July 8 below the prior day’s levels.
52-week range and where the stock sits now
Over the last 52 weeks, Solar Industries India has recorded a low of ₹11,646.00 and a high of ₹18,972.00, according to the July 9 data. Another market card showed a 52-week high of ₹18,874.00 and the same 52-week low of ₹11,646.00, reflecting minor differences across data sources. Either way, the stock has traded closer to the upper end of its 52-week band in recent weeks, making near-term corrections more visible in percentage terms. The July 9 low of ₹17,116 stayed well above the 52-week low but marked a sharp pullback from recent highs.
Recent performance: 6-month, 1-year, 5-day, and yearly moves
Despite the July 9 fall, the longer-term performance metrics in the provided data remained positive. The stock was reported to be up 27% over the past six months and up 10.92% over the last year. Another update stated that Solar Industries had delivered 49.10% in this year and was down 2.29% in the last five days (as of July 8). Taken together, these numbers show a stock that had strong medium-term momentum but was seeing a short burst of profit-taking and volatility.
Mid-June: brief rebound near ₹17,810
The dataset also includes a mid-June snapshot that showed a short rebound. Solar Industries India was last traded at ₹17,810, up 2.03% from its previous close of ₹17,457. Another market card around the same period showed ₹17,798, up 2.12% in 1D, with a day’s low of ₹17,274 and day’s high of ₹17,901. Those levels were meaningfully below the July 8 and July 9 highs, highlighting how quickly the stock moved higher into early July before turning choppy.
March week: upgrade to Buy but prices fell
A March weekly timeline captured a contrasting setup: positive signals alongside falling prices. The stock opened the week at ₹14,256.85 on March 16 and closed at ₹12,939.30 on March 20, a weekly fall of 9.24%. During that period, MarketsMOJO upgraded the stock from Hold to Buy on March 17, with the note that technical momentum shifted mildly bullish. But the stock continued to face selling pressure, with an intraday low of ₹13,267 on March 19 and a close of ₹13,157.15, down 3.98% that day. The summary also said the stock underperformed the Sensex by 8.96% during the week.
February week: strong quarterly results mentioned, then weakness
Another week-by-week view covered early February. Solar Industries began the week down, with a close of ₹13,197.30 on February 2 (-2.06%). On February 3, it surged 5.09% to close at ₹13,868.65 and the timeline cited “very positive quarterly results announced” along with a “sharp open interest surge.” But the week ended lower at ₹13,000.95 (-3.52%) versus Sensex +1.51%, and the stock hit an intraday low of ₹12,950 on February 6. The sequence shows that even with supportive results, prices did not move in a straight line.
Derivatives watch: open interest rose while price fell (Dec 30, 2025)
The dataset also provides a derivatives snapshot dated December 30, 2025. Open interest in Solar Industries’ futures and options increased by 5,534 contracts, a 14.29% rise from the previous day’s 38,713, with total volume of 56,476 contracts. At that time, the underlying stock price was reported at ₹11,915, down 3.21% on the day, and on a consecutive five-day decline totaling 5.44%, with intraday lows at ₹11,824.
The same note flagged that the stock was trading below key moving averages (5-day, 20-day, 50-day, 100-day, and 200-day) and that delivery volume fell 24.45% to 42,760 shares on December 29 versus the five-day average. It also reported market capitalisation at ₹1,10,978 crore and a Mojo Score of 50.0, graded as Hold and described as downgraded from Buy on November 17, 2025.
Market impact: what these moves mean for investors
For investors tracking Solar Industries as an “Aerospace & Defence” mid-cap on NSE, the July 9 drawdown is notable because it occurred after the stock traded near the upper end of its 52-week range. The July 8 and July 9 price bands also show that intraday swings can be large, even when the broader 6-month and 1-year returns remain positive. In practical terms, that combination can increase stop-loss triggers, margin requirements, and short-term risk for leveraged positions.
The earlier derivatives data provides context for how positioning can change when prices fall. Rising open interest alongside declining prices was highlighted as a cautionary signal in that dataset, alongside weaker delivery participation. While that snapshot was from late 2025, it illustrates the kind of market structure that can amplify volatility when sentiment turns.
Key data points at a glance
Conclusion
Solar Industries India’s share price saw a sharp drop on July 9, 2026, extending weakness seen on July 8, even as longer-term returns cited in the data remained positive. With the stock trading near its 52-week highs earlier and showing wide intraday bands, short-term volatility has become the dominant feature. Investors will likely keep a close watch on how the stock behaves around recent lows and whether trading activity stabilises after the quick slide.
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