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Weekly breakout stocks: High-volume watch India

What traders mean by a weekly breakout

A weekly breakout is typically flagged when a stock trades above a prior reference high tracked on a weekly basis. In the shared scans, the reference point is shown as “Last Week High” and the new level as “Current Week High.” The breakout difference and breakout percentage quantify how far price moved beyond that reference. Traders on Reddit often pair this with volume because breakouts with heavy trading tend to attract more follow-through interest. In this dataset, volume is reported as “Current Week Volume” for weekly breakouts and as “Volume” for the price-volume breakout list. These are mechanical screens, not a judgement on business quality or future returns. The numbers shared also show that a breakout signal can coexist with a down day, depending on how the specific breakout metric is computed. For readers, the practical takeaway is to treat the lists as watchlists, then validate liquidity and risk before acting.

Three names dominating social chatter on volume

Among the most discussed tickers in the shared posts were IKS (Inventurus Knowledge Solutions), JSWCEMENT (JSW Cement), and HONASA (Honasa Consumer). The volume comparison table showed IKS at 9,11,195 shares versus an average volume of 1,58,486, a 5.75 times jump in the “Change (No. of times)” column. JSW Cement showed 15,12,99,626 shares versus an average 3,03,74,178, a 4.98 times pickup, alongside a listed price of 136.80 and change of 7.33%. Honasa Consumer showed 6,89,73,967 shares versus an average 1,42,42,075, a 4.84 times pickup, alongside a listed price of 379.90 and change of 5.38%. In the same row-format, IKS showed a price of 1,578.20 with a change of -2.53%. These figures were shared as snapshots from trackers rather than as official exchange summaries. The key reason these three stood out in discussion is the clear gap between current and average volume. That gap is often used as a quick proxy for attention and liquidity, especially during breakout weeks.

Weekly breakout list: leaders by price change

The “Weekly Breakout Stocks” table circulated widely because it combines week-high breakouts with weekly volume. Honasa Consumer Ltd was listed at an LTP of ₹389.50 with a weekly change of +8.04% and a current week high of ₹402.80. JSW Cement Ltd appeared at ₹139.49 with a weekly change of +9.44% and a current week high of ₹142.50. Rategain Travel Technologies Ltd also stood out with +8.07% and a current week high of ₹730.00. Several other names were flagged with smaller but still positive moves, including Supriya Lifescience, Deepak Fertilisers Petrochemicals Corporation, Endurance Technologies, Dixon Technologies, Mtar Technologies, and Entero Healthcare Solutions. Breakout percentages in this list ranged from +2.90% (Entero Healthcare Solutions) to +6.80% (Honasa Consumer). The list is a blend of consumer, building materials, pharma, industrials, and tech-linked names, reflecting broad-based scanning rather than a single sector theme. Below is a compact snapshot of the most shared weekly-breakout entries and their key fields.

Stock (weekly breakout list)LTPWeekly changeBreakout (%)Current week volumeMarket capP/E
Honasa Consumer Ltd₹389.50+8.04%+6.80%3,04,40,836₹11,713.3158.58
JSW Cement Ltd₹139.49+9.44%+5.57%7,82,70,944₹17,389.720.00
Rategain Travel Technologies Ltd₹705.10+8.07%+2.93%49,62,864₹7,709.7039.66
Dixon Technologies India Ltd₹11,772.00+4.57%+3.63%9,40,789₹68,783.3647.81
Deepak Fertilisers Petrochemicals Corporation Ltd₹1,447.30+4.60%+3.75%9,56,084₹17,532.0420.03

How big was the volume pickup this week

Volume is the common thread across the posts, and the numbers vary widely by company size. In the weekly breakout list, JSW Cement’s current week volume was 7,82,70,944, far higher than most other names in the same list. Honasa Consumer’s current week volume was 3,04,40,836, also significantly elevated relative to many mid-cap entries. By contrast, Endurance Technologies showed 1,36,309 and Entero Healthcare Solutions showed 1,40,947, highlighting that not all breakouts come with heavy turnover. The separate “Volume vs Avg. Volume” scan reinforced this idea by expressing activity as a multiple of average volume. IKS was highlighted at 5.75 times its average volume, which is the largest multiple among the three most-circulated rows. JSW Cement and Honasa Consumer were shown at 4.98 times and 4.84 times, respectively, indicating sustained participation rather than a minor uptick. One practical implication is that traders watching liquidity may focus first on the highest-volume names, while others may focus on smaller-volume breakouts for earlier-stage moves. The data also suggests that “high volume” can mean either a very large absolute number or a large jump versus a stock’s own baseline.

Price-volume breakout list: where volume is the story

A second list labelled “Price Volume Breakout Stocks” was shared alongside the weekly breakout names. Here, the key column is “Breakout (%)” relative to “Today’s R1,” and the values are much larger than in the weekly breakout table. Asian Hotels West Ltd was shown with a breakout of +142.54% and volume of 12,197, despite the day’s change listed at -4.42%. Arihant Foundations Housing Ltd showed +104.57% breakout and volume of 6,905 with a -3.52% change. Noida Toll Bridge Company Ltd showed +90.67% breakout with volume of 80,97,005 and a +5.33% change. Sun Pharma Advanced Research Company Ltd and Exicom Tele Systems Ltd were notable for very large volumes of 3,18,08,178 and 3,59,28,807, with day changes of +17.67% and +12.20% respectively. Several smaller names also appeared, including ABS Marine Services, Wol 3D India, Nibe, and ASL Industries, each with breakout metrics above +40% in the table. Because the breakout definition here differs from the weekly-high breakout definition, readers should not compare the breakout percentages directly across lists. Instead, the list is best read as “unusual price plus volume activity around a stated level (R1)” rather than as a traditional chart breakout above a prior week’s high.

Large-cap vs mid-cap: market-cap mix in the list

The shared weekly breakout table provides market cap figures for each entry, giving a quick sense of size. Dixon Technologies India Ltd was the largest in that list at ₹68,783.36 market cap (as listed), while Endurance Technologies Ltd was also large at ₹36,838.90. Mid-sized entries included JSW Cement at ₹17,389.72 and Deepak Fertilisers Petrochemicals Corporation at ₹17,532.04. Honasa Consumer’s market cap was shown at ₹11,713.31, while Rategain was shown at ₹7,709.70. Several other names in the list clustered around ₹5,600 to ₹5,900, such as Megasoft, Supriya Lifescience, and Entero Healthcare Solutions. This mix matters because liquidity, volatility, and participation can look very different across market-cap buckets. It also explains why social chatter often concentrates on a few widely tradable names even when many stocks technically trigger a screen. Separately, other shared tables listed additional companies and one-day moves, but those were not tied directly to the weekly breakout filter shown above. If you are building a watchlist for the week of 25 May 2026, it helps to group candidates by size first, then compare volume and breakout strength within that peer set.

Valuation snapshot: P/E range and zeros

The weekly breakout list also included P/E ratios, which became a point of discussion in comments. Honasa Consumer was listed with a P/E of 58.58, while Dixon Technologies was listed at 47.81 and Endurance Technologies at 38.71. Deepak Fertilisers Petrochemicals Corporation was listed at 20.03, suggesting a lower multiple within this specific set. Mtar Technologies appeared with a very high P/E of 260.07, standing out versus most others in the same list. Some entries showed P/E as 0.00, including JSW Cement, which usually indicates that the tracker is not presenting a meaningful P/E figure in that output. In the price-volume breakout list, Exicom Tele Systems was listed at a P/E of 141.46, while ASL Industries showed 1683.09, reflecting how extreme P/E values can appear in screens. These P/E figures are part of the shared datasets, but they should be handled carefully because P/E can be distorted by one-off earnings, losses, or data gaps. For traders, valuation in a breakout week is often used as a context check rather than as the primary trigger.

What to monitor next week (25 May 2026 setup)

Based on the shared tables, the clearest “attention plus activity” cluster was around Honasa Consumer and JSW Cement, because both appeared as weekly breakouts and also in the high volume-versus-average scan. The next layer includes names like Rategain, Dixon, and Deepak Fertilisers, which showed week-high breakouts with defined breakout percentages and reported weekly volumes. A simple way to track follow-through is to watch whether these stocks can hold near their reported “Current Week High” levels from the breakout list. Another practical check is whether volume stays elevated compared with the average-volume multiples shared for IKS, JSW Cement, and Honasa Consumer. For the price-volume breakout names, monitoring is different because the table is anchored to “Today’s R1” and shows very large breakout percentages that may not align with week-high breakouts. Traders discussing these lists often separate “liquid, widely traded” candidates from “thin volume” names to avoid slippage, and the volumes in the price-volume table help make that distinction. Finally, readers should remember that these are social-media screens and can change quickly with the next session’s data. Use them as a structured starting point for research, not as a substitute for position sizing and risk controls.

Frequently Asked Questions

They are stocks flagged in shared scans as trading above a tracked weekly reference high, including names like Honasa Consumer and JSW Cement from the provided weekly breakout list.
In the shared volume scan, IKS showed 5.75 times average volume, JSW Cement 4.98 times, and Honasa Consumer 4.84 times.
JSW Cement was listed at +9.44%, Rategain at +8.07%, and Honasa Consumer at +8.04% in the provided weekly breakout table.
The shared price-volume breakout metric is based on “Today’s R1” and a breakout calculation that can still register high percentages even when the day’s price change is negative.
A P/E of 0.00 in tracker outputs typically signals the P/E is not meaningful or not available in that dataset, as shown for JSW Cement in the weekly breakout list.

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