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Company Order Wins
BSE & NSE real-time contract tracker · AI buy/sell signals · Revenue impact scored · 2026
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Why Order Wins Are Powerful Stock Catalysts
What Is an Order Win?
An order win is when a BSE or NSE listed company secures a new contract from a
client — government, PSU, or private. Companies must disclose material contracts
to the exchange. Traex captures every filing the moment it hits BSE or NSE.
Stock Price Impact
Large order wins relative to company revenue cause immediate stock price jumps —
often 3% to 15% on announcement day. For mid-cap EPC and infra companies, a
single order worth 20–50% of annual revenue can trigger a multi-day rally.
Key Sectors to Watch
Defence, railways, roads, power transmission, water treatment, and smart city
projects dominate order win news on BSE and NSE. IT multi-year deal wins are also
tracked. Traex sectors every order win for targeted screening.
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Frequently Asked Questions — Order Wins BSE & NSE India
An order win announcement is when a BSE or NSE listed company discloses that it has secured a new contract or work order from a client — government, PSU, or private. Companies must file material contracts with the exchange. Order wins indicate future revenue visibility and are a strong positive catalyst for stock price movement. Traex tracks every such filing in real time.
Large order wins relative to company revenue typically cause an immediate positive stock price reaction — often 2% to 10% on announcement day. For smaller companies, a single large order can represent 20–50% of annual revenue, making it a major rerating catalyst. Traex's AI scores each order based on contract value relative to trailing revenue to estimate price impact.
Infrastructure, defence, railways, power transmission, roads, water treatment, and construction EPC companies announce the most order wins on BSE and NSE. IT services companies also announce large multi-year deals frequently. Mid-cap and small-cap companies in these sectors tend to see the strongest stock price reactions.
L1 (Lowest Bidder) status means the company has submitted the lowest bid and is likely to win the contract, but the formal contract has not been awarded yet. A final order win means the contract has been signed and formally announced. Both events are disclosed to BSE and NSE — L1 announcements often see a smaller initial price reaction, with a stronger move on final order confirmation.
Traex's AI reads the official BSE/NSE filing within seconds of submission. It extracts the contract value, client name, project type, and duration, then compares it to the company's trailing revenue to compute an order-to-revenue ratio. A buy/hold/sell signal is then generated with a confidence score based on contract size, sector momentum, and historical price reaction patterns.
Order wins are generally bullish, but execution risk matters. A company winning orders it cannot deliver — due to strained working capital, stretched manpower, or weak project management history — may disappoint on earnings despite a high order book. Traex adjusts confidence scores for companies with historically weak execution or already-stretched order backlogs.