nepalstock.com

September 3, 2025

What nepalstock.com is (and what it isn’t)

If you type nepalstock.com, you’re essentially trying to reach the public web presence of the Nepal Stock Exchange (NEPSE)—the place where official market information for Nepal’s secondary stock market is published. In practice, you’ll commonly land on NEPSE pages that show live market watch, indices, top gainers/losers, turnover, market depth, and the floor sheet. The site footer and page structure make it clear this is NEPSE’s own platform and it’s been running for a long time.

What it is not: it’s not your personal broker account, and it’s not the trading screen where you place buy/sell orders. Trading happens through NEPSE’s Trade Management System (TMS), which is hosted on separate TMS subdomains (you’ll see addresses like tms01... and many other broker-numbered portals).

So think of it as: official market data and reference pages on the NEPSE site, and transaction execution inside TMS via your broker.

What you can actually do on the NEPSE website

Most investors use the site for three things:

  1. Check live prices and market movement. The “live” pages are designed for quick checking of last traded price (LTP), price change, and market summaries.
  2. Look up market micro-details. Market depth and the floor sheet matter when you’re trying to see what really traded and at what levels during the day. NEPSE’s site navigation explicitly highlights these sections (market depth, floor sheet, downloads, etc.).
  3. Verify info from third-party apps. Nepal has a lot of finance portals showing NEPSE data. Those are convenient, but when there’s disagreement, the NEPSE site is the baseline reference people go back to. (You’ll see third-party portals publishing “as of” timestamps and live snapshots, which can help, but they’re still downstream.)

A practical note: during heavy traffic, official market sites can feel slow. That’s one reason third-party mirrors became popular in the first place. But “slow” and “official” often travel together, because everyone hits the same endpoints.

How TMS relates to nepalstock.com

If you want to trade, you end up in NEPSE Online Trading System / TMS. On the TMS login screens, you’ll see your broker number, username/password fields, and safety tips like not saving passwords, not sharing credentials, and logging out properly.

Here’s the important part people miss: TMS portals are broker-specific. That’s why you might see many TMS URLs (tms01, tms41, and so on). Your broker will tell you which one is yours. If you try logging into the wrong broker portal, you’ll waste time and assume your account is broken.

Also, TMS is where you manage order placement, holdings views (depending on integration), and order history. Meanwhile, nepalstock/NEPSE public pages are where you validate market-wide data like the index level, total turnover, and whether a price move is real or just a cached view somewhere else.

Common pages people use and why they matter

Live market watch

This is the “quick pulse” page: what’s up, what’s down, where the volume is, where the turnover is. NEPSE highlights things like top gainers, top losers, turnover, volume, and transactions in its market summary layout.

Market depth

Market depth is where you stop relying on a single last traded price and start seeing the order-book picture: bid/ask levels and how crowded each side is. Depth doesn’t predict the future, but it helps you avoid silly decisions like chasing a price when there’s barely any buy support behind it.

Floor sheet

For many Nepal investors, the floor sheet is the “hard evidence” of trading for the day. If someone claims a scrip traded at a certain price, or if you’re checking unusual activity, the floor sheet is where you confirm it. You don’t need it every day, but when you need it, nothing else replaces it.

Downloads, notices, holidays

Market holidays and official notices affect settlement timing, trading days, and sometimes rule changes. NEPSE explicitly lists holiday information and provides downloads/FAQs in its navigation structure.

Data reliability, scraping, and why “API” keeps coming up

A lot of tools and websites in Nepal show NEPSE data. Some do it responsibly. Some scrape pages aggressively. Historically, scraping caused performance issues and introduced risk of misrepresentation when people copied and re-hosted data without controls.

NEPSE has discussed providing data access via an API directory so organizations can use real-time and historical data more ethically—typically involving terms and fees.

At the same time, you’ll find unofficial NEPSE API projects on GitHub that provide endpoints (REST, WebSocket, etc.). These can be useful for learning and prototyping, but they’re not official, and you should treat them as “use at your own risk,” especially if you’re building something public-facing or commercial.

If you’re just an individual investor, the takeaway is simple: for decisions that matter, keep one habit—cross-check critical prices/turnover on the official NEPSE pages before you act.

Basic safety and workflow tips (that save real money)

  • Bookmark the correct TMS portal for your broker number and avoid random links from social media. The TMS login pages themselves push security habits for a reason.
  • Treat “live” as near-real-time, not magical. Networks lag. Caching happens. If you’re about to place a large order, verify the latest state across at least two sources (NEPSE + broker/TMS view).
  • Use the floor sheet when something looks off. Sudden spikes, strange prints, rumors—check the recorded trades.
  • Be careful with third-party charts and “signals.” Many portals provide technical analysis overlays and dashboards. Useful for exploring, but don’t confuse a dashboard with official confirmation.

Key takeaways

  • nepalstock.com is effectively the doorway to NEPSE’s official public market data pages, not the trading terminal.
  • Actual order placement happens through NEPSE TMS, and the portal is typically broker-specific.
  • For verification, floor sheet and market depth are the two pages that settle most arguments fast.
  • There are third-party sites and even unofficial APIs, but the official NEPSE site remains the reference point, and official API access has been discussed as a structured alternative to scraping.

FAQ

Is nepalstock.com the same as NEPSE?

It’s commonly used as a short way to reach NEPSE’s web presence, but the important part is you’re trying to access NEPSE’s official site/pages that publish market information.

Why can’t I place trades on nepalstock.com?

Because trading is handled by the NEPSE Online Trading System (TMS), which is hosted on separate TMS portals. The public NEPSE pages are for market data and reference.

Why are there so many TMS websites?

TMS is often segmented by broker number/portal. You need the one your broker provides (you’ll see broker numbers shown right on the login page).

Are third-party NEPSE live sites accurate?

Often yes for convenience and quick checks, but accuracy depends on how they source and refresh data. When the stakes are high, cross-check with NEPSE’s official pages.

Does NEPSE provide an official API?

NEPSE has described structured access to real-time and historical data through a directory approach (with terms/fees) as an alternative to scraping. Separately, there are unofficial API projects online, but those are not the same as official access.