An index move becomes more useful when connected to active stocks, news, volume, and sector context.
The index level gives the thermometer, not the full explanation.
Linked rankings help identify companies attracting attention.
Stories and filings stay linked without republishing third-party bodies.
An index such as the MASI or MASI 20 summarizes part of the market, but it does not describe session quality on its own. For a solid readout, Borsalia connects the index level with active stocks, gainers, losers, breadth, and recent filings.
This approach avoids confusing an index move with a trend shared by the whole market. A large-cap stock can influence the benchmark while several smaller stocks move the other way.
Linked stories and rankings are entry points into evidence: issuer filings, releases, volume, and company pages. Missing figures remain flagged instead of being replaced by assumptions.
The index page remains a context tool, not a recommendation. It helps users understand what is moving before drawing conclusions, especially when one benchmark is influenced by a limited number of large or liquid listings. It also gives international readers a structured entry point before moving into individual issuer pages, documents, dividend history, and sector research.




After the index, review sectors, rankings, filings, and definitions used across Borsalia.
MASICHIMIE (MASICHIMIE) is a market benchmark, but its change does not explain by itself why the session is moving. Borsalia therefore connects the index level with the stocks attracting volume, visible gainers, stories, and recent filings. Active names followed on this page include Addoha (ADH), Maroc Telecom (IAM), Alliances (ADI), COSUMAR (CSR), while performance leaders include EQDOM (EQD), PROMOPHARM (PRO), BMCI (BCI), ATLANTASANAD (ATL).
This reading avoids two common mistakes: confusing a move led by a few large capitalizations with broad market strength, or missing sector rotation because the headline index looks stable. The rankings and links on this page help users move from the index number to verifiable evidence.
When Borsalia does not yet have a confirmed data point, the page keeps the wording cautious. Issuer publications, releases, and identified news remain the priority for explaining a move.
An index page should answer a simple question: is the visible move broad, concentrated, documented, or mostly technical? To answer it, Borsalia does not stop at the displayed percentage. The page connects the index with the most traded stocks, session gainers and losers, sectors, recent publications, and definitions explaining the terms used. That connection gives context that the index number alone cannot provide.



Data remains ranked by reliability. Issuer publications and internal checks are preferred for market facts, filings, and company information. When a data point is absent, old, or unconfirmed, the page avoids definitive claims.
The right way to use this page is to start from the benchmark, then open links to sectors, company pages, and releases. It can help prepare analysis, portfolio monitoring, or market watch work, but it does not replace a personal decision, regulated analysis, or advice adapted to an investor's situation. Borsalia therefore keeps a clear separation between information, method, and opinion.
For regular monitoring, users can revisit this page after the open, during the session, and after the close to compare the same benchmark under different conditions. Gaps between price action, volume, documentation, and news flow become easier to spot. This is especially useful for international readers who need a structured entry point into Moroccan equities before moving into individual issuer pages, documents, dividends, or broader sector research. The same workflow also keeps the page useful when market activity is quiet: the benchmark remains connected to rankings, sector context, issuer publications, and glossary definitions rather than becoming a standalone number.