Monday October 27, 2025 Stocks Crossing Above The 50 SMA After The Longest Consecutive Days Below The 200 SMA Yesterday $TEAM $ZIM $LULU $SWKS $JD $NLY $HPE $NUE $YPF $KDP $ROKU $BROS $CNQ $AMZN

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Rank Ticker Consecutive Days Below 200-Day SMA 50-Day SMA 200-Day SMA Latest Close Price
1 TEAM 114 164.22 210.10 164.26
2 ZIM 🚀 📈 111 13.93 16.11 14.35
3 LULU 99 179.57 266.43 181.39
4 SWKS 98 75.66 72.22 75.84
5 JD 94 33.33 35.39 34.20
6 NLY 66 21.13 20.22 21.16
7 HPE 60 23.83 20.00 24.18
8 NUE 59 140.37 130.25 144.16
9 YPF 📈 55 27.56 32.99 33.36
10 KDP 45 27.87 31.57 29.23
11 ROKU 38 97.10 82.55 98.81
12 BROS 31 59.48 63.85 59.87
13 CNQ 28 31.38 30.68 31.50
14 AMZN 27 225.06 214.21 226.97
15 PINS 27 34.47 33.49 35.24
16 MCD 18 306.43 304.17 310.00
17 SMR 📈 17 38.56 29.99 38.71
18 CDNS 15 347.01 308.23 351.40
19 META 15 742.35 676.63 750.82
20 BA 13 221.44 198.97 223.00
21 DLTR 11 99.16 89.50 102.59
22 LMND 🚀 📈 9 53.48 40.30 58.45
23 KR 8 67.72 67.62 68.03
24 JPM 4 303.52 273.51 304.15
25 UBER 4 95.47 84.47 96.42
26 SCHW 3 94.42 86.96 94.84
What Is 50 Day Simple Moving Average?

The 50‑Day Simple Moving Average (often called the 50‑day SMA) is a widely used technical indicator in finance. It represents the arithmetic average of the closing prices of a stock (or index or other asset) over the most recent 50 trading days, plotted continuously to form a smooth trendline. To calculate it exactly, one adds the closing prices for the last 50 sessions, then divides the total by 50. Each new day, the earliest closing price falls off and the latest one is added, yielding a rolling average without any weighting scheme. Traders often use the 50‑day SMA as a medium‑term trend indicator. When the price is above the SMA, the trend is generally considered bullish; below it, bearish. Many regard it as the first major support line in an uptrend, or as the first resistance in a downtrend. A common strategy is monitoring the interaction between the 50‑day SMA and the 200‑day SMA. A “golden cross” occurs when the 50‑day SMA crosses above the 200‑day SMA, signaling potential upward momentum. A reverse “death cross” may indicate a bearish phase. Because it tracks average price, the 50‑day SMA lags actual price movement and may produce delayed or false signals in volatile or sideways markets. Many traders therefore complement it with faster indicators like Relative Strength Index (RSI) or short‑term exponential moving averages for confirmation.