Wednesday November 5, 2025 Stocks That Crossed Below The 10 Day Moving Average Twenty Days Ago $NOK $BAC $CSCO $ELAN $CRWD $ZS $NET $SNOW $XPEV $NVDA $NVDL $CPNG $CCJ $ERIC

Check scan results for prior days 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 + Export Tickers
← Previous: First day above 50 SMA after longest consecutive days below 200 SMA First day below 10 SMA after longest consecutive days above Next: First day below 20 SMA after longest consecutive days above →
Rank Ticker Consecutive Days Above 10 SMA Name
1 NOK 🚀 26 Nokia Corporation Sponsored
2 BAC 16 Bank of America Corporation
3 CSCO 15 Cisco Systems, Inc.
4 ELAN 15 Elanco Animal Health Incorporat
5 CRWD 12 CrowdStrike Holdings, Inc.
6 ZS 12 Zscaler, Inc.
7 NET 9 Cloudflare, Inc.
8 SNOW 9 Snowflake Inc.
9 XPEV 🚀 📈 9 XPeng Inc.
10 NVDA 8 NVIDIA Corporation
11 NVDL 🚀 📈 8 GraniteShares 2x Long NVDA Dail
12 CPNG 🚀 7 Coupang, Inc.
13 CCJ 6 Cameco Corporation
14 ERIC 🚀 6 Ericsson
15 OVV 5 Ovintiv Inc. (DE)
16 NTNX 4 Nutanix, Inc.
17 KTOS 📈 3 Kratos Defense & Security Solut
18 SRE 2 DBA Sempra
19 UWMC 2 UWM Holdings Corporation
20 BIDU 1 Baidu, Inc.
21 HD 1 Home Depot, Inc. (The)
22 YUMC 1 Yum China Holdings, Inc.
23 ZBH 1 Zimmer Biomet Holdings, Inc.
What Is 10 Day Simple Moving Average?

A 10‑day Simple Moving Average (SMA) is the unweighted average of a security’s closing prices over the most recent ten trading days. To calculate it, you sum those 10 closing prices and divide by ten. As each new trading day closes, the oldest price drops off and the newest closes replaces it, creating a rolling average line - this smoothed curve highlights short‑term trends while reducing daily noise. Traders use the 10‑day SMA for short‑term trend analysis and trade timing. When prices stay consistently above the 10‑day SMA, it often signals upward momentum; when below, it suggests a short‑term downtrend. Common strategies involve watching price crossovers or combining the 10‑day SMA with longer averages - like the 50‑day - for “faster versus slower” confirmation. This indicator is also used as dynamic support or resistance: prices often bounce around the SMA line. For traders with holding periods of only a few days to two weeks, the 10‑day SMA delivers relevant insight into recent trend shifts, market noise, and momentum. However, the 10‑day SMA is a lagging indicator - it reflects past prices rather than predicting future moves. During sideways or choppy markets, it may yield false signals. Therefore, many traders pair it with momentum indicators like the RSI or Bollinger Bands and follow disciplined risk management with stop‑loss levels or confirmation rules.