Tuesday August 19, 2025 Stocks That Crossed Below The 20 Day Moving Average Three Days Ago $CLS $AVGO $AMD $NVDA $NVDL $CDNS $PLTR $PLTU $FFTY $AEM $CRDO $META $AU $AUR
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Rank Ticker Consecutive Above 20SMA Days Yesterday
1 CLS πŸš€ 82
2 AVGO 81
3 AMD 80
4 NVDA 80
5 NVDL πŸš€ 79
6 CDNS 38
7 PLTR πŸš€ 31
8 PLTU πŸš€ 31
9 FFTY 26
10 AEM 21
11 CRDO 19
12 META 13
13 AU 12
14 AUR 11
15 GS 11
16 HOOD 11
17 RGTI πŸš€ 11
18 ROBN 11
19 CVX 10
20 PSTG 9
21 QQQ 9
22 TQQQ 9
23 AMDL πŸš€ 8
24 BA 5
25 BABA 5
26 CCL 5
27 CVE 5
28 OXY 5
29 SOXL πŸš€ 5
30 XP 5
31 TIGR πŸš€ 4
32 BULL πŸš€ 3
33 GRAB 3
34 CVNA 2
35 DJT πŸš€ 2
36 SAIL 2
37 BTDR πŸš€ 1
38 C 1
39 CIEN 1
40 DASH 1
41 EOSE πŸš€ 1
42 GME πŸš€ 1
43 LULU 1
44 MDB 1
45 MRVL πŸš€ 1
46 NET 1
47 ORCL πŸš€ 1
48 QXO 1
49 RCAT πŸš€ 1
50 SBUX 1
51 TSM 1
52 YPF 1
53 ZTO 1
What Is 20 Day Simple Moving Average?

A 20‑day Simple Moving Average (SMA) is a widely used technical analysis indicator that smooths out price data by calculating the arithmetic average of the closing prices over the most recent 20 trading days. Simply put, you sum up the closing price of each of the last 20 days and divide the total by 20 to get the SMA value. Each day, the oldest closing price drops out and the most recent one is included, so the line gradually adjusts. Because it assigns equal weight to each day, the 20‑day SMA reacts more slowly than alternatives like the exponential moving average, which gives greater importance to recent price action. This smoothing effect makes it effective for identifying short‑term trends, areas of support and resistance, and potential entry or exit signals when price crosses above or below the moving average. Swing traders often rely on the 20‑day SMA to quickly gauge the current trend - whether bullish or bearish - and to use it dynamically as a support or resistance level. However, as a lagging indicator, it may produce false signals during sideways or choppy markets, so most traders use it in combination with momentum indicators like RSI or MACD for confirmation.