Tuesday October 7, 2025 Stocks Below 10 SMA For Longest Consecutive Days Five Days Ago $FI $DKNG $BROS $SW $UL $CCL $KMX $COST $LYB $TEAM $NCLH $NLY $CART $HD

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Rank Ticker Consecutive Days Below 10-Day SMA
1 FI 29
2 DKNG 24
3 BROS 23
4 SW 21
5 UL 21
6 CCL 18
7 KMX 18
8 COST 17
9 LYB 17
10 TEAM 17
11 NCLH 16
12 NLY 16
13 CART 15
14 HD 15
15 LYV 15
16 DB 14
17 DECK 🚀 14
18 EOG 14
19 T 14
20 TME 14
21 UWMC 14
22 AEO 🚀 📈 13
23 DLTR 13
24 PINS 13
25 TRU 13
26 Z 13
27 META 12
28 OWL 12
29 RDDT 🚀 📈 12
30 RF 12
31 SN 12
32 SYF 12
33 TSCO 12
34 UAL 🚀 📈 12
35 UPST 🚀 📈 12
36 COF 11
37 CRDO 📈 11
38 U 🚀 11
39 USB 11
40 VST 📈 11
41 AUR 📈 10
42 BX 10
43 CHYM 10
44 XP 10
45 CPB 9
46 DG 9
47 DOCU 9
48 GEV 9
49 ONON 9
50 ORCL 🚀 9
51 TCOM 9
52 ZIM 🚀 📈 9
53 YPF 📈 8
54 ABNB 7
55 ADBE 7
56 ADI 7
57 EC 7
58 ET 7
59 OVV 7
60 PBR 7
61 PBR-A 7
62 PM 7
63 PR 7
64 SU 7
65 SWKS 7
66 ZM 7
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.