| Rank | Ticker | Consecutive Days Above Signal Line | Name |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | GM π | 22 | General Motors Company |
| 2 | AA | 11 | Alcoa Corporation |
| 3 | RGTI π π | 11 | Rigetti Computing, Inc. |
| 4 | NU | 10 | Nu Holdings Ltd. |
| 5 | INTC π | 9 | Intel Corporation |
| 6 | NVDA | 9 | NVIDIA Corporation |
| 7 | PANW | 9 | Palo Alto Networks, Inc. |
| 8 | OKLO π π | 6 | Oklo Inc. |
| 9 | ORCL π | 5 | Oracle Corporation |
| 10 | M π | 4 | Macy's Inc |
| 11 | NBIS π π | 4 | Nebius Group N.V. |
| 12 | UBER | 4 | Uber Technologies, Inc. |
| 13 | WBD | 4 | Warner Bros. Discovery, Inc. - |
| 14 | GOLD π | 3 | Gold.com, Inc. |
| 15 | U π | 3 | Unity Software Inc. |
| 16 | BIDU | 1 | Baidu, Inc. |
| 17 | CSCO | 1 | Cisco Systems, Inc. |
The MACD (Moving Average Convergence Divergence) is a popular technical analysis indicator used by traders to identify changes in the strength, direction, momentum, and duration of a stock's price trend. Developed by Gerald Appel in the late 1970s, it's a momentum oscillator that provides trading signals by showing the relationship between two exponential moving averages of a securityβs price. The MACD is composed of three components that are typically plotted below the price chart: