Tuesday May 6, 2025 Open Interest Conditions Which Suggest Short Term Undervaluation 92 Days Ago

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: Longest consecutive up days Open Interest conditions which suggest short term undervaluation Next: Consecutive days with stoch k below stoch d →
Rank Ticker Lower sequence of numbers suggests short term under valued
1 ZIM ðŸš€ 1_1_1_1
2 NIO ðŸš€ 1_1_2_1
3 SLB 1_1_2_1
4 WBD ðŸš€ 1_1_2_2
5 INTC ðŸš€ 1_2_2_1
6 ET 1_2_2_1
7 SHOP ðŸš€ 1_2_2_1
8 QBTS ðŸš€ 1_2_2_2
9 NEM 1_2_2_3
10 MRVL ðŸš€ 1_2_2_5
11 APLD ðŸš€ 1_2_3_2
12 RGTI ðŸš€ 1_2_4_2
13 JD 1_2_6_1
14 TSLL ðŸš€ 1_2_6_2
15 DIS 1_3_2_1
16 BBAI ðŸš€ 1_4_2_1
17 AGNC 2_1_2_2
18 TLT 2_1_2_2
19 NVDL ðŸš€ 2_1_2_2
20 RBLX 2_1_3_2
21 AMD 2_2_1_1
22 RIG 2_2_1_2
23 PBR 2_2_1_2
24 SOXL ðŸš€ 2_2_2_1
25 LCID ðŸš€ 2_2_2_1
26 BAC 2_2_2_1
27 VALE 2_2_2_1
28 F 2_2_2_2
29 AAL 2_2_2_2
30 AAPL 2_2_2_2
31 SPY 2_2_2_2
32 SOFI 2_2_2_2
33 RIVN 2_2_2_2
34 QQQ 2_2_2_2
35 HOOD 2_2_2_2
36 OKLO ðŸš€ 2_2_2_2
37 MSFT 2_2_2_2
38 ACHR ðŸš€ 2_2_2_2
39 XOM 2_2_2_2
40 CLSK 2_2_2_2
41 SBUX 2_2_2_2
42 META 2_2_2_2
43 KO 2_2_2_2
44 VZ 2_2_2_2
45 PINS 2_2_2_2
46 NKE ðŸš€ 2_2_2_2
47 UBER 2_2_2_3
48 T 2_2_2_3
49 BP 2_2_2_3
50 CSCO 2_2_2_3
51 CCL 2_2_2_3
52 UPST ðŸš€ 2_2_2_3
53 TNA 2_2_2_3
54 SNAP 2_2_2_4
55 AMZN 2_2_2_4
56 WULF ðŸš€ 2_2_2_5
57 BABA 2_2_2_5
58 TSM 2_2_2_5
59 WMT 2_2_3_1
60 MU 2_2_3_2
61 IONQ ðŸš€ 2_2_3_2
62 GM 2_2_3_2
63 U ðŸš€ 2_2_3_2
64 VST 2_2_3_3
65 SOUN ðŸš€ 2_2_4_1
66 RIOT 2_2_4_2
67 WFC 2_2_4_6
68 CLF ðŸš€ 2_2_5_5
69 TQQQ 2_3_2_1
70 HPE 2_3_2_2
71 CELH ðŸš€ 2_3_2_3
72 PTON ðŸš€ 2_4_2_1
73 NU 2_4_2_2
74 BB 2_4_2_2
75 GOOG 2_4_2_2
76 IREN ðŸš€ 2_4_2_2
77 GOOGL 2_4_2_4
78 EVGO ðŸš€ 2_4_4
79 IWM 2_5_2_2
80 SEDG ðŸš€ 2_5_6_2
81 NVDA 3_2_2_2
82 TSLA 3_2_2_2
83 SMCI ðŸš€ 3_2_2_2
84 MSTR 3_2_2_2
85 AVGO 3_3_3_2
86 PCG 3_3_4_2
87 GOLD 3_6_2_2
88 PLTR ðŸš€ 4_2_2_2
89 NOK ðŸš€ 4_4_2_2
90 MARA 4_4_2_5
What Is Open Interest?

Open Interest is the total number of outstanding derivative contracts - typically futures or options - that have been opened but not yet settled, expired, or closed out. It represents the number of active positions traders hold at the end of each trading day. Every contract has two sides - a buyer and a seller. Open Interest increases when both participants initiate new positions (one new long and one new short), and decreases when positions are closed by offsetting trades. If an existing position is passed from one trader to another without marking to close, Open Interest remains unchanged. Open Interest differs from trading volume, which counts every trade executed during a session. Volume reflects how often contracts change hands; Open Interest reflects how many remain open. Rising Open Interest typically indicates fresh capital entering the market and can confirm price trends, while declining levels may signal traders exiting and weakening momentum. Traders and analysts monitor Open Interest to assess liquidity, market sentiment, and trend strength. Large Open Interest in a contract suggests high participation and tighter bid‑ask spreads. When combined with price movement - such as price advancing alongside rising Open Interest - it can support confidence in the persistence of a trend. However, Open Interest should be used alongside other indicators and broader market context.