| Rank | Ticker | Divergence Length (Days) | Name |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | CCJ | 9 | Cameco Corporation |
| 2 | CIEN ๐ | 9 | Ciena Corporation |
| 3 | CRH | 9 | CRH PLC |
| 4 | DHR | 9 | Danaher Corporation |
| 5 | HTHT | 9 | H World Group Limited |
| 6 | MU | 9 | Micron Technology, Inc. |
| 7 | SHOP ๐ | 9 | Shopify Inc. |
| 8 | VALE | 9 | VALE S.A. |
| 9 | XOM | 9 | Exxon Mobil Corporation |
| 10 | ALLY | 8 | Ally Financial Inc. |
| 11 | APP ๐ | 8 | Applovin Corporation |
| 12 | ASTS ๐ | 8 | AST SpaceMobile, Inc. |
| 13 | DB | 8 | Deutsche Bank AG |
| 14 | EBAY | 8 | eBay Inc. |
| 15 | FOXA | 8 | Fox Corporation |
| 16 | JEF | 8 | Jefferies Financial Group Inc. |
| 17 | LITE ๐ | 8 | Lumentum Holdings Inc. |
| 18 | UPST ๐ ๐ | 8 | Upstart Holdings, Inc. |
| 19 | KNX | 7 | Knight-Swift Transportation Hol |
| 20 | MFG | 7 | Mizuho Financial Group, Inc. Sp |
| 21 | MUFG | 7 | Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, |
| 22 | AIG | 6 | American International Group, I |
| 23 | BAC | 6 | Bank of America Corporation |
| 24 | BBVA | 6 | Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria |
| 25 | CX | 6 | Cemex, S.A.B. de C.V. Sponsored |
| 26 | GS | 6 | Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. (The) |
| 27 | ROKU | 6 | Roku, Inc. |
| 28 | WFC | 6 | Wells Fargo & Company |
| 29 | GM ๐ | 5 | General Motors Company |
| 30 | WDC ๐ | 5 | Western Digital Corporation |
| 31 | BALL | 4 | Ball Corporation |
| 32 | LULU | 4 | lululemon athletica inc. |
| 33 | NTR | 4 | Nutrien Ltd. |
| 34 | VTR | 4 | Ventas, Inc. |
The Relative Strength Index (RSI) is a momentum oscillator developed by J. Welles Wilder Jr. and first introduced in 1978. Displayed as a line chart directly below a price chart, the RSI quantifies the speed and magnitude of recent price changes on a 0-to-100 scale The default calculation period is 14 trading periods, usually days. It divides the average gain over those periods by the average loss to produce a value called Relative Strength (RS). The RSI is then computed as: RSI = 100 โ (100 รท (1 + RS)) A reading above 70 is traditionally viewed as overbought, suggesting a possible price reversal or pullback. Conversely, a reading below 30 is considered oversold, indicating that prices may soon rebound. Values near 50 are generally seen as a neutral or balanced state. Traders use RSI to identify divergences - when price movement and RSI diverge in direction - which can signal weakening momentum and potential trend reversals. A bullish divergence (price makes lower lows while RSI makes higher lows) can hint at a coming rally; a bearish divergence (price makes higher highs but RSI makes lower highs) may warn of a downturn. Although RSI is simple and widely built into most charting platforms, it can produce false signals, especially during strong, sustained trends where RSI can remain overbought or oversold for extended periods. To reduce risk, traders often combine RSI with other indicators like MACD, moving averages, or trend lines.