| Rank | Ticker | Volume Ratio |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | XYZ | 2.88 |
| 2 | GGLL 📈 | 2.83 |
| 3 | EOSE 🚀 📈 | 2.07 |
| 4 | GOOGL | 1.99 |
| 5 | NEBX 🚀 | 1.50 |
| 6 | TQQQ | 1.43 |
| 7 | ENTG | 1.34 |
| 8 | DOCS | 1.31 |
| 9 | SYF | 1.28 |
| 10 | SOXL 🚀 📈 | 1.25 |
| 11 | OKLL 📈 | 1.25 |
| 12 | PANW | 1.23 |
| 13 | GEV | 1.22 |
| 14 | JHX 🚀 | 1.20 |
| 15 | U 🚀 | 1.20 |
| 16 | QQQ | 1.15 |
| 17 | NXPI | 1.15 |
| 18 | TPR | 1.13 |
| 19 | CCJ | 1.10 |
| 20 | NVDA | 1.10 |
| 21 | DB | 1.08 |
| 22 | QBTX 🚀 📈 | 1.07 |
| 23 | CLS 🚀 📈 | 1.06 |
| 24 | SHOP 🚀 | 1.06 |
| 25 | SPY | 1.05 |
| 26 | RCL | 1.04 |
When a stock closes above its opening price and does so on significantly higher‑than‑average volume, it’s seen as a bullish confirmation that the upward move had real participation. Closing higher than open means buyers dominated trading throughout the day. But the signal gains real credibility - and strength - when volume spikes above its usual range (often 25‑50 % beyond recent days’ average). That's because heavy volume reflects conviction and money entering the stock, not just short‑term speculators or algorithmic noise. In technical analysis terms, this pattern - an up‑day on elevated volume - suggests institutional interest or widespread enthusiasm. Indicators like On‑Balance Volume (OBV) and the Accumulation/Distribution line specifically quantify this by tracking volume flow on up‑days versus down‑days to confirm trend strength. That said, context is crucial. A spike in volume may sometimes signal a buying climax - such as short covering or window dressing - where most potential buyers have already acted, making a reversal more likely.