Screening Filters
Price: 0.50 – 80 USD
- Purpose: Focus on stocks that are liquid and tradable for active day traders with small–mid size accounts.
- Rationale:
- Below ~$0.50, many tickers are illiquid, heavily manipulated, and have wide spreads—hard to trade in and out quickly.
- Above ~$80, the capital requirement per trade goes up, making it harder to size positions and scale in/out with a $1,000–$10,000 account.
- The 0.5–80 range is a common “sweet spot” for day traders: enough price movement for meaningful % moves, but still affordable to trade multiple shares/contracts.
Relative Volume (relative_vol ≥ 1.3)
- Purpose: Capture trending / “in play” stocks where today’s trading activity is clearly above normal.
- Rationale:
- Relative volume compares current volume to average volume. A value ≥ 1.3 means the stock is trading at least 30% more volume than usual.
- Elevated relative volume is a classic sign of day-trading interest, news, or catalysts—exactly what you want when asking for “trending” names.
Beta: ModerateRisk, HighRisk
- Purpose: Filter for stocks with enough volatility to make intraday moves worth trading.
- Rationale:
- Beta measures how much a stock moves vs. the overall market.
- Moderate to high beta stocks tend to have bigger intraday swings, offering better risk/reward for day trades.
- Very low beta names (defensive utilities, staples) often don’t move enough intraday to be attractive day-trading candidates.
Monthly Average Dollar Volume: ≥ 300,000 USD
- Purpose: Ensure a minimum liquidity threshold so trades can be opened and closed quickly without huge slippage.
- Rationale:
- Dollar volume (price × volume) is more meaningful than share volume alone for gauging how much money actually flows through a stock.
- A minimum of $300k/month helps avoid dead tickers where it’s hard to get filled, while still allowing some lower-priced, active names to pass.
Region: United States
- Purpose: Limit results to U.S.-listed stocks.
- Rationale:
- Your question explicitly asks about the “US market.”
- U.S. tickers give you consistent trading hours, regulation, and access to most mainstream brokerages and data feeds used by day traders.
Is Optionable: True
- Purpose: Focus on stocks with listed options, which generally signals higher interest and better liquidity.
- Rationale:
- Optionable stocks tend to be more widely followed, actively traded, and have tighter spreads.
- For many day traders, options flow and premiums are also part of the setup, so restricting to optionable tickers keeps the list focused on mainstream trading vehicles.
Why Results Match:
- The filters emphasize liquidity (dollar volume, price range, optionable), which is essential for day trading.
- They prioritize activity & trendiness (relative volume ≥ 1.3), capturing stocks that are “in play” today, not just in general.
- They ensure sufficient volatility (moderate/high beta), so there’s meaningful intraday movement to trade.
- They restrict to U.S.-listed securities, aligning exactly with your request for the US market.
Together, these filters are designed to surface U.S. stocks that are actively moving, liquid, and volatile enough to be attractive day-trading candidates right now.
This list is generated based on data from one or more third party data providers. It is provided for informational purposes only by Intellectia.AI, and is not investment advice or a recommendation. Intellectia does not make any warranty or guarantee relating to the accuracy, timeliness or completeness of any third-party information, and the provision of this information does not constitute a recommendation.