Important Note on “Expected to Rise Tomorrow”
No screener (or analyst) can guarantee that specific stocks will rise tomorrow. What we can do is identify stocks that, based on historical data, price trends, and sentiment, have a higher probability of rising. The filters below are designed with that goal.
Screening Filters
monthly_average_dollar_volume ≥ 300,000
- Purpose: Ensure the stocks are reasonably liquid.
- Rationale:
- Higher average dollar volume means the stock trades enough value each day to get in and out without excessive slippage.
- For a “tomorrow” move, you want names that can be traded efficiently and are less prone to random price spikes caused by very low volume.
moving_average_relationship: PriceAboveMA20
- Purpose: Capture stocks in a short-term uptrend.
- Rationale:
- Price being above the 20-day moving average is a classic sign of near-term bullish momentum.
- If you’re looking for stocks likely to rise tomorrow, it makes sense to focus on those already trading above a short-term trend line, rather than those in a clear downtrend.
list_exchange: XNYS, XNAS, XASE
- Purpose: Limit results to major U.S. exchanges.
- Rationale:
- XNYS = NYSE, XNAS = NASDAQ, XASE = NYSE American.
- These are primary U.S. stock markets, aligning with your request for the US market.
- Major exchanges also tend to have better liquidity, disclosure, and tighter spreads.
one_day_rise_prob ≥ 65
- Purpose: Filter for stocks with a statistically higher model-estimated chance of rising the next day.
- Rationale:
- This is likely derived from a quantitative model that estimates the probability a stock’s price will be higher tomorrow than today.
- A minimum threshold of 65% focuses on names where the model is relatively more confident in a positive move, which directly addresses “expected to rise tomorrow.”
one_day_predict_return ≥ 1
- Purpose: Require a positive expected one-day return (e.g., ≥ +1%).
- Rationale:
- This further refines candidates to those not only likely to rise, but also expected to rise by a meaningful amount.
- It aligns with the idea of looking for stocks expected to go up, not just marginally fluctuate.
is_optionable: True
- Purpose: Only include stocks that have listed options.
- Rationale:
- Optionable stocks are typically more established and liquid.
- It also gives traders flexibility to express a bullish view (e.g., via calls) if they want to act on the “expected rise tomorrow” with options strategies.
option_sentiments: Bullish
- Purpose: Capture names where options market activity is leaning bullish.
- Rationale:
- Bullish option sentiment (e.g., heavy call buying, skew, or other measures) suggests that informed or aggressive traders are positioning for upside.
- Combining this with price trends and model probabilities strengthens the case for stocks that may rise in the near term.
Why Results Match Your Request
The timeframe (“tomorrow”) is addressed through:
one_day_rise_prob (probability of rising next day)
one_day_predict_return (expected one-day gain)
PriceAboveMA20 (current short-term uptrend)
The market focus (U.S. stocks) is handled by:
list_exchange: NYSE, NASDAQ, NYSE American
The quality and tradability of names are ensured by:
monthly_average_dollar_volume (liquidity)
is_optionable (typically more followed, more liquid names)
The directional bias you’re asking for (expected to rise) is reinforced by:
- Bullish technical trend (PriceAboveMA20)
- Quantitative signal (one_day_rise_prob, one_day_predict_return)
- Derivatives market behavior (option_sentiments: Bullish)
Together, these filters don’t guarantee gains, but they systematically narrow the universe to U.S. stocks that are liquid, in short-term uptrends, with a statistically higher chance of rising tomorrow and supportive bullish sentiment from the options market.
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.