🧲 Oversold stocks (RSI < 30)

The Relative Strength Index (RSI) measures the speed of recent price moves on a 0–100 scale. Readings under 30 are conventionally called oversold: the stock has fallen hard and fast enough that mean-reversion traders start watching for a bounce. This page lists every stock in our 100-stock universe closing with a 14-day RSI below 30, sorted from most to least oversold.

Today's results are being computed β€” check back after the US market close.

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How this scan works

  • Universe: 100 large-cap US stocks (S&P 100–style list).
  • Signal: 14-period RSI on daily closes is below 30 as of the last close.
  • Metric shown: the RSI value (lower = more oversold).
  • Recomputed once per trading day after the US close, from daily closing data across 100 symbols.

Frequently asked questions

Does oversold mean the stock will bounce?
No β€” oversold measures speed of decline, not a floor. In strong downtrends RSI can pin below 30 for weeks ("oversold can stay oversold"). Mean-reversion traders usually pair the signal with support levels or wait for RSI to turn back up.
Why RSI 14 and the 30 level?
Fourteen periods and the 30/70 bands are the defaults from Welles Wilder's original 1978 formulation, and remain what most platforms and traders quote.

Computed from daily closing data for education and idea generation β€” nothing here is financial advice or a recommendation to buy or sell any security. Data may be delayed or inaccurate.