Fundamentals
TRV
Composite = weighted blend of fundamentals and technicals subscores. Click either report card below to dig in.
Each fundamental metric shows two scores side-by-side: an Absolute score against a professional band, and an Industry rank percentile against Damodaran or universe-computed peer data. Industry data vintage is labeled on every card.
Technicals
Pick a category to see the breakdown
Click any of the rows above to see the metrics or signals that fed into it — including the formula behind each one and what the current value means for TRV.

Fundamentals · Valuation
Valuation Strong
Strong Valuation — most metrics are scoring well above the professional bands' midpoints.
EV/EBITDA ↓
Operating profile commands a premium - usually associated with high-margin, high-growth, or scarce assets.
Capital-structure-agnostic valuation multiple. Useful for comparing levered companies because it adds debt and removes cash from the numerator and uses pre-interest, pre-tax, pre-depreciation earnings in the denominator.
EV = market_cap + total_debt + preferred_equity + minority_interest - cash; EV/EBITDA = EV / ebitda_ttm
EV/FCF ↓
Expensive on cash generation - growth or quality must justify the premium.
Valuation expressed against the cash actually available to all capital providers. Often more honest than EV/EBITDA when capex is meaningful relative to D&A.
EV/FCF = (market_cap + total_debt - cash) / free_cash_flow_ttm
EV/Sales ↓
Premium revenue multiple even after netting cash - usually high gross-margin businesses.
Adjusts the numerator for debt and cash so heavily-levered or cash-rich companies are comparable. Particularly useful for cross-industry valuation work.
EV/Sales = (market_cap + total_debt - cash) / revenue_ttm
Forward P/E ↓
Premium expected-earnings multiple - growth or quality must justify the price.
The multiple equity analysts most commonly quote because it reflects expected earnings rather than the trailing window. Same caveats as trailing P/E - a depressed multiple may be a value trap if forward earnings are too optimistic.
Forward P/E = price / forward_eps
Greenblatt EY ↑
Strong operating earnings yield against the full enterprise claim.
Capital-structure-agnostic earnings yield. Pairs with Greenblatt ROC to compute the Magic Formula rank (the universe-rank of EY plus universe-rank of ROC). Pre-tax operating earnings divided by the full claim on the firm.
Greenblatt EY = EBIT / Enterprise Value * 100
P/B ↓
Market values the franchise far above its book equity - common for branded consumer or software businesses.
How many dollars of book equity each share represents. Useful for asset-heavy businesses (banks, industrials) where book value approximates liquidation floor; less informative for asset-light franchises whose value is in intangibles.
P/B = market_cap / common_equity
P/E (TTM) ↓
Investors are paying a premium relative to current earnings, betting on growth, margin expansion, or perceived quality.
Multiple of trailing-twelve-month earnings the market has assigned to the company. Lower means cheaper relative to current earnings power, but a single low P/E can also mean the market expects earnings to fall.
P/E = market_cap / net_income_ttm
P/S Ratio ↓
Market is paying up for revenue - implicitly betting on margin expansion or revenue growth.
Useful when earnings are negative or noisy (early-stage companies, restructurings). Works best within an industry because gross margin profiles vary wildly.
P/S = market_cap / revenue_ttm
PEG ↑
Multiple is rich relative to growth - either growth disappoints or the multiple needs to compress.
Divides P/E by the annualized EPS growth rate (in percent points). Below 1.0 is conventionally read as 'cheap relative to growth.' Sensitive to which growth window you use; can flip sign if earnings are negative.
PEG = (P/E) / eps_growth_3y_pct
PEGY ↑
Reasonably priced relative to growth + income.
Adds dividend yield to the growth denominator so mature dividend payers don't get unfairly punished by a low-growth PEG. Sweet spot ~1.0; below 0.5 is often a broken growth assumption, above 2 is over-paying.
PEGY = (P/E) / (eps_growth_rate_pct + dividend_yield_pct)

Fundamentals · Profitability
Profitability Weak
Weak Profitability — most metrics in this section are scoring below the professional bands' midpoints.
Asset Turnover ↑
Heavy assets needed per dollar of revenue - utilities, telecoms, capital goods.
Productivity of the asset base. Combined with net margin, this is the DuPont decomposition of ROA: ROA = net_margin * asset_turnover.
Asset Turnover = revenue_ttm / average_total_assets
Capex to Sales ↓
Lower is better for shareholder cash returns; very low values can flag under-investment in a capital-intensive business. Pairs with FCF margin to separate 'thin operating margin' from 'fat operating margin offset by heavy capex'.
Capex to Sales = capital_expenditures_ttm / revenue * 100
Cash Conversion ↑
Earnings exceed cash - common late-cycle warning when receivables and inventories are building.
Sanity-check on earnings quality. Persistently below 1 means working capital or capex is consuming earnings; persistently above 1 is unusual and may flag accounting conservatism or non-cash drags.
Cash Conversion = free_cash_flow_ttm / net_income_ttm
EBITDA Margin ↑
EBITDA margin in the broad-market range.
Easier to compare than operating_margin across firms with very different leverage / depreciation profiles. Software platforms commonly run above 30%; capital-light service businesses cluster around 20%.
EBITDA Margin = ebitda / revenue * 100
FCF Margin ↑
Cash flowing through to owners - the hallmark of high-quality compounders.
End-to-end conversion ratio: of every dollar of revenue, how much falls through to genuine free cash flow available to capital providers? More honest than net margin because it accounts for capex needed to maintain the business.
FCF Margin = (free_cash_flow_ttm / revenue_ttm) * 100
Free Cash Flow Yield ↑
Strong cash income relative to price - attractive when growth doesn't have to do all the work.
FCF the business throws off relative to what you pay for the equity. Treats the equity as a perpetual claim on cash. Cyclicals can swing below zero in a downturn.
FCF Yield = (free_cash_flow_ttm / market_cap) * 100
Greenblatt ROC ↑
Joel Greenblatt's reformulation of return-on-capital that excludes goodwill, acquired intangibles, and financial assets, focusing instead on the tangible operating capital that actually generates EBIT. Pairs with Greenblatt's Earnings Yield (EBIT/EV) to produce the Magic Formula rank.
Greenblatt ROC = EBIT / (working_capital + net_fixed_assets) * 100
Gross Margin ↑
First-line profitability measure - how much revenue is left after the direct cost of producing it. Stable gross margin suggests pricing power and low input-cost exposure.
Gross Margin = ((revenue_ttm - cogs_ttm) / revenue_ttm) * 100
Net Margin ↑
Strong all-in profitability after every expense category.
Operating margin minus interest, tax, and below-the-line items. Useful but noisy because tax rate and debt service distort year-to-year comparability.
Net Margin = (net_income_ttm / revenue_ttm) * 100
OCF to Net Income ↑
Net income running ahead of operating cash - check accruals (receivables, deferred revenue, inventories).
Pre-capex version of cash conversion. Numbers persistently below 1 suggest accruals are doing the work; numbers persistently above 1 are a (mild) positive sign.
OCF/NI = operating_cash_flow_ttm / net_income_ttm
Operating Margin ↑
Thin profit per dollar of revenue - exposed to input cost or wage shocks.
Captures the leverage between revenue and operating profit. Core test of whether a business converts sales into income at the operating level.
Operating Margin = (operating_income_ttm / revenue_ttm) * 100
Return on Assets ↑
Heavy asset base is needed to generate each dollar of profit - common in capital-intensive industries.
Capital-efficiency measure that ignores how the assets are financed. Useful for comparing within a sector but biased low for asset-heavy businesses (banks, utilities) and high for asset-light ones.
ROA = (net_income_ttm / average_total_assets) * 100
Return on Capital Employed ↑
Pre-tax cousin of ROIC using operating capital employed (long-term debt + equity ≈ total assets less current liabilities). Damodaran publishes ROCE by industry, so it benchmarks cleanly.
ROCE = ebit / (total_assets - current_liabilities) * 100
Return on Equity ↑
Capital is being put to work effectively - sustainable when supported by real economic moats.
Headline profitability metric. High ROE compounds book value if the business can reinvest at the same return. Beware of buybacks artificially inflating ROE by shrinking the denominator.
ROE = (net_income_ttm / average_common_equity) * 100
Return on Invested Capital ↑
Operating capital is being deployed unproductively - watch for businesses earning less than they pay for capital.
Measures how productive the actual operating capital base is, independent of capital structure. The benchmark is the company's cost of capital - sustained ROIC above WACC creates value, below WACC destroys it.
NOPAT = operating_income_ttm * (1 - effective_tax_rate); invested_capital = shareholders_equity + total_debt - cash; ROIC = NOPAT / avg_invested_capital * 100
Fundamentals · Growth
Growth Above average
Above-average Growth — more positives than negatives in this section.
EPS Growth (YoY) ↑
Earnings per share are compounding meaningfully.
Bottom-line growth on a per-share basis, capturing both operating progress and any net buyback effect. The denominator uses absolute prior EPS so a turnaround from negative to positive earnings reads with the conventional sign.
EPS Growth = (diluted_eps_ttm - diluted_eps_prior_ttm) / abs(diluted_eps_prior_ttm)
Revenue Growth (YoY) ↑
Revenue flat or declining - the growth engine is paused or in reverse.
Top-line growth - the cleanest way to see whether the franchise is expanding. Best read alongside margin trend; revenue rising while margin compresses is often discount-driven volume rather than real growth.
Revenue Growth = (revenue_ttm - revenue_prior_ttm) / revenue_prior_ttm

Fundamentals · Balance Sheet
Balance Sheet Strong
Strong Balance Sheet — most metrics are scoring well above the professional bands' midpoints.
Cash Ratio ↑
Strips out receivables and inventory, leaving only cash and equivalents over current liabilities. Stress-tests whether the business can meet obligations even if collections seize up.
Cash Ratio = cash_and_equivalents / current_liabilities
Current Ratio ↑
Whether the company can cover near-term obligations from near-term assets. Below 1.0 doesn't mean insolvent (cash flow can cover the gap) but is worth a closer look.
Current Ratio = current_assets / current_liabilities
Debt-to-Assets ↓
Debt funds a heavy share of the asset base - returns are amplified, so are stress responses.
Useful complement to debt-to-equity. Banks, REITs, and post-buyback firms can have small or negative book equity, which makes D/E unstable; D/A stays well-behaved because the denominator is always positive. Industry context still matters - utilities run higher than software.
Debt-to-Assets = total_debt / total_assets
Debt-to-Equity ↓
Capital structure is debt-heavy - amplifies equity returns but also stress in downturns.
How much the company funds itself with debt vs. equity. Higher leverage amplifies both returns and risks; the appropriate level varies wildly by industry.
Debt-to-Equity = total_debt / common_equity
Interest Coverage ↑
EBIT covers the interest bill many times over - balance sheet has plenty of breathing room.
Solvency-under-stress measure. A ratio of 1x means EBIT exactly covers interest with nothing left over; 5x is comfortable for an industrial; below 2x is a credit-watch level. Especially important when leverage is rising or profits are cyclical.
Interest Coverage = EBIT / interest_expense
LT Debt-to-Equity ↓
Permanent leverage is high - watch coverage ratios and refinancing windows.
Strips out short-term operating debt and revolver use to focus on permanent capital structure. Useful when comparing companies that fund working capital differently.
LT D/E = long_term_debt / common_equity
Net Debt / EBITDA ↓
Net debt looks heavy relative to operating cash earnings - watch covenant headroom.
Bond covenants are commonly written against this ratio. Above ~5x is high-yield territory; investment-grade industrials typically run below 3x. Negative net debt (more cash than debt) means the firm could pay off its bonds and still hold cash.
Net Debt / EBITDA = (total_debt - cash_and_equivalents) / ebitda_ttm
Quick Ratio ↑
The acid-test variant of current ratio strips inventory from current assets, since inventory can be stale or written down before it becomes cash. Sweet spot 1.2x; below 0.5x signals liquidity stress, above 3x signals trapped working capital.
Quick Ratio = (current_assets - inventory) / current_liabilities
Fundamentals · Efficiency
Efficiency Weak
Weak Efficiency — most metrics in this section are scoring below the professional bands' midpoints.
Cash Conversion Cycle ↓
The single best operations-quality metric. Negative CCC means the firm is funded by suppliers (Apple, Costco). Long CCC ties up working capital and forces operating-loan dependence.
CCC = DIO + DSO - DPO
Days Sales Outstanding ↓
Cash collection is fast - high-quality receivables.
Earnings-quality flag. Receivables growing faster than revenue is one of the cleanest tells for revenue recognition stretching. Beneish-style.
DSO = 365 * average_accounts_receivable / revenue
Inventory Turnover ↑
DuPont productivity measure. Combined with margin it tells the asset-light vs asset-heavy story. Very high turnover in retail can flag stockouts — the metric reads best industry-relative.
Inventory Turnover = cogs / average_inventory

Fundamentals · Income
Income Mixed
Mixed Income — roughly balanced strengths and weaknesses.
Dividend Yield ↑
Real income today - sustainability depends on payout ratio and free cash flow coverage.
Direct income from holding the share. Stable dividend yield often signals capital discipline; abnormally high yield can be a warning that the dividend isn't covered by FCF and may be cut.
Dividend Yield = (dividends_per_share_ttm / price) * 100
Earnings Yield ↑
Earnings stream is large relative to price - attractive when treasury yields are low.
Lets you compare equity earning power directly to bond yields. A 6% earnings yield is the equity-side analog to a 6% coupon, with the difference being earnings can grow (or contract).
Earnings Yield = (net_income_ttm / market_cap) * 100
Payout Ratio ↑
Payout in the sustainable range - dividend has room to grow with earnings.
Sustainability check on the dividend yield. Below 30% means the dividend has room to grow; 30-60% is the conventional sweet spot; above 85% is stretched and frequently precedes a cut. REITs and utilities run higher than the broad market by design.
Payout Ratio = dividends_paid_ttm / net_income_ttm
Total Shareholder Yield ↑
Little cash going back to shareholders - return depends on growth or multiple expansion.

Fundamentals · Composite
Composite Strong
Strong Composite — most metrics are scoring well above the professional bands' midpoints.
Altman Z-Score ↑
Five-factor distress signal originally calibrated for US public manufacturers. Above 3.0 is the conventional 'safe' zone, 1.8-3.0 is the grey zone, below 1.8 historically associates with elevated bankruptcy risk.
Z = 1.2X1 + 1.4X2 + 3.3X3 + 0.6X4 + 1.0X5; X1=working_capital/total_assets, X2=retained_earnings/total_assets, X3=ebit/total_assets, X4=market_cap/total_liabilities, X5=revenue/total_assets
Beneish M-Score ↑
Beneish (1999) calibrates eight financial-statement indices against a sample of known manipulators. M < -2.22 reads as unlikely manipulator; M >= -1.78 as likely manipulator; the gap is grey. Companion to Altman Z but for fraud risk rather than bankruptcy.
M = -4.84 + 0.92*DSRI + 0.528*GMI + 0.404*AQI + 0.892*SGI + 0.115*DEPI - 0.172*SGAI + 4.679*TATA - 0.327*LVGI
Piotroski F-Score ↑
Clean fundamentals scorecard - profitability, leverage, and efficiency all moving the right way.
Joseph Piotroski's score for distinguishing winners from losers among low-P/B stocks. Each of 9 questions answers 0 or 1; the more 'yes' answers, the higher quality the recent year-over-year improvements.
Sum of 9 binary indicators across profitability (ROA>0, CFO>0, ROA improving, CFO>NI), leverage (LT debt/assets falling, current ratio rising, no share issuance), and operating efficiency (gross margin rising, asset turnover rising)
Sloan Ratio ↑
Net income outpacing cash by an unusual amount - earnings quality may be deteriorating.
Richard Sloan's accruals-quality measure. Persistent positive accruals (NI exceeds OCF) tend to mean-revert via earnings disappointments. Large negative values are usually fine but can flag one-time working-capital releases or non-cash drags. Phase D-2 made this a target-window metric centred at zero.
Sloan = (net_income_ttm - operating_cash_flow_ttm - cash_flow_from_investing_ttm) / total_assets
Technicals · Momentum
Momentum Mixed
Mixed Momentum — roughly balanced strengths and weaknesses.
Connors RSI(2)
Active pullback-buy in an established uptrend — price bouncing off a 2-period oversold reading.
- ↑ $298.04
- ↑ $298.94
- ↑ $285.27
- ↑ $291.13
- ↑ $290.59
- ↑ $293.01
- ↑ $295.52
- ↑ $302.01
- ↑ $299.40
- ↑ $302.44
- ↑ $302.09
- ↑ $268.63
Buys oversold pullbacks within an established uptrend (price above the 200-day SMA). Holds while RSI(2) is below an exit threshold; exits when RSI(2) crosses above 60.
+1 when price is above regime_ma and RSI(2) drops below oversold; held while inside the trade; back to 0 when RSI(2) crosses above exit.
+1 = pullback-buy state active, 0 = flat. Bear-side variant uses the symmetric short rule.
period=2, oversold=10, exit=60, regime_ma=200
MACD Divergence
MACD histogram printing lower highs beneath higher highs in price — reversal-down tell.
- ↓ $310.90
- ↓ $292.77
- ↓ $277.32
- ↑ $247.73
- ↓ $272.03
- ↓ $260.99
- ↑ $227.87
- ↓ $260.34
Compares price pivots against the MACD histogram (MACD line minus signal line) at those same bars. Bullish divergence: price lower-low, histogram higher-low. Bearish divergence: price higher-high, histogram lower-high.
+1 at right-hand pivot of bullish divergence; -1 at right-hand pivot of bearish divergence; 0 otherwise.
+1 = bullish divergence, -1 = bearish divergence.
fast=12, slow=26, signal=9, pivot_window=5
MACD Signal Cross
MACD line crossed down through its signal line — short-term momentum trigger short.
- ↓ $301.35
- ↑ $301.59
- ↓ $305.20
- ↑ $280.69
- ↓ $289.01
- ↑ $290.21
- ↓ $282.12
- ↑ $275.19
- ↓ $265.64
- ↑ $268.96
- ↓ $272.34
- ↑ $282.41
Fires on the bar where the MACD line (EMA12-EMA26) crosses through the signal line (EMA9 of MACD). Bullish when MACD crosses up through signal, bearish when it crosses down. Far more commonly used as a trade trigger than divergence (see macd_divergence for the slower confirmatory tell).
+1 on bullish cross (MACD crosses up through signal); -1 on bearish cross (MACD crosses down through signal); 0 otherwise.
+1 = bullish MACD-signal cross, -1 = bearish MACD-signal cross.
fast=12, slow=26, signal=9
RSI Divergence
Momentum weakening even as price prints higher highs — a reversal-down tell.
- ↓ $310.90
- ↓ $292.77
- ↓ $282.82
- ↓ $277.32
- ↓ $260.99
When price prints a lower low while RSI prints a higher low at those same bars, momentum is improving even though price is still falling - a classic bullish divergence. The bearish mirror fires when price makes a higher high but RSI prints a lower high.
+1 at the right-hand pivot of a (lower-low price, higher-low RSI) pair; -1 at the right-hand pivot of a (higher-high price, lower-high RSI) pair; 0 otherwise.
+1 = bullish divergence, -1 = bearish divergence, 0 = no divergence at this bar.
period=14, pivot_window=5, lookback=60
Stochastic Cross
%K crossed up through %D from oversold — short-term buy trigger.
- ↑ $291.82
- ↓ $305.53
- ↓ $291.76
- ↑ $271.66
- ↑ $271.75
- ↓ $290.87
- ↓ $291.40
- ↑ $277.05
- ↓ $291.48
- ↓ $285.25
- ↓ $282.82
- ↓ $261.81
Bullish when %K crosses above %D while both lines are below the oversold threshold; bearish when %K crosses below %D while both are above overbought.
+1 on bullish cross in oversold; -1 on bearish cross in overbought; 0 otherwise.
+1 = oversold bullish cross, -1 = overbought bearish cross.
k=14, d=3, smooth=3, ob=80, os=20
Technicals · Trend
Trend Above average
Above-average Trend — more positives than negatives in this section.
52-Week Proximity
Price hugging its 52-week high — strength regime, breakout candidates.
- ↑ $304.72
- ↑ $305.14
- ↑ $310.02
- ↑ $307.33
- ↑ $306.33
- ↑ $305.20
- ↑ $305.53
- ↑ $310.90
- ↑ $309.84
- ↑ $309.54
- ↑ $307.52
- ↑ $305.13
Reports whether the close sits within the configured proximity (default 2%) of the rolling 252-bar high or low. New-highs and new-lows are universally used screening filters; momentum and breakout strategies start from here.
+1 while close is within proximity of the 252-bar high; -1 while close is within proximity of the 252-bar low; 0 mid-range.
+1 = near 52-week high, -1 = near 52-week low, 0 = mid-range.
window=252, proximity=0.02
ADX Trend Weakness
ADX below threshold — trend is weak, prefer mean-reversion to trend strategies right now.
- ↑ $298.04
- ↑ $298.94
- ↑ $301.59
- ↑ $301.35
- ↑ $301.53
- ↑ $304.72
- ↑ $305.14
- ↑ $302.25
- ↑ $310.02
- ↑ $303.74
- ↑ $302.73
- ↑ $307.33
ADX (Average Directional Index) measures trend strength regardless of direction. Below ~20 historically associates with sideways/choppy markets unfavorable to trend strategies.
+1 while ADX is below the threshold (weak trend); 0 otherwise.
+1 = weak trend (chop) - typically a signal to disable trend strategies, not to trade direction.
period=14, weak_threshold=20
Donchian Breakout
Active long breakout state — close above the N-day highest high.
- ↑ $298.04
- ↑ $298.94
- ↑ $301.59
- ↑ $301.35
- ↑ $301.53
- ↑ $304.72
- ↑ $305.14
- ↑ $302.25
- ↑ $310.02
- ↑ $303.74
- ↑ $302.73
- ↑ $307.33
Turtle-style breakout signal: enters long on a close above the highest high of the lookback window, short on a close below the lowest low. Holds the position for a fixed number of bars.
+1 on long entry, held for hold_bars; -1 on short entry, held for hold_bars.
+1 = long breakout state, -1 = short breakout state.
period=20, hold_bars=20
Ichimoku
Ichimoku components disagree; no clean setup either direction.
- ↑ $294.15
- ↑ $275.19
- ↑ $255.04
- ↑ $259.16
Composite trend system: bullish when price is above the cloud, tenkan crosses above kijun, and the cloud ahead is green. Bearish on the symmetric short-side configuration.
+1 on bullish trigger conditions, -1 on bearish, 0 otherwise.
+1 = full Ichimoku bullish setup, -1 = full bearish setup.
tenkan=9, kijun=26, senkou_b=52
MA Crossover
Fast MA below slow MA — bearish bias state held.
- ↓ $301.35
- ↑ $295.05
- ↓ $299.25
- ↑ $306.33
- ↓ $302.44
- ↑ $280.69
- ↓ $284.16
- ↑ $289.54
- ↓ $282.12
- ↑ $275.19
- ↓ $268.08
- ↑ $259.96
Holds +1 while the fast moving average is above the slow one (bullish bias), -1 when below (bearish bias). Whipsaws in chop; works best when combined with a regime filter.
+1 while fast > slow, -1 while fast < slow.
+1 = bullish state (fast above slow), -1 = bearish state.
fast=5, slow=10, ma_type=ema
Parabolic SAR Flip
SAR flipped from below to above price — switch to short bias.
- ↓ $301.35
- ↑ $295.05
- ↓ $295.52
- ↑ $306.33
- ↓ $302.09
- ↑ $303.82
- ↓ $293.14
- ↑ $277.47
- ↓ $284.16
- ↑ $289.54
- ↓ $288.31
- ↑ $266.10
The Parabolic SAR plots a stop-and-reverse dot above or below price; when price crosses the SAR, the trend side flips. The signal fires on the flip bar.
+1 on flip from above-price (bearish) to below-price (bullish); -1 on flip the other way.
+1 = bullish flip, -1 = bearish flip.
accel=0.02, max_accel=0.2
Regime Filter
Price above the long-term MA — bullish regime, gate longs on.
- ↑ $298.04
- ↑ $298.94
- ↑ $301.59
- ↑ $301.35
- ↑ $301.53
- ↑ $304.72
- ↑ $305.14
- ↑ $302.25
- ↑ $310.02
- ↑ $303.74
- ↑ $302.73
- ↑ $307.33
Simplest possible regime filter: long-only when price is above its long-term MA, flat or short-only when below. Often used to gate other signals.
+1 while close > MA, -1 while close < MA.
+1 = bullish regime (above 200dma), -1 = bearish regime (below 200dma).
ma_period=200
Relative Strength vs SPY
Ticker outperforming the broad market by more than its trailing-year norm.
- ↑ $300.78
- ↑ $299.33
- ↓ $268.38
- ↓ $267.16
- ↓ $267.76
- ↓ $261.86
- ↓ $262.52
- ↓ $260.88
Computes the period-bar log-return spread (ticker minus SPY), then ranks the spread against its trailing 252-bar quantile. SPY = SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust ('SPDR' = Standard & Poor's Depositary Receipts), the standard proxy for the US large-cap market. Ranking against the trailing window means the same threshold works in both gentle bull markets and high-volatility regimes.
+1 while the ticker-vs-SPY spread is in the top high_pct of its trailing window; -1 while in the bottom low_pct; 0 otherwise.
+1 = clear outperformance regime, -1 = clear underperformance regime.
period=63, rank_window=252, high_pct=0.85, low_pct=0.15
Technicals · Price Action
Price Action Mixed
Mixed Price Action — roughly balanced strengths and weaknesses.
Doji
Indecision candle after a downtrend — buyers and sellers in balance, watch for follow-through.
- ↑ $299.59
- ↑ $295.05
- ↑ $305.13
- ↑ $283.26
- ↑ $277.76
- ↑ $235.16
- ↑ $250.44
- ↑ $207.95
Open and close are nearly equal (tiny body, under ~5% of range) with comparable upper and lower wicks. Marks indecision; meaningful when it appears at trend extremes or after extended runs.
+1 on doji (the bar marks the indecision candle regardless of direction).
+1 = doji formed; direction depends on context (use with prior trend).
body_max=0.05, wick_balance=0.3
Double 7s
Active Connors Double-7 pullback in an uptrend — buy the 7-day low, sell the 7-day high.
- ↑ $298.04
- ↑ $298.94
- ↑ $301.59
- ↑ $301.35
- ↑ $301.53
- ↑ $290.53
- ↑ $291.68
- ↑ $291.82
- ↑ $285.27
- ↑ $291.13
- ↑ $290.59
- ↑ $293.01
While price is above its 200-day MA (uptrend regime), buy when today's close is the lowest in 7 sessions; exit when today's close is the highest in 7 sessions.
+1 on entry day (new 7-day low above regime); held until exit on new 7-day high; back to 0 on exit.
+1 = pullback-buy state active, 0 = flat.
lookback=7, regime_ma=200
Engulfing
Up candle fully engulfed the prior down body after a downtrend — reversal-up tell.
- ↑ $302.01
- ↑ $277.47
- ↓ $290.65
- ↓ $280.62
- ↑ $269.07
- ↓ $262.30
- ↑ $262.88
- ↓ $245.70
- ↑ $244.23
- ↓ $250.68
- ↑ $237.62
- ↓ $203.87
Bullish engulfing: down candle followed by an up candle whose body fully covers the prior body. Bearish engulfing: up candle followed by a larger down candle covering the prior body. Strongest after a trend.
+1 on bullish engulfing after a downtrend; -1 on bearish engulfing after an uptrend.
+1 = bullish engulfing reversal, -1 = bearish engulfing reversal.
prior_trend_window=5
Fibonacci Retracement
Price interacted with a key Fibonacci level on its way up — likely springboard or resistance to clear.
- ↑ $298.04
- ↑ $298.94
- ↑ $301.59
- ↑ $301.35
- ↑ $301.53
- ↑ $304.72
- ↑ $305.14
- ↑ $302.25
- ↑ $310.02
- ↑ $303.74
- ↑ $302.73
- ↑ $307.33
Identifies the most recent significant swing high and low, projects standard Fibonacci levels (23.6%, 38.2%, 50%, 61.8%, 78.6%), and tags bars where price interacts with one of those levels.
Reports the level price is closest to, in price units, when price is within the proximity band.
Magnitude is the level (e.g. 281.13 = the price level itself), not -1/+1. Sign carries direction-of-move when present.
swing_lookback=60, levels=[0.236,0.382,0.5,0.618,0.786]
Head and Shoulders
Standard H&S confirmed — three-peak topping pattern that broke its neckline down.
- ↓ $301.35
- ↑ $300.78
- ↑ $283.48
- ↓ $291.40
- ↓ $267.85
- ↓ $274.02
- ↓ $261.08
- ↑ $261.92
- ↓ $261.84
- ↓ $260.41
- ↑ $255.40
- ↑ $236.16
Bearish head-and-shoulders: left shoulder, higher head, right shoulder of comparable height to left, broken by a close below the neckline. Inverse pattern (three troughs) is bullish.
+1 at neckline break of inverse-H&S; -1 at neckline break of standard H&S.
+1 = bullish inverse H&S confirmed, -1 = bearish H&S confirmed.
shoulder_tol=0.03, head_prom=0.02
MA Rejection
Price tagged a key MA and rolled — moving average held as resistance.
- ↓ $298.04
- ↓ $298.94
- ↑ $301.59
- ↑ $301.35
- ↑ $301.53
- ↑ $305.14
- ↑ $302.25
- ↑ $303.74
- ↑ $302.73
- ↑ $301.68
- ↑ $301.42
- ↑ $300.78
When price comes within a small band of a key moving average (typically 50- or 200-period) and reverses without closing through it, the MA is acting as support (uptrend) or resistance (downtrend).
+1 when price prints a low near the MA in an uptrend and closes back above; -1 when price prints a high near the MA in a downtrend and closes back below.
+1 = bullish MA rejection (support held), -1 = bearish MA rejection (resistance held).
ma_periods=[50,200], proximity=0.01
Multi Top/Bottom
Price retested a prior high and rolled — multi-top resistance confirmed.
- ↓ $301.35
- ↑ $301.53
- ↓ $305.14
- ↓ $303.74
- ↓ $301.68
- ↑ $300.78
- ↓ $301.31
- ↑ $291.68
- ↓ $290.59
- ↓ $296.84
- ↑ $304.64
- ↓ $310.90
Finds two or more pivot highs (tops) or lows (bottoms) within a price tolerance and minimum bar separation. Confirmed multi-bottom is bullish; multi-top is bearish.
+1 at confirmation of a multi-bottom (price retests prior low and holds); -1 at confirmation of a multi-top.
+1 = multi-bottom (support pattern), -1 = multi-top (resistance pattern).
peak_count=2, tolerance=0.02, min_sep=10
Pin Bar
Long upper wick rejected the prior upswing — sellers stepped in at the high.
- ↓ $304.64
- ↑ $239.80
- ↓ $251.87
- ↓ $252.24
- ↑ $239.04
- ↑ $206.54
- ↓ $197.46
A pin bar has a small real body (under ~30% of the bar's range) and a long wick (over ~60%) on one side, sticking out beyond the prior trend. Bullish pin: long lower wick after a downtrend. Bearish pin: long upper wick after an uptrend.
+1 for bullish pin (long lower wick, body near top, after downtrend); -1 for bearish pin.
+1 = bullish reversal candle, -1 = bearish reversal candle.
body_max=0.3, wick_min=0.6, prior_trend=5
Star
Morning star printed at a low — small-body middle bar bridged a down day and a strong up day.
- ↑ $293.99
- ↓ $291.76
- ↓ $269.20
- ↑ $265.77
- ↑ $250.80
- ↓ $203.87
Morning star (bullish): big down candle, small-body middle, big up candle that closes well into the first body. Evening star is the bearish mirror at a top.
+1 on confirmed morning star; -1 on confirmed evening star.
+1 = morning star (bullish reversal), -1 = evening star (bearish reversal).
middle_body_max=0.3, penetration=0.5
Sushi Roll
No outside-range reversal recently.
- ↑ $277.05
- ↑ $267.31
- ↑ $263.25
- ↑ $260.03
- ↑ $259.59
- ↑ $267.41
- ↑ $273.56
- ↑ $268.34
- ↑ $268.08
- ↑ $262.08
- ↑ $260.43
- ↑ $262.88
Two consecutive non-overlapping windows where the second window's high is above the first's high AND the second's low is below the first's low (an outside range). Reads as a reversal signal off the prior trend.
+1 if prior trend was down and current outside-range closes higher than it opens; -1 in the symmetric down-reversal case.
+1 = bullish outside reversal, -1 = bearish outside reversal.
window=10
Trendline Break
Decisive close below an upward trendline — support line gave way.
- ↓ $298.94
- ↑ $310.02
- ↑ $307.33
- ↓ $295.05
- ↓ $299.25
- ↑ $298.81
- ↑ $298.14
- ↑ $297.53
- ↑ $287.18
- ↓ $284.16
- ↑ $277.70
- ↓ $266.46
Fits a trendline through pivot points and flags decisive closes through the line. Distinguishes a clean break from a wick-test by requiring the close to violate the line.
+1 on close above a downward trendline; -1 on close below an upward trendline.
+1 = bullish breakout above resistance line, -1 = bearish breakdown below support line.
lookback=60, min_touches=2
Wedge Pattern
Rising wedge resolved down — compression broke in favor of sellers.
- ↓ $298.04
- ↓ $298.94
- ↓ $301.59
- ↓ $301.35
- ↓ $301.53
- ↓ $304.72
- ↓ $305.14
- ↓ $302.25
- ↓ $310.02
- ↑ $300.81
- ↑ $298.84
- ↑ $299.33
A wedge is a price compression where two trendlines converge. Rising wedge (both lines sloping up but upper less steep) typically resolves down; falling wedge resolves up.
+1 on confirmed break above falling wedge; -1 on confirmed break below rising wedge.
+1 = bullish wedge resolution, -1 = bearish wedge resolution.
lookback=40, min_touches=2
Technicals · Volume
Volume Above average
Above-average Volume — more positives than negatives in this section.
Declining Volume
Decline running on falling volume — sellers losing conviction, reversal candidate.
- ↑ $298.04
- ↑ $298.94
- ↑ $301.59
- ↑ $301.35
- ↑ $300.81
- ↑ $298.84
- ↑ $299.33
- ↑ $299.59
- ↑ $306.33
- ↑ $304.64
- ↑ $302.49
- ↑ $302.01
Trends backed by declining volume tend to lose conviction. The signal compares the slope of price against the slope of volume over a rolling window.
+1 when price is rising but volume slope is negative (weak rally); -1 when price is falling but volume slope is negative (weak decline / potential reversal).
+1 = weak uptrend (sell into strength), -1 = weak downtrend (cover or buy into weakness).
trend_window=20
OBV Divergence
OBV and price moving together; accumulation/distribution is in line with the tape.
- ↓ $292.77
- ↓ $282.82
- ↓ $277.32
- ↓ $273.10
- ↑ $247.73
- ↓ $260.99
- ↓ $255.72
OBV cumulates signed volume - rising OBV reflects accumulation, falling OBV distribution. Same pivot-pair rule as RSI/MACD divergence: when price makes a new low but OBV doesn't, big-money has stopped selling.
+1 at right-hand pivot of (price lower-low, OBV higher-low); -1 at right-hand pivot of (price higher-high, OBV lower-high).
+1 = bullish OBV divergence, -1 = bearish OBV divergence.
pivot_window=5, lookback=60
Volume Climax
Capitulation bar with heavy volume and small body near the low — sellers may be exhausted.
- ↑ $296.60
Identifies bars whose volume is well above their recent average AND whose body is small relative to the bar's true range - the classic 'climax' shape that often marks short-term turning points.
+1 (long-side capitulation) when the climax bar prints near its low; -1 (distribution) when it prints near its high.
+1 = capitulation/buying climax (potential reversal lower-to-higher), -1 = distribution/selling climax (potential reversal higher-to-lower).
vol_ma=20, spike_mult=2.5, body_range_max=0.4
Technicals · Volatility
Volatility Weak
Weak Volatility — most metrics in this section are scoring below the professional bands' midpoints.
ATR Regime
ATR%-of-close in the top decile — elevated volatility regime, mean-reversion strategies have an edge.
- ↑ $297.26
- ↑ $291.68
- ↑ $291.82
- ↑ $285.27
- ↓ $279.47
- ↓ $280.94
- ↓ $283.15
- ↓ $282.16
- ↓ $284.16
- ↓ $286.72
- ↓ $284.16
- ↓ $289.01
Computes Wilder ATR over `period`, divides by close to get ATR%-of-close, then ranks each bar against the trailing `window` quantile. High-percentile readings flag elevated volatility regimes (mean-reversion edge); low-percentile flags compression (breakout edge).
+1 while ATR%-of-close is in the top high_pct of its trailing window; -1 while in the bottom low_pct; 0 otherwise.
+1 = high-volatility regime, -1 = compression regime, 0 = average regime.
period=14, window=252, high_pct=0.85, low_pct=0.15
Bollinger Mean Reversion
Active short mean-reversion held — price tagged the upper band, exits at the midline.
- ↓ $304.72
- ↓ $305.14
- ↓ $302.25
- ↓ $310.02
- ↑ $295.05
- ↑ $295.55
- ↑ $293.99
- ↑ $290.53
- ↑ $291.68
- ↑ $291.82
- ↑ $285.27
- ↑ $291.13
Enters +1 when close <= lower band, holds until close >= middle band. Symmetric short-side state. Captures reversion-to-mean trades inside Bollinger bands.
+1 enter on close <= lower band, exit on close >= middle. -1 enter on close >= upper, exit on close <= middle.
+1 = long mean-reversion held, -1 = short mean-reversion held, 0 = flat.
period=20, std=2
Bollinger Reentry
Price closed back inside the bands from above — short-term reversion-short signal.
- ↓ $302.25
- ↑ $291.82
- ↑ $291.13
- ↑ $296.60
- ↓ $291.76
- ↑ $268.44
- ↓ $283.97
- ↑ $263.25
- ↓ $280.62
- ↓ $280.59
- ↓ $272.04
- ↓ $273.10
Fires on the bar where the close returns inside the bands after the prior close was outside. Long reentry from below the lower band, short reentry from above the upper band.
+1 when prior close < lower band and current close inside; -1 when prior close > upper band and current close inside.
+1 = long-side reentry from oversold, -1 = short-side reentry from overbought.
period=20, std=2