Where Your Stock Sits, and What Tends to Happen Next.
The 52-Week Range tool reads where a stock sits inside its yearly range right now and shows what tends to happen next. It scores the price as a range position from 0 to 100, where 0 means it is sitting on the 52-week low and 100 means a fresh 52-week high. Then it conditions forward returns on that position, so you see how the stock has typically behaved from the same spot in its range.
Most traders treat a 52-week high as automatically bullish and a 52-week low as automatically bearish, but the history is rarely that clean. The same range position can lead to a breakout in one name and a fade in another, and the only way to know is to look at what actually followed. The decision-relevant question is not whether the stock is high or low in its range, it is what came next the other times it was here, measured across the full history rather than guessed from the chart.
A new high is not always a green light and a new low is not always a falling knife: what tends to happen next depends on exactly where in the range the price sits, how wide that range is, and the horizon you care about. The tool reports the next-day and next-week return and green probability from the current position, the odds the next 3%, 5%, or 10% move goes up first, and the width of the range itself, so you read the setup in context instead of reacting to the headline number.
The range position from 0 to 100, the range width percentile, next-day and next-week forward returns and green probability, and the odds the next 3%, 5%, or 10% move goes up first, for any liquid US ticker.
Where the price sits from 0 (the 52-week low) to 100 (a new 52-week high) right now.
How wide the 52-week range is, shown as a percentile so you know if it is tight or stretched.
The average next-day return and green probability from the current range position.
The same forward read over the following week, for a slightly longer horizon.
The odds the next 3%, 5%, or 10% move goes up before it goes down.
Every stat is measured from the times the stock was at the same spot in its range.
When the stock prints a fresh 52-week high, check whether it has tended to keep running or fade from here.
When it sits on the 52-week low, see whether the history points to a bounce or to more downside.
Compare the next-day and next-week outlook to match the read to how long you plan to hold.
Use the up-first odds to judge whether the next 3%, 5%, or 10% move is more likely up or down.
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