A Multi-Day Run Just Stacked Up. Now What?
A return streak is the total performance delivered across a run of consecutive green or red days. The Daily Return Streak tool identifies stocks currently on these types of streaks and shows how the stock behaved after the same pattern appeared in the past.
A single big day grabs everyone's attention. The quiet run that adds up to a big move is the one most traders miss. Four days up 2% each is an 8% move that never printed a dramatic candle, and by the time anyone notices, the run is already extended. A return streak captures exactly that: a run of consecutive same-direction days whose total move clears a threshold. The decision-relevant question is what tends to happen once the move is already this big.
The folklore splits two ways: either the move has momentum and keeps stacking, or it is stretched and ready to give some back. The honest answer is more interesting: it depends on how far the run has traveled, how long it took, the direction, and the ticker. A 5% run that took five days is a different animal from a 5% run jammed into two. The forward distribution is the only way to tell which one you are looking at.
A live streak banner, a 45-day forward price cone, a Chance of Move bar graph, a full sortable event log, and a watchlist scan that surfaces today's biggest multi-day moves at a glance.
One glance tells you the return streak the stock is on right now and how far it has traveled.
Projects the next 45 days by applying forward returns from past similar streaks.
How often price rose or fell by a set percentage after similar streaks.
A return streak is the total performance delivered across a run of consecutive same-direction days.
The tool scans the market and auto-highlights stocks on a return streak today.
The Historical Log displays every past instance of a streak like today's.
Check if any stocks on your watchlist or in the market are on a return streak today.
Open the 45-day price cone. It shows how price behaved after similar streaks in the past. This gives you a realistic view of what typically happens next instead of guessing.
Switch to Bar Graph view and set your target price level. The bars show how often similar streaks reached that distance by upcoming expirations. Toggle between "By Touch" and "By Close" depending on your strategy.
Before acting on the signal, open the events log. Check how many historical matches exist and whether they cluster in one period. A small sample or regime-specific cluster tells you the signal may be less reliable than the percentages suggest.
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