Stocks with a 14-day RSI below 30 — technically oversold, a level mean-reversion traders watch for bounces.
The Relative Strength Index (RSI) measures the speed and size of recent price moves on a 0–100 scale. A reading below 30 is traditionally read as oversold — selling may be overdone and a bounce more likely.
This screen lists stocks with a 14-day RSI below 30, ranked from most oversold upward.
RSI(14) is computed with Wilder's smoothing from each stock's daily closes. Readings below 30 are conventionally oversold; above 70, overbought.
Stocks under 30 are listed, most-oversold first. Oversold does not mean 'buy' — a stock can stay oversold in a strong downtrend.
RSI is a momentum oscillator and a mean-reversion reference, not advice. Confirm with trend and support levels.
What does RSI below 30 mean?
RSI is a 0–100 momentum oscillator. Below 30 is traditionally 'oversold' — recent selling has been sharp and a bounce is considered more likely, though not guaranteed.
Is an oversold stock a buy?
Not automatically. In a strong downtrend a stock can remain oversold for a long time. RSI is one input among many and is not buy/sell advice.
How is RSI calculated here?
Strota uses the standard 14-period RSI with Wilder's smoothing, computed from daily closing prices.
How often does it update?
Daily, after each session's closing prices are added to the history.