Every number, symbol, and label explained in plain English. No experience required.
Ticker Symbol and Score — The ticker is the short code for the stock. The Score (0–100) is built from 9 filters: volume, momentum, RSI, EDGAR filings, analyst upgrades, and more. Higher is better. Only scores above the threshold reach your screen.
Relative Strength — Compares this stock's performance to the overall market. Two percentages shown: short-term and longer-term gains vs. the market index. Positive means outperforming.
Performance Label — GROWTH / HIGH MOMENTUM / STRONG. Classified based on price behavior, volume, and momentum over multiple timeframes.
EPS Flag — A -EPS flag means the company reported a loss in recent earnings. A caution flag, not an automatic disqualifier — context matters.
Prior Close — The official price the stock closed at yesterday. This is the baseline for everything — pivot points, percent change, and gap detection all start here.
Pre-Market — If a price appears here, the stock is already moving before 9:30 AM ET. A dash (—) means no pre-market activity detected.
Relative Volume (Rel Vol) — Compares today's volume to the 52-week daily average. 2.0x means twice as many shares trading as usual. High relative volume is one of the strongest signals of institutional interest.
Pivot points are mathematically calculated price levels that professional floor traders watch every day. Derived from the previous session's high, low, and close.
PP (Pivot Point) — The neutral equilibrium price. Above PP = bullish. Below PP = bearish.
R1 / R2 (Resistance) — Price ceilings above the pivot. R1 is first resistance, R2 is stronger. A breakout above R2 with high volume is a very bullish signal.
S1 / S2 (Support) — Price floors below the pivot. Buyers tend to step in at these levels. If price breaks below S2 with volume, the down move may be significant.
The NOW Indicator — A live arrow showing you exactly where the current price sits in the pivot framework at this moment.
ATR (Average True Range) — Measures how much a stock typically moves in a single day. The ruler V21 uses to place stop losses and profit targets at mathematically meaningful levels.
ATR Stop Loss — Your suggested exit price if the trade goes against you. Placed 1 ATR below entry — far enough to survive normal fluctuations, close enough to limit loss if the stock genuinely breaks down.
Target 1 — Conservative target at 1x ATR above entry. Take partial profits here, then move your stop to breakeven so the rest is risk-free.
Target 2 — Full target at 2x ATR above entry. Let your remaining position ride here for the bigger gain.
8-K Filing — A major corporate event disclosure: earnings, mergers, CEO changes, new contracts. V21 polls EDGAR every 10 minutes during market hours.
Form 4 — Insider Trades — Filed when a CEO, CFO, or board member buys or sells shares. When insiders buy with their own money, that is a bullish signal. Multiple insiders selling large amounts is worth noting.
Form 144 — Intent to Sell — Filed when an insider intends to sell restricted shares. A forward-looking warning before the actual sale happens.
Dark Pool Volume — Large institutions execute massive orders away from the public market. When dark pool volume is reported, institutional money has been quietly moving. V21 monitors these flows as part of its scoring.
Unusual Volume Flag — When volume is dramatically above the 52-week average with no obvious public news, it often means institutional accumulation. V21 combines this with price action, EDGAR data, and dark pool flow to assess conviction.
90–100: Highest conviction signals. All layers confirmed. These are the ones worth watching most closely.
75–89: Strong signals. Most criteria met. Worth monitoring with a clear plan.
60–74: Moderate signals. Some criteria confirmed. Use with additional context.
Below 60: Does not reach your screen. Filtered out entirely.
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