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Stock Screener — Find Stocks by Any Criteria

Screen thousands of stocks across NYSE, NASDAQ, and global exchanges. Filter by price, market cap, sector, performance, and fundamentals. Includes live gainers, losers, sector heatmap, and earnings calendar.

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How to Use a Stock Screener

What is a stock screener?

A stock screener filters thousands of stocks based on your chosen criteria — price, market cap, P/E ratio, volume, sector, dividend yield, and more. Instead of researching stocks one by one, a screener narrows the universe down to only those that match your specific investment or trading strategy.

Filtering by fundamentals

Fundamental filters include P/E ratio (price-to-earnings), EPS (earnings per share), revenue growth, debt-to-equity, and dividend yield. Value investors typically look for low P/E ratios relative to the sector. Growth investors screen for strong revenue and earnings growth. Dividend investors filter for consistent high yields.

Filtering by technicals

Technical filters include price relative to moving averages (above/below 50-day MA), RSI levels (oversold below 30, overbought above 70), volume spikes, 52-week highs/lows, and volatility. A common setup is screening for stocks making new highs on above-average volume — a classic momentum signal.

Understanding market cap tiers

Large-cap stocks (over $10B) are established companies like Apple or Microsoft — lower risk, lower growth. Mid-cap ($2B–$10B) offer a balance of growth and stability. Small-cap (under $2B) have higher growth potential but more volatility and risk. Micro-cap stocks (under $300M) are highly speculative.

What is a sector heatmap?

A sector heatmap visualizes performance across all market sectors simultaneously. Each box represents a company — size reflects market cap, color reflects price change (green = up, red = down). It lets you instantly see which sectors and stocks are leading or lagging the market on any given day.

Earnings and stock prices

Earnings season happens four times per year when public companies report quarterly results. Stocks often move sharply — 5% to 20% or more — around earnings announcements. The earnings calendar shows upcoming report dates. Traders watch for "earnings surprises" where actual results beat or miss analyst expectations significantly.

Frequently Asked Questions
How do I find the best stocks to buy?+
There is no universal "best" stock — it depends on your strategy. For long-term investing, screen for companies with consistent earnings growth, low debt, and strong free cash flow. For momentum trading, screen for stocks hitting 52-week highs with increasing volume. Always combine screener results with further research into the company's business model, competitive position, and management team.
What is P/E ratio and why does it matter?+
The Price-to-Earnings (P/E) ratio is the stock price divided by annual earnings per share. A P/E of 20 means investors pay $20 for every $1 of earnings. A low P/E can signal undervaluation; a high P/E can mean high growth expectations or overvaluation. Always compare P/E within the same sector — tech companies typically trade at higher P/Es than utilities or banks.
What is the difference between NYSE and NASDAQ?+
The NYSE (New York Stock Exchange) is the world's largest stock exchange by market cap, listing mainly large, established companies. NASDAQ is a fully electronic exchange known for technology companies — Apple, Microsoft, Google, and Meta all trade here. NASDAQ typically has higher volatility and growth-oriented companies compared to NYSE's more traditional blue-chip listings.
What are ETFs and how do they differ from stocks?+
An ETF (Exchange-Traded Fund) holds a basket of assets — stocks, bonds, or commodities — and trades on an exchange like a single stock. SPY tracks the S&P 500, QQQ tracks the NASDAQ 100. ETFs provide instant diversification at low cost. Unlike individual stocks, you are not betting on a single company — you are buying exposure to an entire index or sector.
Can I trade US stocks from Morocco?+
Yes — many international brokers accept Moroccan clients and allow access to US stock markets. Platforms like Interactive Brokers, eToro, and XM provide access to NYSE and NASDAQ-listed stocks. You will need to verify your identity, fund your account in USD or EUR, and be aware of any currency conversion costs. Always use a regulated broker authorized to operate in your region.
What is short selling?+
Short selling means borrowing shares of a stock and selling them, expecting the price to fall so you can buy them back cheaper and profit from the difference. For example, if you short a stock at $100 and it drops to $70, you profit $30 per share. However, losses are theoretically unlimited if the price rises instead. Short selling is an advanced strategy and carries significant risk.