7 min read

EverHint Signal — Dip & Bounce — December 03, 2025

Today's dip & bounce scan spots 19 stocks that flushed below yesterday's close and then bounced intraday, with Industrials and Tech leading the list. Highlights include Macy's post-earnings shakeout and several oversold infrastructure and energy names setting up for potential mean-reversion bounces.

What This Signal Is (Quick)

The Dip & Bounce Mean Reversion scanner looks for a specific intraday pattern: a controlled flush below the previous close, followed by a same-day recovery off the low. The day often still finishes red or roughly flat versus yesterday, but the candlestick shows a clear lower wick where buyers stepped in.

For each stock, the engine measures:

  • How far the price dipped below the previous close (Dip %)
  • How strongly it bounced from the intraday low to the close (Bounce %)
  • Where it finished versus the previous close (Net Chg %)

This is an experimental mean-reversion scanner focused on short-term 1–3 day bounce setups. It’s not trying to chase breakouts; it’s trying to catch controlled dips with visible buying pressure, ideally in liquid names where the move is more likely to be an overreaction than the start of a collapse.

Best use case: treat this as a watchlist generator. From the 19 signals, a trader can manually pick one or two clean setups, plan entries around intraday support, and manage risk tightly around the session low.


How We Ranked Today (Reader Version)

For December 03, 2025, the signals are ranked with a strict priority:

  1. Dip % (descending) – bigger intraday flush from yesterday’s close ranks higher
  2. Bounce % (descending) – stronger recovery from the low ranks higher within similar dips
  3. Liquidity (adv20_dollars) – when dip and bounce are comparable, more liquid names get preference

On top of this, we overlay:

  • Insider flows (90 days) – Net open-market buying vs selling in dollars
  • Earnings proximity (Days → Earnings) – how close each stock is to its next scheduled report
  • Momentum (RSI 14) – how stretched or oversold the stock is on a short-term basis

Important context:

  • These are controlled dips, not flash-crash style airpockets.
  • Many names are still down on the day despite the bounce, which is exactly what you want to see for a mean-reversion watchlist.
  • Signals are intended for education, research, and back-testing, not for blind auto-trading.

📈 Dip & Bounce Signals (Ranked by Dip % then Bounce %)

Rank Ticker Company Sector Last ($) Dip % Bounce % Net Chg % RSI(14) Insider Net (USD) Days → Earnings
1 MOD Modine Manufacturing Company Consumer Cyclical 157.46 +8.38% +7.12% -1.86% 56.9 0 62
2 PACS PACS Group, Inc. Healthcare 31.34 +7.01% +7.10% -0.41% 84.8 0 n/a
3 M Macy's, Inc. Consumer Cyclical 22.46 +5.81% +5.00% -1.10% 64.0 -$1.8M 0 (today)
4 TSEM Tower Semiconductor Ltd. Technology 116.01 +5.70% +5.64% -0.39% 60.3 0 68
5 STRL Sterling Infrastructure, Inc. Industrials 323.46 +5.64% +4.58% -1.32% 33.8 0 83
6 VIAV Viavi Solutions Inc. Technology 17.51 +4.95% +4.91% -0.28% 46.6 -$2.0M 57
7 LITE Lumentum Holdings Inc. Technology 302.98 +4.73% +5.02% +0.06% 60.4 -$6.5M 64
8 RUN Sunrun Inc. Technology 17.85 +4.57% +2.88% -1.82% 39.7 -$5.9M 85
9 VRT Vertiv Holdings Co Industrials 178.88 +4.54% +3.58% -1.12% 54.2 -$0.9M 70
10 GEV GE Vernova Inc. Utilities 601.97 +4.36% +4.62% +0.06% 55.3 0 56
11 FLNC Fluence Energy, Inc. Utilities 19.85 +4.11% +3.71% -0.55% 52.6 0 68
12 AGX Argan, Inc. Industrials 351.09 +4.03% +2.33% -1.79% 46.5 -$6.0M 1
13 BA The Boeing Company Industrials 202.54 +3.89% +2.60% -1.38% 56.9 -$0.2M 55
14 AAOI Applied Optoelectronics, Inc. Technology 25.65 +3.84% +2.52% -1.42% 56.0 0 84
15 DK Delek US Holdings, Inc. Energy 38.13 +3.82% +2.31% -1.60% 40.3 -$7.8M 83
16 TTMI TTM Technologies, Inc. Technology 68.47 +3.81% +3.98% +0.01% 45.2 -$0.7M 63
17 ALB Albemarle Corporation Basic Materials 126.54 +3.62% +2.46% -1.25% 68.6 -$0.0M 70
18 DINO HF Sinclair Corporation Energy 51.72 +3.35% +2.97% -0.48% 39.6 0 78
19 DY Dycom Industries, Inc. Industrials 173.90 +3.35% +3.02% -0.43% 75.4 0 84

Field notes on the table

  • Dip % – Intraday low vs previous close. MOD, PACS, M, and TSEM all flushed more than 5.5% below the prior day’s close, landing them at the top of the list.
  • Bounce % – Close vs intraday low. Many names bounced 4–7% off the low, showing clear buying into weakness.
  • Net Chg % – Final stance versus the previous close. A lot of these are still negative on the day despite the bounce, which is typical for a controlled flush setup.
  • RSI(14) – Short-term momentum. STRL, DINO, RUN, and DK are all below roughly 41 on RSI, leaning toward the “oversold” side of the spectrum.
  • Insider Net (USD) – Net open-market buying vs selling over the last 90 days. Several names (M, VIAV, LITE, RUN, VRT, AGX, BA, DK, TTMI, ALB) show net insider selling, while others have flat insider activity.
  • Days → Earnings – Time to next earnings. AGX reports essentially immediately (1 day) after the signal, M reported today, while many others have earnings in the 60–85 day window.

Recent Headlines and Catalysts (Selected Names)

These headlines are condensed summaries of recent public news around the strongest dip & bounce setups:

  • M — Macy’s, Inc. (Rank 3)
    • Fresh earnings coverage highlights a promising turnaround, with sales momentum and stronger performance from higher-income shoppers.
    • Commentary from multiple outlets points to market-beating quarterly results, followed by debates over whether the stock has become “too hot” after the run.
    • Today’s pattern looks like a classic post-earnings shakeout: a big intraday flush, a healthy bounce, but still red on the day as traders digest the new information.
  • TSEM — Tower Semiconductor (Rank 4)
    • Coverage notes the stock pushing toward new highs, with institutional investors increasing exposure through concentrated bets.
    • Some fund commentary mentions Tower as a key small/mid-cap semiconductor holding, even in periods when fund performance has been mixed overall.
    • Against that backdrop, a 5.7% intraday dip followed by an almost equally strong bounce suggests aggressive buy-the-dip interest in a structurally strong name.
  • MOD — Modine Manufacturing (Rank 1)
    • Featured in small-cap fund commentary as a long-term compounder in specialty industrial cooling and thermal solutions.
    • The large intraday drop and strong rebound on otherwise constructive long-term commentary make MOD a textbook case for this experimental scanner: big flush, strong recovery, trend still intact.

These news snippets help explain why some dips happened (post-earnings volatility, fund flow adjustments, sector themes) and which ones may have more durable backdrops behind the intraday noise.


Field Notes: Reading Today’s Dip & Bounce Board

A few structural observations from the December 03 scan:

  • Sector clusteringThe concentration in Tech and Industrials suggests the flush was not purely idiosyncratic; it aligns with a broader rotation where cyclical and growth-sensitive areas got hit intraday before buyers stepped back in.
    • Technology (6 names) – VIAV, LITE, RUN, TSEM, AAOI, TTMI
    • Industrials (5 names) – STRL, VRT, GEV, AGX, DY
    • Energy (2 names) – DK, DINO
    • Consumer Cyclical (2 names) – MOD, M
    • Utilities (2 names) – FLNC, GEV
    • Basic Materials (1) – ALB
    • Healthcare (1) – PACS
  • Oversold vs extended
    • More oversold profiles: STRL (RSI ~33.8), DINO (~39.6), RUN (~39.7), DK (~40.3) – sizable dips and comparatively low RSI make them classical mean-reversion candidates, assuming the broader tape stays constructive.
    • More extended profiles: PACS (RSI ~84.8) comes in with a huge dip and bounce, but from a very strong prior trend. This is more of a “hot name wobble” than a deep value flush.
  • Insider flows
    • Heavy net selling in some names, especially DK, AGX, LITE, RUN, VIAV, and TTMI, which may temper conviction for longer-term positioning. In a pure intraday/1–3 day mean-reversion context it’s less critical, but it’s still worth noting that insiders have been taking chips off the table into strength.
    • Several names (MOD, PACS, STRL, GEV, FLNC, AAOI, DINO, DY, TSEM, VRT) show flat or negligible insider activity, which is more neutral than anything else.
  • Earnings proximity
    • Very near-term: AGX with 1 day to earnings, M having just reported. These can be extremely volatile and are better suited for traders who are comfortable with earnings-related gaps.
    • Mid-range (50–70 days): TSEM, GEV, FLNC, ALB, VRT, VIAV, LITE, TTMI, MOD – enough distance that earnings are not the immediate driver but still within one quarter.
    • Farther out (80+ days): STRL, DK, RUN, AAOI, DY, DINO – plenty of room before the next binary event.

Overall, today’s board looks like broad but orderly selling into cyclical and tech names, with buyers selectively stepping in rather than full-on panic.


Vlad’s Take (EverHint)

On the macro side, the backdrop for this scan is constructive:

  • The S&P 500 closed up about 0.52%, the Nasdaq gained roughly 0.59%, and the Dow climbed around 1.09%, while the Russell 2000 small-cap index outperformed with a 1.72% advance.
  • The VIX closed near 16.08, down about 2.13%, which points to a low-to-normal volatility regime, not a fear spike.
  • In crypto, Bitcoin added roughly 2.4% and Ethereum gained just over 5%, reinforcing a generally risk-on tone.

So we have a market where indices are grinding higher, volatility is easing, and yet individual names are still seeing sharp intraday flushes. That’s exactly the kind of environment where an experimental mean-reversion scanner like Dip & Bounce can be useful: it highlights single-stock noise against a relatively supportive index backdrop.

A few practical trading notes for this pattern:

  • Entry timing
    • Consider stalking entries near prior support (around today’s low or yesterday’s close), rather than chasing the close after a big intraday bounce.
    • If tomorrow opens flat to slightly weak, that can be an opportunity to scale into partial size.
  • Position sizing
    • For aggressive traders, a common approach is 1–2% of portfolio per idea, especially when stacking multiple dip-bounce names at once.
    • Given that several of these names had 5–8% intraday ranges, sizing small and spreading risk can matter more than being perfect on any single entry.
  • Risk management
    • A logical stop-loss for this pattern is just below today’s low, since the entire setup is based on buyers defending that area. If price slices through that low with volume, the thesis is invalidated.
    • Take-profit ideas:
      • Short-term bounce: aim for 3–5% and trail up if the move continues.
      • Structural swing: target a retest of the previous day’s high or a nearby resistance level.
    • Time stop: if there is no meaningful bounce within 1–3 trading days, consider closing and recycling capital into fresher setups.
  • Trend and context
    • Mean reversion works best when the broader trend is up or sideways. In strong downtrends, dips can keep dipping. With indices currently green and volatility soft, today’s signals lean more toward “buying noise” than “catching falling knives,” but it still pays to stay flexible.

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