EverHint Signal — EMA10 × SMA50 Crossover — November 20, 2025
November 20, 2025
What This Signal Is (Quick)
This setup tracks fresh crossovers between the fast 10-day Exponential Moving Average (EMA10) and the slower 50-day Simple Moving Average (SMA50). When the fast line overtakes or rolls under the slow one, it often marks the start of a new swing leg rather than just random noise.
- Buy signal (EMA10_x_SMA50_Buy) – EMA10 crosses above SMA50 on the latest close
- Short-term momentum turns up through a medium-term trend line
- Often used for 4–12 week swing or position trades
- Sell signal (EMA10_x_SMA50_Sell) – EMA10 crosses below SMA50
- Momentum rolls over through the 50-day trend
- Can flag profit-taking, risk-off rotation, or early trend reversals
This EMA10 × SMA50 crossover is designed to be more stable than very short-term pairs like EMA10 × EMA30, with fewer but cleaner signals and lower whipsaw risk – better suited for medium-horizon swing setups. Today’s scan produced 39 symbols across buy and sell sides.
This remains an experimental scanner meant for research, education, and back-testing – not a turnkey “buy/sell” system.
How We Ranked Today (Reader Version)
For today’s list, signals are:
- Ranked primarily by RSI(14) – higher RSI at the moment of crossover rises to the top
- Overlays considered in commentary:
- Insider Net (USD) – 90-day net insider buying/selling (open-market P vs S only)
- Earnings timing – days until the next scheduled earnings report
- Analyst coverage & estimates – where available, used qualitatively in notes
The tables below are for readers and back-testers:
- Not a model portfolio
- Not sized or risk-managed
- Meant to help you spot interesting technical inflection points and then do your own deep dive.
📈 Buy-Side Signals
Only four names triggered fresh EMA10 × SMA50 buy crossovers today – one each in Financials, Real Estate, Energy, and Consumer Cyclicals. All four are coming in with RSI already well above 60, so these lean more toward “momentum continuation” than “early reversal”.
Buy-Side – Ranked by RSI(14)
| Rank | Ticker | Company | Sector | Last ($) | RSI(14) | Insider Net (USD) | Days → Earnings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | RLI | RLI Corp. | Financial Services | 64.06 | 84.2 | 69 | |
| 2 | IRT | Independence Realty Trust, Inc. | Real Estate | 16.74 | 67.5 | 83 | |
| 3 | PAA | Plains All American Pipeline, L.P. | Energy | 16.99 | 67.1 | 78 | |
| 4 | CART | Instacart (Maplebear Inc.) | Consumer Cyclical | 40.14 | 63.8 |
Field notes (buy side):
- Momentum profile:
- RLI sits in classic “RSI hot zone” territory (>80) – strong upside momentum but also more vulnerable to sharp pullbacks.
- IRT and PAA cluster in the high-60s, suggesting sustained but less extreme trend strength.
- CART is the lowest-RSI buy, but still above 60 – these are not early “off the lows” reversals.
- Event risk:
- RLI, IRT, PAA all have earnings roughly 2–3 months out, leaving meaningful room for swings before the next major event shock.
- CART currently has no scheduled earnings date in the feed, so treat timing as uncertain.
- Insider flows:
- No meaningful 90-day net insider buying or selling shows up on these four – neither a strong tailwind nor a red flag from corporate insiders at this moment.
Recent headlines (buy side)
- RLI – Coverage highlights that shares have continued to grind higher since the last earnings beat, with analysts focused on underwriting discipline and steady premium growth.
- CART – A recent piece on grocery automation and partner ecosystems puts Instacart into the broader discussion around digital grocery and robotics, even if it’s not always the central character in those stories.
Together, these buys represent momentum continuation plays in an otherwise hostile tape (see Vlad’s Take below). Position sizing and patience matter here; chasing late in the swing can be dangerous on a day when the broader market is under pressure.
📉 Sell-Side Signals
On the other side, 35 names triggered fresh EMA10 × SMA50 sell crossovers – a broad wave of momentum rolling over across multiple sectors, with a heavy tilt toward Industrials and Technology. Below are the top 10 by RSI(14) (i.e., names that still have relatively elevated RSI but are starting to crack):
Sell-Side – Top 10 by RSI(14)
| Rank | Ticker | Company | Sector | Last ($) | RSI(14) | Insider Net (USD) | Days → Earnings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | EGO | Eldorado Gold Corporation | Basic Materials | 26.81 | 56.3 | ||
| 2 | MASI | Masimo Corporation | Healthcare | 143.00 | 52.9 | ||
| 3 | PEG | Public Service Enterprise Group Incorporated | Utilities | 80.76 | 50.9 | -405.1K | |
| 4 | BVN | Compañía de Minas Buenaventura S.A.A. | Basic Materials | 22.78 | 50.1 | ||
| 5 | HR | Healthcare Realty Trust Incorporated | Real Estate | 17.51 | 45.4 | -270.0K | 90 |
| 6 | PHG | Koninklijke Philips N.V. | Healthcare | 26.71 | 44.0 | 90 | |
| 7 | ORC | Orchid Island Capital, Inc. | Real Estate | 7.08 | 40.7 | 70 | |
| 8 | CVS | CVS Health Corporation | Healthcare | 76.04 | 40.5 | 83 | |
| 9 | NRG | NRG Energy, Inc. | Utilities | 160.46 | 39.6 | ||
| 10 | NU | Nu Holdings Ltd. | Financial Services | 15.32 | 39.5 |
Behind this top slice you’ll also find large-cap and higher-profile names in the broader sell list, including:
- ALKS, BELFB, QCOM, RUN, SONO, LNC, KNX, VMI, among others – several of which show material insider selling over the last 90 days (see below).
Field notes (sell side):
- RSI dynamics:
- Top-ranked sells like EGO, MASI, PEG, BVN still sit around the 50–56 RSI zone – “mid-range rolling over” rather than deeply oversold.
- Lower down the list, several names push toward the 30s, suggesting more advanced down-legs or already damaged trends.
- Insider Net examples (last ~90 days, P vs S only):
- RUN – heavy net selling (~-4.9M USD), which lines up with a momentum rollover in a high-beta, rate-sensitive name.
- QCOM – sizeable net insider selling (~-2.6M USD).
- BELFB – net selling approaching the high-hundreds-of-thousands USD.
- PEG – net selling around -0.4M USD.
- ALKS and HR – also show notable net selling, while SONO and LNC stand out as net buyers in the group.
- Earnings timing:
- Many financials and REITs in the list have earnings 2–3 months ahead, so today’s crosses are not immediately earnings-driven.
- A few names have closer dates (or just reported), which may help explain choppy, post-event price action.
Recent headlines (sell side)
A few examples of how the news flow lines up with these crossovers:
- ALKS – Recent coverage highlights Alkermes raising its offer in a strategic transaction, keeping deal-risk and integration questions in the spotlight.
- PEG – Commentary points to grid and infrastructure investments supporting the long-term story, even as the stock cools after a strong run.
- QCOM – Institutional filings show at least one fund reducing its position, adding a fundamental angle to an already softening technical trend.
- RUN – Comparative analysis pieces pit Sunrun against other solar names, often emphasizing balance-sheet and rate-sensitivity challenges amid a tough macro backdrop.
- CART, RLI, ATKR, PHG – Appear in various sector write-ups and stock notes, reinforcing that today’s signals are landing in names with active institutional and media attention.
Again, these news snippets are context, not trading instructions; price and risk management come first.
Field Notes – How to Read These Metrics
A quick reference for interpreting the columns:
- Last ($) – Last closing price at the time of the crossover.
- RSI(14) –
- Below 30: traditionally oversold (can stay oversold in strong downtrends)
- 30–50: weak to neutral trend
- 50–70: healthy uptrend zone
- Above 70: overbought/momentum hot zone – powerful but fragile
- Insider Net (USD) –
- Positive (e.g., +1.0M) – insiders have been net buyers
- Negative (e.g., -4.9M) – insiders have been net sellers
- Blank – no meaningful open-market P/S activity captured
- Days → Earnings –
- 0: reporting today
- 1–7: very near-term event risk
- 7–30: medium-term window
- 30+ or blank: lower immediate earnings shock risk (but still subject to guidance, macro, etc.)
Sector rotation snapshot:
- Buys – spread one-per-sector across Financials, Real Estate, Energy, and Consumer Cyclicals.
- Sells – concentrated in Industrials and Technology, with additional pressure in Healthcare, Financials, and Utilities. That pattern fits a broad de-risking move out of cyclicals and growth-sensitive names on a rough macro day.
Vlad’s Take (EverHint)
Today’s backdrop is decidedly risk-off:
- S&P 500 fell about -2.96%, the Nasdaq Composite dropped roughly -4.25%, and the Dow slid around -1.6% – a tech-led flush with broad damage.
- Russell 2000 small caps lost about -2.4%, confirming that weakness is not confined to mega-caps.
- The VIX spiked to roughly 26.4, up about 27% on the day – elevated volatility, closer to “stress” than “calm”.
- Bitcoin and Ethereum both shed around -4–5%, showing that higher-beta risk assets were sold across the board.
- The 10-year Treasury yield eased slightly to about 4.10%, which helps on the margin but didn’t stop the equity selloff.
In that context:
- The sell-side EMA10 × SMA50 signals look more actionable for risk management – they’re catching names where momentum is rolling over into a weak tape, sometimes with insider selling as an extra headwind.
- The buy-side signals are interesting but high-RSI continuation trades in a market that just hit an air pocket. If you explore them at all, they likely merit smaller size, staggered entries, and hard exit rules rather than aggressive conviction bets.
Big picture: this experimental scanner is best treated as a shortlist generator on a day like this – a way to focus your manual research on where technical momentum and macro stress are colliding.
This is not financial advice. Do your own due diligence.
See https://www.everhint.com/disclaimer/ and https://www.everhint.com/faqs/.
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