Oversold US Stocks by 14-Day RSI

US stocks with 14-day RSI below 30 — potential mean-reversion candidates.

The 14-day Relative Strength Index (RSI) is a momentum oscillator that crosses below 30 when a stock has fallen sharply over a short period. Mean-reversion traders watch this level for potential bounces, while trend traders use it as a confirmation that selling pressure may be exhausting. Cross-reference with the Quality view to find oversold names with strong fundamentals — those tend to bounce harder and faster than weak-balance-sheet stocks.

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TickerCompanyPriceRSI 14SMA 50SMA 200vs 52w Hivs 52w LoRS Rank

Frequently asked questions

How often is this list updated?
The underlying price, volume, and indicator data refresh once per US trading day after the close. The list itself is cached for 30 minutes; the cache invalidates automatically when the nightly data pipeline writes the next session.
Does oversold always mean "buy"?
No. In strong downtrends RSI can stay below 30 for weeks. The signal is most reliable when paired with positive fundamentals, support levels, and improving relative strength.
How is RSI calculated?
RSI(14) uses the ratio of average gains to average losses over the last 14 trading days, normalized to a 0–100 scale. Values below 30 are traditionally oversold; below 20 is extreme.
Can I customize the filters?
Yes — click "Customize this screen" at the top of the page. That opens the interactive screener with all the filters from this preset pre-loaded, so you can adjust ranges, swap views, or add new criteria.