As a trader, you want to maximize your profit potential on every trade. One way to do this is to only trade stocks that are capable of making substantial moves. Even if you are successful in predicting the direction of a move, unless you get meaningful movement, you won't be getting the most out of your trade. As a trader, your profits are limited to the amount a stock can move, so finding the most volatile stocks is imperative.
Daytraders: You want to find the stocks with the greatest intraday range -- you don't necessarily care about the direction.
Swing Traders: You want stocks capable of making a large, trending move over a period of a few days.
Options Traders: You're looking for a fast, explosive move before time value gets the best of your position.
Intermediate Term Traders: These stocks offer you great potential if any of them meet your unique fundamental and technical criteria.
Q: How can you make sure you're in stocks that have the likelihood of making substantial moves?
Each day, we generate this powerful list which shows the most volatile stocks over the past 50 trading days. Volatility can be one of your most important trading tools. Using volatility to determine how much price will move allows you to determine if a stock should be traded or not. A little unclear on volatility? No problem.
Quick Volatility Refresher
You don't have to know how volatility is calculated in order to benefit from this list, but it helps to understand how it works.
Simply put, volatility measures the change in price of a market over a given time period. In non-technical terms, think of it this way: If the Nasdaq rises 5 points one day and falls 5 points the next, volatility is low. If, however, it rallies 100 points one day and plunges 100 points the next, then volatility is high. More specifically, historical volatility (HV) is the standard deviation of the day-to-day price changes, expressed as a percentage. A $100 stock with a 10% historical volatility has a 66% chance of trading between $90 ($100 - $10) and $110 ($100 + $10) over the next year.
Here's a quick calculation from Dave Landry's volatility lesson:
More Potential, But More Risk Too
Day, option, and swing traders
especially will want to seek out more volatile stocks. Because of the large
intraday ranges these stocks trade in, they can provide good profit potential --
and more risk. By definition, stocks with higher HV are riskier than those with
a low HV. Intermediate-term traders, be advised that because of the larger
ranges, there is increased potential to be stopped out. Adjust your stops
accordingly. One idea is to base your stops around the historical volatility.
Again, from Dave's lesson, here's a calculation of the stop points:
The Proof Is In The Charts
Below are three stocks that came up on "Trading Where The Action Is" -- notice the kinds of moves these volatile stocks can make.

Marvell Technology (MRVL | Quote | Chart | News | PowerRating) explodes in a seven-day run after making the "Trading Where the Action Is" list on 10/31/01.

Brocade (BRCD | Quote | Chart | News | PowerRating) follows suit, with an equivalent gain.

Not to be outdone, RF Micro Devices (RFMD | Quote | Chart | News | PowerRating) takes off for a 36% gain in a few days.

While these stocks were taking off, so was the Nasdaq -- but as expected, the NDX didn't perform as well as the more volatile stocks -- up only 13%. The S&P (not pictured) performance for the same period was even less. No doubt one could have made money in the run-up shown above, but wouldn't it have been better to have been in the exploding stocks?
To find "Trading Where The Action Is" from the TM Home Page, click on Stocks, then Indicators, scroll to the bottom, and under "Actionable Signals And Other Indicators," click on "Trading Where The Action Is."
When you get there, you'll see the list of stocks in order of volatility, with a chart option, sector, volume, earnings, and relative strength data to to help you further refine your research.
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How To Use The List
Pull up a chart for each stock and identify the current trend. Evaluate the stock's strength through the use of its 3-, 6-, and 12-month Relative Strength rankings. Short-term traders will probably care more about near-term RS. If you are directional trader, use the Stock Scanner to determine the strength of the trend. Look for key pattern setups such as pullbacks and trading-range breakouts as well as large surges in volume. When you see the stock set up, you'll have the confidence that it has the "juice" to make a good move. Use entry points as defined by the setup rules.
Volatility is one of a trader's best friends -- use it to your advantage. Filter out low-volatility stocks by clicking Trading Where the Action Is every day, and focus only on the big movers that will give you the big trades.
For a more detailed study of volatility, see Larry Connor's lessons on the subject, his books Street Smarts and Connors on Advanced Trading Strategies, and Dave Landry's three lessons: 1 2 3.
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