These Scanner Settings Consistently Reveal Strong Stocks Early

I recently came across a very practical stock screening method that uses a scanner to filter potential setups. The overall logic is not about predicting breakouts, but about identifying pullback opportunities in already strong stocks.

First, I set up the basic filters in the scanner:

Options available

Price above $20 (personal preference)

Average volume above 400K

Then I add two additional conditions:

Quarter +10%

Week Down

"Quarter +10%" means screening for stocks that have gained at least 10% over the past three months, indicating a strong overall trend with sustained buying pressure.

"Week Down" means the stock has pulled back over the past week, placing it in a short-term retracement phase.

The core idea is trading supply and demand zones.

The key is to identify situations where price has moved sharply up or down and then enters a consolidation range, and mark those areas.

These zones are often where institutional participation is higher, and the idea is to wait for price to return to these areas before entering a trade.

In practice, I usually do the following:

Use the scanner to quickly find stocks

Check whether they are near supply and demand zones

Add 10–15 stocks to a watchlist

Set price alerts

Wait for triggers instead of chasing price

The core principle is to let opportunities come to you, not to chase the market.

I only take structured pullback setups and keep the number of stocks I follow limited to stay focused.

If you’re interested in this type of screening approach, feel free to leave a comment or send me a message. I’d be happy to share more details and discuss the ideas. I’m not selling anything—I’m just sharing some personal thoughts.

Due to the overwhelming number of messages, I’ve turned off Reddit’s notification alerts. When I see messages, I’ll reply to each one of you individually.

u/No_Shallot_9540 — 14 days ago

These Scanner Settings Find Strong Stocks Before the Breakout

I recently came across a very practical stock screening method that uses a scanner to filter potential setups. The overall logic is not about predicting breakouts, but about identifying pullback opportunities in already strong stocks.

One of my most memorable trades was on AMD, where I made over 1,150% profit, also found through a similar screening approach.

First, I set up the basic filters in the scanner:

Options available

Price above $20 (personal preference)

Average volume above 400K

Then I add two additional conditions:

Quarter +10%

Week Down

"Quarter +10%" means screening for stocks that have gained at least 10% over the past three months, indicating a strong overall trend with sustained buying pressure.

"Week Down" means the stock has pulled back over the past week, placing it in a short-term retracement phase.

The core idea is trading supply and demand zones.

The key is to identify situations where price has moved sharply up or down and then enters a consolidation range, and mark those areas.

These zones are often where institutional participation is higher, and the idea is to wait for price to return to these areas before entering a trade.

In practice, I usually do the following:

Use the scanner to quickly find stocks

Check whether they are near supply and demand zones

Add 10–15 stocks to a watchlist

Set price alerts

Wait for triggers instead of chasing price

The core principle is to let opportunities come to you, not to chase the market.

I only take structured pullback setups and keep the number of stocks I follow limited to stay focused.

If you’re interested in this type of screening approach, feel free to leave a comment or send me a message. I’d be happy to share more details and discuss the ideas. I’m not selling anything—I’m just sharing some personal thoughts.

u/No_Shallot_9540 — 19 days ago

These Scanner Settings Find Strong Stocks Before the Breakout

I recently came across a very practical stock screening method that uses a scanner to filter potential setups. The overall logic is not about predicting breakouts, but about identifying pullback opportunities in already strong stocks.

One of my most memorable trades was on AMD, where I made over 1,150% profit, also found through a similar screening approach.

First, I set up the basic filters in the scanner:

Options available
Price above $20 (personal preference)
Average volume above 400K

Then I add two additional conditions:

Quarter +10%
Week Down

“Quarter +10%” means screening for stocks that have gained at least 10% over the past three months, indicating a strong overall trend with sustained buying pressure.

“Week Down” means the stock has pulled back over the past week, placing it in a short-term retracement phase.

The core idea is trading supply and demand zones.

The key is to identify situations where price has moved sharply up or down and then enters a consolidation range, and mark those consolidation areas.

These zones are often where institutional participation is higher, and the idea is to wait for price to return to these areas before entering a trade.

In practice, I usually do the following:

Use the scanner to quickly find stocks
Check whether they are near supply/demand zones
Add 10–15 stocks to a watchlist
Set price alerts
Wait for triggers instead of chasing price

The core principle is to let opportunities come to you, not to chase the market.

I only take structured pullback setups and keep the number of tracked stocks limited to stay focused.

If you have a similar screening method, feel free to share and discuss.

u/No_Shallot_9540 — 20 days ago

This setup helps me identify and trade intraday market trends.

I've already made my first million.

I've been using a very simple intraday trading strategy based on the 21 EMA and 50 EMA on the 15-minute chart.

There's nothing magical about it, and the logic isn't complicated. My goal is simply to follow the trend instead of making trading more complicated than it needs to be.

When the 21 EMA crosses above the 50 EMA, I focus on how price behaves around the EMA zone. If price pulls back into the area and forms bullish candlestick patterns, I'll look for long entries.

When the 21 EMA crosses below the 50 EMA and price gets rejected around the EMA zone, I'll watch for bearish candlestick patterns as a signal for potential short entries.

For me, the crossover itself isn't the most important part. What matters is how price reacts around the EMA area after the crossover.

A few things I've noticed while testing:

  • Clean pullbacks tend to work better than chasing extended moves
  • Clear candlestick confirmation near the EMA often leads to better entries
  • When price becomes choppy around the EMA zone, the setup tends to perform worse
  • Patience is usually more rewarding than frequent trading

This strategy is far from perfect, and I'm still testing it in different market conditions.

Compared to taking random entries, it gives me a more objective framework and helps me stay disciplined while trading with the trend.

I've also put together a simple checklist that helps me stay consistent with risk management.

If you're trading a similar setup or working on improving your risk management, I'd be interested in hearing your thoughts.

u/No_Shallot_9540 — 27 days ago

Money Isn't Leaving the Market, It's Rotating

Everyone keeps talking about timing the top, but this heatmap tells a different story.

Money is still flowing. It's just moving around.

Some semiconductor names are red, but NVDA is green. Big tech is holding up. Financials are green. Healthcare is green. Industrials are green.

The market isn't a single stock. When one area cools off, capital often finds another place to go.

u/No_Shallot_9540 — 1 month ago
▲ 48 r/TheRaceTo1Million+1 crossposts

In just three months, my income increased from 170,000 to 510,000.

Looking back at the past three months, the biggest gain wasn't the change in my account balance, but the deeper understanding I've developed about trading.

The market moves every day, but what ultimately determines the outcome is usually not a single trade. It's a consistent execution system. Position sizing, respecting the trend, and patiently waiting for opportunities all sound simple, but consistently doing them is not.

u/No_Shallot_9540 — 1 month ago
▲ 16 r/Optionmillionaires+1 crossposts

Most Traders Focus on Entries. I Focused on Risk Management Instead.

I've recently achieved some good results in options trading, especially in credit spreads. Through proper risk management and precise entry points, my investments have gradually yielded decent returns.

This success was not accidental, but rather the result of systematic learning and continuous optimization of trading strategies. Options trading requires patience and analysis. It involves not only market volatility, but also factors such as time value and volatility.

My goal is not to capture every major market fluctuation, but to gradually accumulate stable returns through highly liquid instruments, clear profit-taking rules, and strict risk control. Here are my three pre-defined principles:

Entry criteria: Enter when a clear technical signal appears, such as a breakout of a key level or confirmation of a trend.

Risk cap: Pre-set the maximum loss for each trade and strictly control the position size.

Exit Plan: Take profits when the target return is reached, otherwise, set a stop-loss order to exit.

I've been using this strategy for over six months now, and some of my previous trades were based on the same logic. The win rate is quite good, but it's not always successful.

If you're still struggling to improve your risk management, I've compiled a simple checklist that helps me stay consistent in my risk management approach.

I'm not an expert, nor do I advocate anything, I'm just sharing some methods that have helped me improve stability.

u/No_Shallot_9540 — 28 days ago

Everything changed when I stopped overtrading

I used to chase setups all day and take way too many trades every week.

Lately I’ve just been focusing on strong trends, momentum, and holding winners longer instead of trying to be right every day.

That shift honestly changed everything.

Up a little over $111k in the last year so far.

Most people trade too much.

u/No_Shallot_9540 — 2 months ago

Market breadth still surprisingly strong despite concentration risk

Looking at today’s sector heatmap, the market is still heavily driven by mega-cap tech.

NVDA, MSFT, AAPL, GOOGL, TSLA continue to dominate index performance.

However, beneath the surface, there’s still decent rotation into energy, industrials, and select financials.

The real question isn’t whether tech is strong — it clearly is — but whether this level of concentration is sustainable long term.

u/No_Shallot_9540 — 2 months ago

I have been seeing more consistent results recently trading options, especially with credit spreads

A big shift for me was focusing on risk defined setups and consistency instead of chasing large wins

A friend introduced me to a small trading group where people share real executions and ideas. There are no paid courses or signals, which helped me clean up a lot of bad habits

One concept that has been working better than expected is a simple Bollinger Band mean reversion setup

The idea is straightforward

When price extends beyond the upper or lower band, especially during overextended moves, I start looking for a move back toward the midline

That is where I look for entries, usually using credit spreads to keep risk controlled

I am not saying this is a perfect system, but it has helped me find

More consistent setups, Cleaner entries, Better risk and reward structure

I am still refining execution, but this approach has been more stable compared to how I was trading before

Curious if anyone else here trades Bollinger Band mean reversion or combines it with other indicators

u/No_Shallot_9540 — 2 months ago