Trading Activity

Trading Activity

Trading activity measures the level of buying and selling in a stock, typically expressed through volume metrics that indicate liquidity and investor interest.

Where it fits

VolumeVolume is the number of shares traded in the period. High volume usually means stronger interest and more reliable moves.Trading Activity
On-Balance Volume (OBV)On-Balance Volume (OBV) cumulatively adds volume on up periods and subtracts it on down periods to track buying or selling pressure.Trading Activity
Avg 10-Day VolumeAverage 10-day volume is the average number of shares traded per day over the last 10 trading days. Higher volume often means more interest and easier trading.Trading Activity
Avg 30-Day VolumeAverage 30-day volume is the average number of shares traded per day over the last 30 trading days. It gives a more stable view of typical trading activity.Trading Activity

Trading activity measures the level of buying and selling in a stock, typically expressed through volume metrics that indicate liquidity and investor interest. Understanding trading activity helps investors assess how easily they can enter or exit positions and interpret the significance of price movements.

Key trading activity metrics:

Daily Volume: The number of shares traded in a single trading session. This is the most basic measure of trading activity.

Average Volume: Typical daily volume calculated over a period, commonly 10-day, 30-day, or 90-day averages. Provides context for whether current activity is normal or unusual.

Dollar Volume: Share volume multiplied by price, showing the total value of shares traded. More meaningful for comparing activity across stocks with different prices.

Dollar Volume = Share Volume × Stock Price

Volume Ratio: Current volume compared to average volume, expressed as a multiple.

Volume Ratio = Today's Volume / Average Volume

Why trading activity matters:

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  • Liquidity indicator: Higher volume generally means tighter bid-ask spreads and easier execution
  • Price discovery: Active trading helps establish fair market prices
  • Sentiment gauge: Unusual volume often signals news or changing investor views
  • Move confirmation: Price changes on high volume are more significant than low-volume moves
  • Interpreting volume patterns:

    • High volume breakouts: Price moves above resistance on elevated volume suggest genuine buying interest
    • Low volume rallies: Price increases without volume support may lack conviction
    • Volume climax: Extremely high volume after extended moves can signal exhaustion and reversal
    • Declining volume in trends: Falling volume during a price trend may indicate weakening momentum

    Liquidity considerations:

    • Position sizing: Limit positions to a small percentage of average daily volume
    • Market impact: Large orders in illiquid stocks can move prices significantly
    • Execution costs: Low volume stocks have wider spreads, increasing trading costs
    • Exit risk: Difficult to sell illiquid positions quickly without price concessions

    Volume analysis techniques:

    • On-balance volume (OBV): Running total that adds volume on up days and subtracts on down days
    • Volume-weighted average price (VWAP): Average price weighted by volume, used as a trading benchmark
    • Relative volume: Comparing current volume to historical patterns for the same time period

    Investors use volume analysis alongside price action to assess the strength and sustainability of market moves. High volume confirms price movements as meaningful, while divergences between price and volume often precede trend changes.