📚 Investor Education

The Concepts Behind
the Numbers.

Before reading a ranking table, it helps to understand why these metrics exist and what they reveal about the market. These are the investment concepts that power every analytical reading on the platform.

Topic 1 of 5

What is Relative Strength?

Relative Strength answers a single question: is this stock gaining more than the market, or less? The answer separates true leaders from stocks that are merely moving with the tide.

The core idea

When you look at a stock's price chart and see it is up 12% over the past three months, that tells you only half the story. The other half is: what did the broad market do during that same period?

If the index rose 18%, your stock lagged the market by 6% — even though it went up in absolute terms. Capital that was invested in the index would have performed better. A stock that consistently loses ground relative to its benchmark is unlikely to become a sustained market leader.

Relative Strength (RS) formalises this comparison. It measures a stock's price return against its benchmark over a defined time period — and expresses the result as a single, comparable number.

Why it matters for investors

Decades of market research — and the track records of some of the most successful growth investors in history — consistently show the same pattern: the stocks that produce the largest price gains are almost always the strongest relative performers before the big move begins.

Put differently: market leaders tend to show their leadership early. When a stock is consistently outperforming the index — even moderately, even before the full trend is clear — it is already differentiating itself from thousands of alternatives. That early outperformance is the first observable indication of potential leadership.

This is why a stock that is up 8% while the market is up 15% is treated as a weaker setup than a stock that is flat while the market is flat. In both cases, the price barely moved — but the RS readings are very different. The flat stock held its ground; the "up 8%" stock was falling behind.

RS over multiple timeframes

Markets move in waves of different lengths. A stock can look strong over 3 months and weak over 12 months — or vice versa. That is why the platform measures RS across multiple timeframes simultaneously: short-term (weeks), medium-term (months), and longer-term (quarters).

The most significant RS reading occurs when a stock shows sustained outperformance across all timeframes at once. That alignment — short, medium, and long-term RS all positive — reflects deeply embedded institutional participation, not a brief speculative burst.

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RS vs RSI — Important Distinction
These are two completely different metrics despite sounding similar.

Relative Strength (RS) compares a stock to an external benchmark — is it outperforming the market?

RSI (Relative Strength Index) is an internal momentum oscillator — it compares a stock's recent up-days to its down-days. It measures the stock against its own recent history, not against the market.
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RS Percentile (RS_Pct)
RS Percentile ranks a stock from 1 to 99 against all other stocks in the same market.

A score of 90 means the stock has outperformed 90% of its peers. A score of 40 means it has outperformed only 40%.

Stocks above 80 are in the top fifth of the market — a meaningful filter that narrows a universe of thousands down to a manageable watchlist of genuine leaders.
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RS Chain: Stock → Sector → Index
The strongest RS setups involve alignment at every level: the stock beats its sector, and the sector beats the market.

This is labelled S>Sec>Idx on the platform. It means: stock beats sector, sector beats index — the full top-down hierarchy is aligned. These are the highest-conviction setups the framework identifies.
See RS rankings live All stocks ranked by RS Percentile, updated daily
Open India Report →
Topic 2 of 5

How to Read Momentum Scores

A momentum score is not a trading prompt. It is a summary of how broadly a stock's relative strength is confirmed across multiple independent analytical factors — the higher the score, the more factors are aligned.

What momentum means

In physics, momentum describes an object that is already moving and tends to keep moving. In markets, the concept works the same way: a stock that has been persistently outperforming its peers tends to continue outperforming over the next 3 to 12 months — unless something breaks the pattern.

This effect is well-documented across global markets going back decades. It is one of the most studied and replicated findings in the field of quantitative investing. It is not a guarantee — markets do not guarantee anything — but it is a persistent edge that consistently appears in the data.

The platform's momentum scoring system attempts to capture this effect not from a single indicator, but from the agreement of multiple independent indicators. When RS, RSI, trend direction, and moving average alignment all point the same way simultaneously, the momentum reading is far more reliable than any single metric alone.

What the classification tiers mean

The platform assigns each stock to one of six tiers based on its combined analytical profile. Here is how to read each tier:

Prime is the highest classification. It means the stock's analytical profile shows the broadest alignment — outperforming on multiple RS timeframes, with RSI, Supertrend, and trend direction all confirmed simultaneously. It is relatively rare. Not every market will have Prime stocks every day.

Confirmed means strong, broad alignment — but not every factor at its peak. A consistent RS leader with solid momentum. Most established RS leaders are in this classification.

RS Leader means positive relative strength on the primary timeframe. The stock is outperforming the market, but confirmation factors have not fully aligned yet. A developing RS reading.

Watch means conditions are improving but alignment is not yet confirmed. Worth monitoring for further confirmation.

Neutral / RS Breakdown — either mixed readings or clear underperformance. Drops into this tier indicate that a stock's relative leadership has faded.

The most important thing to understand

These classifications are analytical tools only — they do not constitute a recommendation to buy, sell, or hold any security. They describe where a stock sits in the relative strength ranking at this moment in time, based on its recent price behaviour relative to the market. These are informational outputs; all investment decisions remain entirely with the individual investor, who should conduct their own research and consult a qualified financial professional.

🌟 Prime
Highest classification. All major RS and momentum factors aligned simultaneously. Outperforming on multiple timeframes. Relatively rare.
✅ Confirmed
Strong, broad alignment. Consistent RS leader with solid momentum. Not every factor at peak — but most confirmed.
📈 RS Leader
Positive RS on primary period. Outperforming the market. Momentum building but not all confirmation factors aligned yet.
👁 Watch
Setup developing. Some conditions met, not yet confirmed. Conditions are improving. Monitor — do not act on this alone.
⬜ Neutral
Mixed readings. Neither clearly leading nor clearly lagging. No clear directional trend at this time.
🔴 Breakdown
Underperforming. Lagging the market on multiple timeframes. Weakest classification in the RS framework.
FactorWhat it adds
RS (multiple periods)Confirms outperformance is not just a single-week event
RSI (14-day)Confirms recent price momentum is consistent with an uptrend
Supertrend (daily)Confirms short-term price structure is bullish
Supertrend (weekly)Adds medium-term trend confirmation
Moving avg alignmentConfirms all key trend lines are pointing the same direction
See live analytical classifications Prime, Confirmed, RS Leader classifications updated daily
Opportunities Tab →
Topic 3 of 5

Understanding Market Breadth

A market index can rise while most stocks are falling. Breadth measures how many stocks are actually participating in a rally — and that distinction matters enormously.

Why the index can mislead you

Most major stock market indices are weighted by market capitalisation — meaning the largest companies have the most influence on where the index goes. In a large-cap dominated index, a rally driven by 5 or 10 enormous companies can push the headline number up even while the majority of stocks in the index are flat or declining.

This is a well-known phenomenon called "narrow market leadership." It happens regularly, particularly late in bull market cycles when money increasingly concentrates into the perceived safety of a handful of mega-cap stocks, while smaller and mid-cap names quietly weaken beneath the surface.

If you are watching only the index, you may believe the market is healthy when it is actually fragile. Market breadth is the X-ray that looks beneath the surface.

What breadth actually measures

Breadth indicators count participation. The most common measures are:

Advance/Decline ratio — how many stocks advanced versus how many declined on a given day. A ratio of 3:1 means three stocks went up for every one that went down — a healthy, broad rally. A ratio of 1:3 means the opposite — the market looks weaker than the index suggests.

% above key moving averages — what percentage of all stocks are currently trading above their 20-day, 50-day, 100-day, and 200-day moving averages. When 80% of stocks are above their 50-day moving average, the trend is deeply embedded across the full market. When that number drops to 30%, the trend is concentrated and vulnerable.

The platform tracks both of these across multiple index levels within each market — the broad universe, the large-cap index, and in some markets the mid-cap and small-cap universe separately.

How to use breadth in practice

Breadth context helps you calibrate how aggressively to look for new setups. When breadth is strong — most stocks in uptrends, broad advance/decline ratios — the environment is supportive of momentum strategies. When breadth deteriorates — fewer and fewer stocks holding above key moving averages — the environment is sending an early warning, often before the index shows it.

This is not a timing tool by itself. Markets can stay narrowly led for extended periods before reverting. But breadth is one of the most reliable early warning systems available to an investor who wants to understand what is truly happening beneath the index level.

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Narrow vs Broad Rally
Broad rally (healthy): The index rises and 75%+ of stocks are advancing. Participation is wide. Trend is sustainable.

Narrow rally (fragile): The index rises but only 30–40% of stocks advance. A handful of large-caps are carrying the index. The majority are already weakening.
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What Healthy Breadth Looks Like
A broadly healthy market typically shows:

70%+ of stocks above their 50-day moving average
• Advance/Decline ratio consistently above 1.5:1 on up days
• Small and mid-caps participating alongside large-caps
• New highs list expanding, not contracting

Illustrative breadth readings across 500 stocks:

Above 20d SMA
78%
Above 50d SMA
65%
Above 100d SMA
54%
Above 200d SMA
47%

Above is illustrative only. Live readings are in the Market tab of each country report.

Live breadth data % above 20/50/100/200-day SMA across all stocks
Market Tab →
Topic 4 of 5

Sector Rotation Explained

The stock market is not a single thing — it is eleven sectors with very different characteristics. Money moves between them constantly. Knowing which direction it is moving is one of the most powerful edges an investor can have.

Why sectors behave differently

Each sector of the economy is sensitive to a different set of conditions. Technology companies are affected by interest rates and growth expectations. Energy companies are affected by commodity prices and geopolitics. Consumer Staples are relatively immune to economic cycles — people still buy groceries in recessions. Financials are sensitive to the yield curve and credit conditions.

Because of these different sensitivities, sectors rarely move together. When one sector is outperforming, another is typically underperforming. This rotation of capital between sectors is one of the most persistent and observable patterns in financial markets.

The rotation cycle

Sector rotation tends to follow a recognisable pattern across economic cycles — though the timing varies considerably and no cycle is identical. Early economic recovery, for example, tends to favour Consumer Discretionary and Financials. Late cycle often sees Energy and Materials lead. Defensive sectors like Utilities and Consumer Staples tend to hold up better during slowdowns.

You do not need to predict where you are in the economic cycle to benefit from rotation analysis. What you need is a way to observe which sectors are currently receiving capital flows — not which sectors "should" be leading based on theory. Markets often lead the economy by months, pricing in future conditions long before they are visible in economic data.

This is where relative strength applied at the sector level becomes useful. A sector that is consistently outperforming the broad market — regardless of the macro narrative — is a sector where institutional capital appears to be flowing. RS data reflects observable price behaviour across the market, not predictions or forecasts.

Leading vs lagging sectors

A leading sector is one that is outperforming the broad market index on a relative basis and showing improving RS momentum. Capital is flowing in. Stocks within a leading sector tend to have macro tailwinds supporting their individual momentum.

A lagging sector is the opposite — underperforming the index, with deteriorating RS. Capital is flowing out. Even strong individual stocks within a lagging sector are fighting an uphill battle against this sector-level headwind.

The implication for stock selection: everything else equal, a stock in a leading sector is in a more favourable environment for a sustained move than an identical-looking stock in a lagging sector. The sector context does not guarantee anything — but it meaningfully changes the probability distribution.

Early Recovery
Growth Sectors Lead
Consumer Discretionary, Financials, and Technology tend to outperform as growth expectations improve and credit conditions ease.
Mid Expansion
Broad Participation
Industrials and Materials join the leadership. Breadth is typically at its broadest. Most sectors are above their long-term averages.
Late Cycle
Cyclicals & Energy
Energy and commodity-linked sectors often lead late cycle as inflation pressures build. Breadth begins narrowing even as the index holds up.
Slowdown
Defensives Outperform
Utilities, Consumer Staples, and Healthcare hold up as risk appetite contracts. The index may lag but defensive sectors hold their RS.
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The cycle is a guide, not a script
Real markets rarely follow the textbook cycle in perfect order or timing. External events, policy changes, and global shocks regularly disrupt the pattern. Use RS data to observe what is actually leading — not to predict what should lead based on the cycle stage you think you're in.
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RRG — Relative Rotation Graph
The platform's RRG tab shows sector rotation visually. Each sector is plotted by its current RS level and the direction it is moving — Leading, Weakening, Lagging, or Improving. Sectors rotating clockwise from Improving into Leading are the ones currently gaining institutional sponsorship.
Live sector rotation RRG and sector RS rankings updated daily
Sectors Tab →
Topic 5 of 5

Top-Down Investing: The Framework

Top-down investing is a discipline: you start with the broadest picture and only drill down when each level looks healthy. It filters out the noise before you spend a single minute analysing individual stocks.

The pyramid of confirmation

Think of the market as a pyramid. At the top is the broad market — the overall trend and health of the index. Below that are the sectors. Below the sectors are industries. At the base are individual stocks.

The top-down approach works from the apex downward: you only move to the next level when the level above it confirms a healthy environment. If the market is in a sustained downtrend with deteriorating breadth, you do not spend your time hunting for individual stock setups, because even good stocks tend to fail in bad markets. The macro environment is a strong headwind that even the strongest stocks struggle to overcome.

This is what separates top-down investors from pure stock pickers. A stock picker might find a brilliant-looking chart — great RS, strong fundamentals, ideal pattern — and commit capital, only to have the market decline drag the stock down regardless. A top-down investor only takes that setup to the next stage of analysis if the broader market environment supports it.

The three questions

Question 1: Is the market healthy? Are most stocks in uptrends? Is breadth expanding? Is the broad index above its key moving averages? A positive answer here is the first green light.

Question 2: Which sectors are leading? Are there clearly identifiable sectors outperforming the broad market on a relative basis? Is the RS trend in those sectors expanding or contracting? A leading sector provides a macro tailwind for every stock within it.

Question 3: Which stocks are leading their sector? Within a leading sector, which individual stocks have the strongest RS, the cleanest trend, and the most aligned momentum profile? These are the candidates for the next level of analysis — chart structure, fundamentals, setup quality.

The goal of this framework is not to find any stock opportunity. It is to concentrate attention only on the highest-quality setups that have the full alignment of market, sector, and stock working in their favour simultaneously.

How TechnoFunda applies this

Every tab on the platform exists within this framework. The Market tab shows you the first question — breadth, snapshot, macro health. The Sectors tab shows you the second question — which sectors are leading, which are weakening. The Opportunities tab answers the third — stocks where sector RS and individual stock RS are both confirmed and aligned. The All Stocks table lets you filter down by every factor simultaneously.

This is why the platform covers 28 global markets with the same methodology: the top-down framework works at any scale. The same logic that filters sectors within India also filters countries within the global picture. Capital rotates between countries just as it rotates between sectors.

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Level 1 — The Market
Is the broad index above its long-term moving average? Is breadth expanding? Are advance/decline ratios healthy? Is the overall market in a confirmed uptrend?

If yes: conditions are broadly supportive — move to sector analysis.
If no: the environment is not supportive — high-quality setups will still underperform.
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Level 2 — Leading Sectors
Which sectors are showing positive RS vs the index? Which have improving RS momentum? Which are rotating from "Improving" into "Leading" on the RRG?

Focus on: sectors where institutional capital is actively building. This is where the macro tailwind is strongest.
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Level 3 — Leading Stocks
Within a leading sector, which stocks show the highest RS Percentile? Which have Prime or Confirmed classifications? Which have the cleanest trend and moving average alignment?

These are: the candidates for further independent research — price structure, fundamentals, and individual context. All analysis requires individual judgement and professional guidance.
LevelPlatform Tab
Market health & breadthMarket tab
Sector leadership & RSSectors + RRG tabs
Leading stocks in leading sectorsOpportunities tab
Full stock universe rankingAll Stocks tab
Price structure & patternsPatterns tab
Global country rotationWorld Dashboard
Apply the framework now Market → Sectors → Opportunities: the full top-down flow
Choose Your Market →
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Important Disclaimer — Please Read: TechnoFunda is an automated, educational market-analysis platform. All content on this page — including descriptions of RS readings, momentum classifications, analytical tiers, and any labels such as "Prime", "Confirmed", or "RS Leader" — is provided for informational and educational purposes only and must not be construed as investment advice, a research report, or a recommendation or solicitation to buy, sell, or hold any security or financial instrument.

We are not registered with any financial regulator as an Investment Adviser or Research Analyst — including SEBI (Securities and Exchange Board of India), the SEC or FINRA (United States), the FCA (United Kingdom), or any equivalent authority in any other jurisdiction. Nothing on this platform is tailored to your personal financial situation, investment objectives, or risk tolerance.

Investments in securities markets are subject to market risks. Read all related documents carefully before investing. Past performance of any classification, score, or analytical framework shown here is not indicative of future results. Market data shown may be delayed, inaccurate, or incomplete.

You are solely responsible for your own investment decisions. Always conduct your own independent research and consult a licensed, registered investment adviser or a qualified financial professional regulated in your jurisdiction before making any investment decision. TechnoFunda and its creators accept no liability for any loss or damage arising from the use of this information.