Weekly stock screens

Market Radar

Separate stock screens from chart indicators and review market breadth, weekly breakouts, one-year winners, and market-cap concentration.

daily

US 52-week highs + turnover

US large-cap names trading at or near 52-week highs, sorted by trading value.

2026-05-16

NASDAQ

3 names

RankNameMarketMetric1YMkt Cap
1

J.B. Hunt Transport Services, Inc.

JBHT

NASDAQ502,450,997 USD78.22%24.7B USD
2

KalVista Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

KALV

NASDAQ237,091,411 USD134.27%1.4B USD
5

The Vita Coco Company, Inc.

COCO

NASDAQ109,449,528 USD129.42%4.5B USD

NYSE

7 names

RankNameMarketMetric1YMkt Cap
3

Cenovus Energy Inc

CVE

NYSE201,718,780 USD128.8%58B USD
4

Valaris Limited

VAL

NYSE155,437,030 USD173.28%7.3B USD
7

Seadrill Limited

SDRL

NYSE50,063,630 USD114.66%3.3B USD
8

Select Water Solutions, Inc.

WTTR

NYSE47,857,922 USD123.58%2.7B USD
9

Kennedy-Wilson Holdings Inc.

KW

NYSE14,582,962 USD76.48%1.5B USD
10

NGL ENERGY PARTNERS LP

NGL

NYSE9,458,768 USD427.81%2.2B USD
11

BW LPG Limited

BWLP

NYSE6,548,565 USD81.87%3.2B USD

AMEX

1 names

RankNameMarketMetric1YMkt Cap
6

Imperial Oil Limited

IMO

AMEX52,845,687 USD87.59%65.2B USD

Interpretation guide

How to read U.S. 52-week highs with turnover

The U.S. 52-Week Highs radar shows large U.S.-listed stocks trading at or near long-term highs, sorted by trading value. It helps identify which stocks are actually leading the U.S. market and whether those moves are supported by enough capital.

Selection rules

The screen starts with U.S. large-cap stocks at 52-week highs. When the exact high list is small, it includes names very close to their highs so leadership candidates are not missed.

  • A 52-week high means the stock is breaking through or approaching long-term supply.
  • Sorting by trading value prioritizes names where real capital is concentrated.
  • One-year return shows how much momentum is already embedded.

How to interpret it

A high-turnover breakout is more likely to reflect institutional attention. But if the high list is small or concentrated in defensive sectors, it may represent selective safety rather than broad risk appetite.

  • Many technology and consumer discretionary highs point to stronger growth risk appetite.
  • Many utility and staples highs point to a more defensive market tone.
  • Very high one-year returns require extra attention to short-term crowding risk.

How to respond

The U.S. high list is useful for finding global leadership. Korean investors can connect it to Nasdaq, semiconductors, AI, and dollar trends to judge spillover risk appetite in related Korean sectors.

  • When new highs broaden, check correlation with global growth and semiconductor names.
  • If only a few names are making highs, focus on individual leadership rather than the whole market.
  • If price fails after the high and turnover fades, treat it as a failed breakout.

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