Inverse Head & Shoulders Stocks Today
These stocks broke the neckline of an inverse head-and-shoulders — a three-trough bottoming pattern that often marks the handoff from a downtrend to an uptrend. Today's neckline breakouts from our daily scan are below.
| # | Symbol | Price | Change | Pattern | RVol | Sector | Conv. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | ASND | $261.60 | +0.01% | Other | 1.47× | Healthcare | 87 |
| 2 | TOL | $164.14 | +1.27% | Other | 1.67× | Consumer Discretionary | 83 |
| 3 | BKD | $15.68 | +1.75% | Other | 2.13× | Healthcare | 78 |
| 4 | DHI | $166.27 | -0.41% | Other | 1.78× | Consumer Discretionary | 76 |
| 5 | OC | $135.42 | -0.62% | Other | 0.99× | Industrials | 69 |
| 6 | ORCS | $30.32 | +2.53% | Other | 4.39× | — | 52 |
| 7 | HIFS | $308.20 | +2.17% | Other | 0.48× | Financials | 51 |
| 8 | TMF | $36.67 | -0.08% | Other | 0.52× | — | 35 |
See the full chart, levels, and trade plan for each — plus the earlier setup & breaking-out lanes
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Start free — 14-day full access →Conv. = conviction, our 0–100 setup score (pattern quality, trend, and volume). RVol = relative volume vs. the stock's recent average. Educational data, not financial advice.
About inverse head and shoulders stocks today
An inverse head and shoulders (a "head-and-shoulders bottom") is a classic bullish reversal. It's three troughs — a low (left shoulder), a deeper low (the head), and a higher low (right shoulder) — under a resistance line connecting the intervening peaks, called the neckline. The rising right shoulder shows sellers losing control, and the pattern completes when price closes above the neckline.
The neckline break is the signal traders act on, ideally on expanding volume that confirms demand has taken over. The measured-move target projects the distance from the head up to the neckline above the breakout point. As a reversal pattern it carries more weight after a real downtrend than mid-range; a break that fails back below the neckline voids it.
Our scanner detects this structure across the whole universe each night. This page lists the names tagged as inverse head-and-shoulders in the broke-out and retest lanes of the latest daily scan.
Frequently asked questions
What is an inverse head and shoulders pattern?
It's a bullish reversal made of three troughs — a left shoulder, a lower head, and a higher right shoulder — beneath a neckline. A close above the neckline completes the pattern and signals a potential trend change to the upside.
Is an inverse head and shoulders bullish?
Yes — it's one of the most-watched bullish reversal patterns, typically forming at the end of a downtrend. The breakout above the neckline, confirmed by volume, is the trigger. These are technical screens, not buy recommendations — chart patterns fail often, so always confirm with your own plan and risk management.
How often does this refresh?
The list refreshes every evening after the US close, once that day's market-wide scan finishes.