Following Big Money Trades in S&P 500 Stocks


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S&P 500 is indicating institutional buying: Buy Imbalance reaches +$1.8 billion

Following the Big Money in S&P 500 Stocks

So far in trading today, the S&P 500 ETF is up 1.9%. SPY stock last traded at $572.29. Large volume bursts in S&P 500 stocks reached 51.8 million shares worth a total of $6.8 billion in transactions. There was notable buy pressure in the Technology and Consumer Discretionary sectors. Overall, buy volume pressure outpaced sell volume pressure by a 1.7 to 1 ratio. There were 151 stocks that had more buy pressure on balance, and 126 stocks that had more sell pressure from large institutions. As a whole, there was a net positive +$1.8 billion in dollar volume trades. A greater amount of the trading volume occurred on lit exchanges, at 58.3%, compared with 41.7% being transacted in the dark pool. To learn more about large volume trades, check out our help section.

Daily Chart: Large Volume Bursts Over Time

As you can see from the chart below, the most recent cumulative buy imbalance of +$1.8 billion occurred at 1:45 PM. This also represented the peak buy imbalance for the day. The largest spike in imbalance came between 9:30 AM and 9:45 AM when the buy pressure outweighed the sell pressure by a 3.2 to 1 ratio.

Flow by Sector

Technology had the most dollar volume bursts of all the SPDR sectors, with buy dollar volume exceeding sell dollar volume by $1.2 billion. 34 of the Technology stocks had positive dollar balance, versus 13 that were net negative.

Individual Stocks

NVDA stock had the single biggest volume burst activity of all the S&P 500 stocks. Buy volume bursts exceeded sell volume by 4.6 million shares. As of this afternoon, the average purchase price on buy volume was $118.95. The stock price increased $5.98, indicating strength following the trade.