What is the difference between a screener and a ranked screener?

A screener is a set of rules for narrowing the investable universe of stocks down to a much smaller set of stocks that you are interested in researching further based on their financial metrics and/or price performance. A screener is typically made up of a set of filters, and a stock must pass all filters to be included in screener results.

A ranked screener is an advanced type of screener that adds in a weighting option, so that in addition to creating filters, you can also weight certain criteria (weights must add up to 100%). The weights allow Stock Rover to score and rank stocks so that you can see which stock most closely matches the criteria you designate as being important. A key advantage of ranked screening criteria is that they allow you to narrow the universe of stocks to a more digestible population (like regular screeners), but they do so without requiring strict absolute filters.

Weights can also be applied to a portfolio or watchlist so that the stocks in that population can be ranked according to the weighted criteria. Learn more about how they work on our help site.


Top
How do I modify an existing... How many screeners can I...