LIVE NEWS DATA

Most Mentioned Stocks
in the News (Last 24h)

Track the stocks getting the most coverage across financial news right now, from hundreds of sources in the last 24 hours. This live ranking combines news mentions, buzz and bullish sentiment to surface the tickers making headlines today. Updated hourly.

View Rankings How to Interpret

How to Read This Data

Here's what each column in the table means.

Buzz Score

0-100

Mentions

Count (sources)

Bullish %

0-100%

Trend

↑ ↓ →

Buzz Score

How much a stock is being covered in the news. Combines mention volume, sentiment, source diversity and trend.

70+Hot - heavy coverage
40-70Moderate coverage
<40Quieter, light coverage

Mentions

Total times the stock was mentioned in news articles. The number in brackets shows how many distinct sources.

Many sourcesBroad coverage across outlets
Few sourcesConcentrated in one place

Bullish %

What percentage of news coverage is positive about the stock.

55%+People are optimistic
45-55%Mixed opinions
<45%More skepticism

Trend

Shows if coverage is increasing or decreasing compared to before.

Growing interest
Fading interest
Stable activity

Important to Know

This data shows where financial news coverage is concentrated - it's not investment advice or a recommendation to buy or sell any stock. Heavy coverage can flag a catalyst worth researching, but it often follows a move rather than leading it. Use this ranking to spot which tickers are making headlines, surface emerging stories early and see how the press is framing a stock. Always do your own due diligence before making any investment decisions.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Everything you need to know about the News Top 50 Stocks ranking.

What stocks are in the news right now?

The live table at the top of this page ranks the stocks getting the most news coverage right now, updated hourly across hundreds of financial news sources. Set the time period to Today for the freshest 24-hour view, or widen it to 7 or 30 days to see which tickers have held media attention over time.

What is the News Top 50 Stocks ranking?

It's a live ranking of the stocks mentioned most across financial news outlets. Stocks are ranked by their buzz score, which combines news mention volume, sentiment, source diversity and trend momentum.

Which news sources are tracked?

We process hundreds of financial news publishers and wires, from major outlets to specialist trade press. A stock's mention count shows the total articles, and the number in brackets shows how many distinct sources covered it.

How is the news buzz score calculated?

Buzz score (0-100) combines mention volume, average sentiment, source diversity and trend momentum. A high score means a stock is covered widely and actively, not just by a single outlet repeating one story.

How often is the data updated?

The ranking refreshes every 60 minutes as new articles are processed. The page caches data for 5 minutes, so you'll see fresh rankings within minutes of a coverage shift.

What does the bullish percentage mean?

It shows what proportion of recent news mentions carry positive sentiment. A stock at 70% bullish means 70% of its coverage reads as optimistic. Sentiment is scored from the article text, so it reflects how the press frames the stock.

Why do some well-known stocks rank low?

Rankings are based on current coverage, not market cap. A large-cap can rank lower simply because there's nothing new to report. A low rank doesn't mean bearish, it often just means a quiet news week.

How accurate is news sentiment for stocks?

News sentiment captures the tone of published coverage well, but tone isn't a price forecast. Heavy coverage often follows a move rather than leading it, so treat the ranking as a map of where media attention sits and confirm any idea against fundamentals and price before acting.

Is there an API for this data?

Yes. The Stock News Sentiment API gives programmatic access to the same data. The free tier includes 250 requests/month. Build trading bots, dashboards or research tools on top of it.

What's the difference between stocks and ETFs tabs?

The filter helps you focus on specific asset types. Stocks are individual companies (AAPL, TSLA), while ETFs are funds (SPY, QQQ). "All" shows both combined, ranked by buzz score regardless of type.

For Developers
Build with News Sentiment Data

Access the same data powering this page through our API. Build trading algorithms, dashboards, alerts, or research tools with real-time stock news sentiment.

Get Free API Key