Unveiling the Turnover Rate: The Ultimate Secret to Stock Activity

The turnover rate indicator might be the most overlooked yet most valuable tool in the stock trading world. Many investors read thousands of stock analyses but fail to understand the turnover rate, ultimately suffering significant losses. Traders who don’t understand the turnover rate are destined to wander in the market. Those who learn to interpret it can identify major player actions and capture key opportunities in strong stocks in advance.

Essentially, the turnover rate reflects a stock’s activity level—the frequency of buying and selling transactions. The market-wide turnover rate indicates overall market enthusiasm, while individual stock turnover rates show the stock’s attention level and capital flow.

What is the turnover rate? A must-master indicator of trading frequency

Many people have only a vague impression of the turnover rate, but its definition is very clear—also called the turnover ratio—it measures how frequently stocks are bought and sold within a certain period. Specifically, it equals the total trading volume of a stock divided by its circulating shares.

Calculation formula: Turnover Rate = Trading Volume in a Period ÷ Circulating Shares × 100%

For example: If a stock trades 10 million shares in a month, and its circulating shares are 50 million, then the monthly turnover rate is 20%. That means 20% of the floating shares changed hands during that period.

In China’s stock market, only circulating shares are used for this calculation because state-held shares and legal person shares are not tradable on the secondary market. Calculating based on circulating shares provides a more accurate reflection of the stock’s true liquidity.

Why is the turnover rate so important? Because it directly reveals three core pieces of information:

1. Market attention. Higher turnover indicates more buyers and sellers, meaning greater market focus and popularity. Conversely, low turnover suggests the stock is out of favor or ignored.

2. Capital activity. High turnover signifies frequent capital inflows and outflows, often driven by major players or speculative funds. Low turnover indicates the stock is “locked” and market participation is low.

3. Liquidity strength. Stocks with high turnover are easier to buy and sell without issues, avoiding situations where you can’t sell or buy at desired prices. Extremely low turnover stocks may face liquidity risks.

Understanding the true meaning of turnover rate through 12 intervals

In practice, investors should interpret stocks’ operational states based on different turnover rate levels. Each interval corresponds to distinct market psychology and main force intentions.

1%-3%: Dormant period, institutional indifference
Stocks in this range are ignored by institutions and lack interest from speculative funds. Usually, large-cap stocks that don’t move much or traditional, unexciting themes. These stocks tend to be sideways or slowly declining.

3%-5%: Testing phase, funds cautious
Bold capital begins tentative accumulation but with limited strength. The stock isn’t very active yet, and both bulls and bears are observing each other’s moves.

5%-7%: Early game, divergence emerges
Clear disagreements between bulls and bears appear. The turnover rate fluctuates slightly over several days, and the stock price gradually rises. This may be the main force slowly accumulating shares in preparation for a rally.

7%-10%: Main force gains momentum, rhythm control
Main buyers become more aggressive. If the price is falling, it could be the main force gently suppressing the price for a shakeout; if rising, it indicates orderly accumulation.

10%-15%: Clear control intent
Main players aim to control the stock’s shares. The accumulation intensifies. Once completed, a rally often follows. This is a risky zone—retail investors can easily get trapped, as the main force may still be building positions.

15%-20%: Activity intensifies, bottom signal
Trading becomes unusually active, with increased volatility. If the stock is still low and volume surges, it may signal a bottom—typical of strong stocks. But if the stock is already high and volume drops, beware.

20%-30%: Battle between bulls and bears, beginning of distribution
This is the most intense phase of the tug-of-war. If at a low, the main force might be aggressively accumulating to attract retail buyers. If at a high, it could be quietly distributing shares.

Modern main players are clever—they split large orders into many small ones to sell gradually, reducing transaction costs and preventing retail panic selling, which could push prices down.

30%-40%: Extreme activity, warning of distribution
Very high turnover rates, usually seen in hot stocks with strong themes. Main players often prefer to “quietly” distribute shares here, as obvious signs of distribution can inflate prices and increase costs.

40%-50%: Attention peaks, high risk
Market attention is intense, and prices fluctuate wildly. Retail investors often can’t hold through such volatility. Caution is advised.

50%-60%: Major divergence, danger at high levels
Triggered by significant news, the market shows big disagreement. Prices are often at highs. Profit-takers exit, while others may buy the dip. Intense battle ensues.

60%-70%: Frenzy, difficult to judge
Market is extremely emotional. Both sides look down on each other. If this occurs at the bottom, it might be a sudden big positive; at the top, it indicates main force is dumping aggressively.

70%-80%: Out of control, unpredictable risks
Stock price is off its normal trajectory, full of uncertainty. Especially in downtrends, avoid “catching falling knives.” There may be hidden negative news, and the momentum can lead to large swings.

80%-100%: Almost all chips exchanged, frenzy
Nearly all shares have changed hands, and sentiment is at its peak. Such stocks should be observed from afar; only consider entering once the market stabilizes.

Identifying main force via turnover rate: bottom accumulation vs. high-level distribution

If turnover rate indicates the stock’s “temperature,” combining it with price position helps reveal the true intent of the main force.

Mid- to long-term main force characteristics
Some stocks have very low turnover but keep rising steadily. This suggests long-term institutional accumulation, with strong persistence and lower risk. The main force quietly builds positions with confidence, willing to hold for the long term.

Bottom accumulation signals
After a long correction, a stock suddenly shows several days of high turnover—this often signals new capital entering. Sustained high turnover at the bottom over multiple days indicates ample volume and potential for a subsequent rally, making such stocks likely to become strong performers.

Conversely, if a stock in a downtrend has very low turnover, it indicates little trading activity. For stocks previously accumulated by main players, a sudden drop to very low turnover after a shakeout suggests the stock may be bottoming out and preparing for the next upward move.

High-level turnover warnings
But does higher turnover always mean higher prices? Not necessarily. When a stock is still climbing and not yet high, high turnover can be a good sign. But once the stock has risen significantly and deviates from the main player’s cost basis, high turnover may signal distribution.

At this stage, high turnover can be a “massive volume, sky-high price” sign—if the stock continues to rise with sustained high turnover, it indicates strong momentum. But if turnover starts decreasing while prices are still high, it suggests the main force is exiting, and the upward trend may weaken.

Practical application: how to use turnover rate to spot strong stocks

In real trading, analyzing main force actions through turnover rate requires attention to key points:

Interval judgment rules

  • Below 3%: Very normal, no significant capital activity.
  • 3%-7%: Stocks are relatively active, worth attention.
  • 7%-10%: Common in strong stocks, highly active, market focus.
  • 10%-15%: If not at a peak or top, indicates large institutional operation.
  • Over 15%: Needs careful monitoring. If the stock remains in dense trading zones, it may have huge upward potential—characteristic of super-strong stocks.

Key observation rules

  • Focus on stocks with consistently high turnover and increasing volume, indicating deep institutional involvement.
  • Watch for high turnover after a big rise, then a decline—possible long-term accumulation.
  • Observe sudden increases in turnover with little price movement—possible pre-arranged distribution or accumulation.

Special rules for new stocks and limit-up stocks

  • New stocks often have high initial turnover—normal and expected.
  • When a stock approaches its first limit-up, lower turnover rates are often more promising than high ones, especially in weak markets.
  • Ideal: regular stocks with turnover below 2%, ST stocks below 1%. In strong markets, slightly higher is acceptable, but generally not exceeding 5%.

Judging continuous high turnover

  • Multiple days of high turnover with rising prices far outperforming the market can be due to institutional building, short-term speculation, or distribution. Additional analysis is needed.

The five-dimensional valuation method for stocks

Many investors only look at stock prices superficially, thinking a 70 yuan stock is more expensive than a 7 yuan one—that’s a mistake. The true value isn’t in the current price but in intrinsic valuation.

For example:

  • Stock A: Price 70 yuan, PE ratio 10
  • Stock B: Price 7 yuan, PE ratio negative

Most would think Stock B is cheaper, but actually, Stock A might be undervalued.

Five evaluation dimensions

  1. Industry and sector comparison: Compare PE ratios within the same industry. Lower PE indicates relative cheapness.
  2. Profitability ranking: Sort by net profit; higher profit suggests better earning power.
  3. Shareholder count: Fewer shareholders often imply concentrated ownership by main players—good for stability.
  4. Net asset per share: Higher book value per share is generally better, especially if the stock price is near or below this value.
  5. Dividend payout ability: Sort by retained earnings or dividend capacity; stronger dividend ability indicates solid profitability.

Combine these rankings into a total score (out of 100) to assess whether a stock is truly cheap or expensive.

Deep meaning of high and low turnover rates

Turnover rate levels often reflect:

Market heat

  • High turnover: active trading, popular stocks.
  • Low turnover: less interest, cold stocks.

Liquidity

  • High turnover: good liquidity, easier to buy/sell, better cashing-out ability.
  • But also often associated with short-term speculative funds, higher volatility, and risk.

Future trend prediction

  • Sudden rise in turnover and volume may indicate new buying interest, potential price increase.
  • Continuous high turnover after a rise might suggest profit-taking and potential decline.

Emerging markets tend to have higher turnover than mature markets due to rapid growth, more new listings, and less investor maturity.

The logic behind high turnover manipulation

Understanding why main players create different turnover levels at various points:

Volume spike at high levels

  • When stock price is high and volume surges, main force is likely distributing shares. Usually, this requires positive news to facilitate smooth distribution.

Reliable bottom volume

  • Strong stocks with volume at the bottom are most trustworthy. High turnover here indicates new capital entering, with good potential for future gains. The more thorough the bottom accumulation, the lighter the upward pressure later, and the greater the upside.

Special case: new stocks

  • High initial turnover is normal. Many new stocks have risen sharply after listing. But as the market evolves, high open-high close patterns are less common, requiring caution.

Summary

  • Low-volume, rising stocks at the bottom are worth close attention.
  • High-volume, falling stocks at the top are best avoided, especially during ongoing declines.
  • Always wait for stabilization before entering, respecting the trend. Overconfidence and fighting the trend are unwise—respect the market and protect your capital.

Turnover rate is a statistical tool that deeply reflects market participants’ psychology and capital flow. Mastering its interpretation allows you to identify main players and discover strong stocks. Start observing the turnover changes in stocks around you—you’ll find unexpected opportunities.

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