Table of Contents
Table of Contents

What Is a Stock Gap? 4 Main Types of Gaps, Example, and Analysis

What Is a Stock Gap?

A stock gap is an area discontinuity in a security's chart where its price either rises or falls from the previous day’s close with no trading occurring in between. Gaps are common when news causes market fundamentals to change during hours when markets are typically closed, for instance, an earnings call after-hours.

Key Takeaways

  • A gap is a discontinuous space in the price chart of an asset or security, often occurring between trading hours.
  • There are four different types of gaps: common gaps, breakaway gaps, runaway gaps, and exhaustion gaps; each with its own signal to traders.
  • Gaps are easy to spot, but determining the type of gap is much harder to figure out. 

Understanding a Stock Gap

Gaps typically occur when a piece of news or an event causes a flood of buyers or sellers into the security. It results in the price opening significantly higher or lower than the previous day’s closing price. Depending on the kind of gap, it could indicate either the start of a new trend or a reversal of a previous trend.

Gapping occurs when the price of a security or asset opens well above or below the previous day’s close with no trading activity in between. Partial gapping occurs when the opening price is higher or lower than the previous day’s close but within the previous day’s price range. Full gapping occurs when the opening is outside of the previous day’s range. Gapping, especially a full gap, shows a strong shift in sentiment that occurred overnight.

Some traders make it a strategy to profit from playing the gap when such a situation occurs.

There are limitations despite gaps being easy to spot. The glaring flaw is one's own ability to identify the different types of gaps that occur. If a gap is misinterpreted, it could be a disastrous mistake causing one to miss an opportunity to either buy or sell a security, which could weigh heavily on one's profits and losses.

Types of Stock Gaps

There are some fundamental differences between the different types of gaps: common gaps, breakaway gaps, runaway gaps, and exhaustion gaps.

  • Common Gap: In general, there is no major event that precedes a common gap. Common gaps generally get filled relatively quickly (usually within a couple of days) when compared to other types of gaps. Common gaps are also known as "area gaps" or "trading gaps" and tend to be accompanied by normal average trading volume.
  • Breakaway Gap: A breakaway gap occurs when the price gaps above a support or resistance area, like those established during a trading range. When the price breaks out of a well-established trading range via a gap, that is a breakaway gap. A breakaway gap could also occur out of another type of chart pattern, such as a triangle, wedge, cup and handle, rounded bottom or top, or head and shoulders pattern.
  • Runaway Gap: A runaway gap, typically seen on charts, occurs when trading activity skips sequential price points, usually driven by intense investor interest. In other words, there was no trading, defined as an exchange of ownership in security, between the price point where the runaway gap began and where it ended.
  • Exhaustion Gap: An exhaustion gap is a technical signal marked by a break lower in prices (usually on a daily chart) that occurs after a rapid rise in a stock's price over several weeks prior. This signal reflects a significant shift from buying to selling activity that usually coincides with falling demand for a stock. The implication of the signal is that an upward trend may be about to end soon.

Each type of gap has certain consequences for traders. For example, reversal or breakaway gaps are typically accompanied by a sharp rise in trading volume, while common and runaway gaps are not. Additionally, most gaps occur due to news, or an event such as earnings or an analyst's upgrade/downgrade.

Common gaps happen more regularly and do not always need a reason to occur. Also, common gaps tend to get filled, whereas other gaps may signal a reversal or continuation of a trend.

Examples of a Stock Gap

In the example below of Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN), a small stock gap occurred between Oct. 26, 2023, and Oct. 27, 2023, when the price jumped from $119.57 to $127.74. This was a reversal of a downward trend which saw the stock's price continue to climb.

Amazon Stock Chart

In the next example, of Alphabet Inc. (GOOGL), a gap can be seen from Oct. 24, 2023, to Oct. 25, 2023, when the price fell from $138.81 to $125.61 after weeks of a general price increase. The gap drop did not result in a continued downward trend, instead, the price continued to increase to its pre-gap level, filling the gap.

Google Graph

Why Do Stock Gaps Fill?

A stock gap is a large jump in a stock's price after the market closes, usually due to some news. When a gap has been filled, this means the stock's price has returned to its "normal" price; the pre-gap price. This happens quite often as the price settles after irrational buying and trading has stopped after the news.

What Is Price Gap Risk?

Price gap risk is the risk that a security's price will fall or increase dramatically from a market close to a market open, without any trading in between. Traders should plan for price gap risk, such as by closing out orders at the end of the day or putting in stop-loss orders.

How Often Do Stocks Gap?

The amount of times stocks gap really depends on the time frame that a trader is viewing and making trades. The shorter the time frame, the more frequent the gaps. So a daily chart would have more gaps than a monthly chart.

The Bottom Line

Price movements of an asset indicate to traders when it might be a time to buy, sell, or ignore what is happening in the market. Gaps, such as stock gaps, are large jumps in a security's price during non-trading hours due to external factors, such as news. When evaluating the gap, traders and investors need to determine the cause before taking any action.

Article Sources
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  1. Yahoo! Finance. "Amazon.com, Inc. (AMZN)-Chart."

  2. Yahoo! Finance. "Alphabet Inc. (GOOGL)-Chart."

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