Supported market regions
API · /trendingstocks-api
Trending Stocks API
The tickers people are actually searching for right now, served from Yahoo Finance's public trending feed. This is an attention and retail-interest signal, not a price-mover list: the trending endpoint returns the most-searched symbols in a region (US, UK, Germany, France, India, Brazil and more), and enriches each one with its live price, day change and exchange — so you see what is grabbing attention and how it is moving. The ticker endpoint answers the question "is this symbol trending right now, and where does it rank". The regions endpoint lists the supported markets. This is the search-attention / sentiment data-cut for stocks — what retail is watching — distinct from the price-based market-movers, the live-quote and the intraday-candle APIs in the catalogue. Trending reflects search interest and shifts through the trading day. Live, no key on the upstream, nothing stored.
API health
healthy- Uptime
- 100.00%
- Server probes · 24h
- Avg latency
- 169 ms
- Server probes · 24h
- Subscribers
- 3,440
- active
- Total calls
- 84
- last 7 days
Pricing
Pick a tier — billed monthly, cancel anytime.
Free
Free
- 33,000 calls / month
- 5 requests / second
- Hard cap (429 above quota, no overage)
- 33,000 calls/month
- 5 req/sec
- Trending, ticker check & regions
- No credit card
Starter
€5.40 /month
- 350,000 calls / month
- 15 requests / second
- Hard cap (429 above quota, no overage)
- 350k calls/month
- 15 req/sec
- All 14 regions
- Email support
Pro
€16.20 /month
- 1,450,000 calls / month
- 40 requests / second
- Hard cap (429 above quota, no overage)
- 1.45M calls/month
- 40 req/sec
- Sentiment dashboards & alerts
- Priority support
Scale
€37.60 /month
- 5,200,000 calls / month
- 100 requests / second
- Hard cap (429 above quota, no overage)
- 5.2M calls/month
- 100 req/sec
- Trading-desk scale
- Dedicated SLA
Built by
Related APIs
Other APIs with overlapping tags.
Consumer Inflation Expectations API
What households in each economy expect for prices and for the wider economy — the OECD consumer surveys as an API, live, no key. Every month consumers are asked whether they expect prices to rise faster or slower over the year ahead, and whether they think the general economic situation will improve or worsen. The OECD harmonises the answers into balances — the share answering up/better minus the share answering down/worse, on a scale around zero. Consumer inflation expectations are one of the most closely watched soft indicators in central banking: if households start expecting higher inflation, they bring forward purchases and demand higher wages, which can make inflation self-fulfilling, so policymakers track whether expectations stay anchored. The economic-situation balance is the household read on where the economy is heading, and it leads consumer spending. The inflation endpoint ranks every economy by its consumer inflation-expectations balance — where households most expect prices to climb. The economy endpoint ranks by the economic-situation outlook. The country endpoint gives one economy's inflation and economic-situation balances side by side with the month-on-month change. Each reading carries its own month and discontinued series are excluded, so the board is genuinely current. The consumer-survey / inflation-expectations cut — distinct from the composite Business & Consumer Confidence board (which gives only the headline confidence index, not the inflation-expectations component), the manufacturing business-survey board, the realised-inflation feeds, and the generic multi-provider data aggregator. Balances are in percentage points; figures are monthly.
api.oanor.com/consumersurvey-api
Business & Consumer Confidence API
How optimistic the firms and households of each economy are right now — the OECD Business and Consumer Confidence Indicators as an API, live from the OECD's official statistics, no key. Confidence is soft data: it comes from monthly surveys asking businesses about orders, output and expectations, and consumers about their finances and the outlook, and it moves before the hard data does, which makes it one of the most-watched early reads on demand. The OECD standardises both into amplitude-adjusted indices that oscillate around 100 — above 100 means confidence is above its long-term average (optimism), below 100 means below average (pessimism) — and the direction (rising or falling) tells you whether sentiment is improving or deteriorating. The business endpoint returns the Business Confidence Indicator (BCI) for every economy the OECD tracks (and the aggregates — G7, G20, OECD, the euro area), ranked, each with its current value, month-on-month change, optimism/pessimism reading and direction. The consumer endpoint returns the Consumer Confidence Indicator (CCI) the same way. The country endpoint puts both side by side for one economy — the firm view and the household view together, with a combined read. Discontinued series are excluded and each reading carries its own period, so the board is genuinely current. The survey-based confidence / soft-data cut — distinct from the OECD composite-leading-indicator board (a different measure built to lead GDP), from the bond-yield and inflation boards, and from the generic multi-provider data aggregator. Figures are monthly; this is the sentiment lens on the world's economies.
api.oanor.com/confidence-api
COT Index API
The normalised Commitments-of-Traders positioning signal traders actually act on, computed live from the US CFTC public reporting API — no key. A raw COT net-position number means little on its own: "large speculators are +176,020 contracts net long gold" tells you nothing until you know whether that is high or low versus history. The COT Index fixes that by normalising each trader group's current net futures position to a 0-100 percentile over a lookback window (the classic Larry Williams 156-week / three-year COT Index): 100 = the most net-long that group has been in the window, 0 = the most net-short. Above 80 marks a crowded long extreme (contrarian bearish), below 20 a crowded short extreme (contrarian bullish). The index endpoint returns one market's COT Index for both the large speculators (non-commercials) and the commercial hedgers, with the current net, the window min/max, the week-over-week change and an extreme flag. The screener endpoint computes the index across a curated set of 17 FX, stock-index, metal, energy and grain futures and ranks them, surfacing which markets sit at a positioning extreme right now. This is the normalised positioning-signal cut — distinct from the raw COT-report feed (which serves the weekly long/short contract counts), and from the price, open-interest and options-positioning APIs. It turns the report into the signal.
api.oanor.com/cotindex-api
Altcoin Season Index API
One number that tells you whether crypto capital is rotating into altcoins or huddling in Bitcoin, computed live from Binance daily candles (no key, nothing stored). The market swings between two regimes: in "altcoin season" most alts outperform Bitcoin and money chases the long tail; in "Bitcoin season" alts bleed against BTC and capital flees to the majors. The classic gauge is simple — of the top altcoins, what share has outperformed Bitcoin over the last 90 days? Above ~75% it is altcoin season; below ~25% it is Bitcoin season. The index endpoint returns that index (0-100), the season label, Bitcoin's own return over the window and how many alts out- versus under-performed. The leaderboard endpoint ranks the alts by their excess return versus Bitcoin — who is leading the rotation and who is lagging — each with its own return, BTC's return and the gap. The coins endpoint lists the universe. The altcoin-season / alt-vs-BTC rotation cut — distinct from the market-cap-dominance and global-market APIs (which report BTC's share of total cap, not relative performance), the single-coin momentum and the price APIs. It answers whether it is altseason, not what the market cap is.
api.oanor.com/altseason-api
Frequently asked questions
Quick answers about pricing, quotas, and integration.
How do I get an API key for Trending Stocks API?
What's the rate limit for Trending Stocks API?
How much does Trending Stocks API cost?
Can I cancel my subscription anytime?
Is Trending Stocks API GDPR-compliant?
Pick an endpoint from the list on the left to see its details and try it.
Code snippets
Sign up to get an API key, then call any path under your slug.
curl https://api.oanor.com/trendingstocks-api/SOME_PATH \
-H "x-oanor-key: oanor_test_..."
const res = await fetch("https://api.oanor.com/trendingstocks-api/SOME_PATH", {
headers: { "x-oanor-key": "oanor_test_..." }
});
const data = await res.json();
$ch = curl_init("https://api.oanor.com/trendingstocks-api/SOME_PATH");
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_RETURNTRANSFER, true);
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_HTTPHEADER, ["x-oanor-key: oanor_test_..."]);
$response = curl_exec($ch);
import requests
r = requests.get(
"https://api.oanor.com/trendingstocks-api/SOME_PATH",
headers={"x-oanor-key": "oanor_test_..."},
)
print(r.json())
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