Free Ticker Correlation Matrix Tool
Analyze relationships between stocks and other symbols with a free correlation matrix.
Enter multiple tickers, choose a date range and interval, and generate a heatmap-style table to compare
positive, negative, and weak correlations across assets.
Free access
No signup required
Multi-ticker comparison
Custom date range
Heatmap matrix
Input
Multiple comma-separated tickers
Controls
Start date, end date, interval
Output
Correlation matrix with heatmap-style cells
Best For
Portfolio review, diversification checks, pair analysis
What this correlation tool does
- Builds a correlation matrix across the tickers you enter.
- Lets you compare symbols across custom date ranges.
- Supports multiple intervals including daily, weekly, monthly, and intraday views.
- Displays a heatmap-style table for faster pattern recognition.
- Helps identify strong positive, negative, and low-correlation relationships.
How to use it
- Enter comma-separated ticker symbols.
- Choose a start date and end date.
- Select the interval.
- Generate the correlation matrix.
This page is useful for traders, investors, and researchers comparing relationships across equities, ETFs, and other assets.
What a correlation matrix can help you see
- Which symbols tend to move together over the selected period.
- Which assets may provide diversification due to weaker correlation.
- Which pairs may have strong inverse or negative relationships.
- How relationships change depending on the interval you choose.
- Whether a basket of symbols is concentrated in similar behavior.
FAQ
Is this ticker correlation tool free?
Yes. The page is free to use and does not require signup for core functionality.
Can I compare multiple tickers at once?
Yes. Enter multiple ticker symbols separated by commas to build a single matrix.
What intervals are supported?
The tool supports daily, weekly, monthly, hourly, 30 minute, 15 minute, 5 minute, and 1 minute intervals.
What does a high positive correlation mean?
A high positive correlation generally means two symbols have tended to move in the same direction over the selected period.
What is this page best used for?
This page is best used for portfolio analysis, diversification review, market relationship research, and pair comparison work.