Fidelity National Information Services (FIS) — Daily Price Character

Historical session stats from dividend-adjusted prices: win rate, streaks, record days, weekday patterns, and (when available) how often the stock was green on S&P 500 green days.

Daily streak leaderboard →

Archetype

Explosive

High daily volatility — frequent large price swings.

Win rate

49.6%

3090 green · 2826 red · 318 flat · 6234 sessions

Current streak

1 red

As of Apr 7, 2026

Max win / lose streak

10 / 9 days

Win streak return: +6.05% · Lose: 19.78%

Median / σ daily

+0.000% · 5.680%

Avg green +1.41% · avg red 1.29%

Extreme days (>3%)

7.7%

241 up · 241 down

History from Jun 21, 2001 through Apr 7, 2026 · 6234 trading days with returns.

Trailing year — daily returns (calendar)

Apr 8, 2025Apr 7, 2026 · Mon–Fri sessions only

Monday–Friday — average return

Average dividend-adjusted return on that weekday (green / red by sign). Green/red day rule: ±0.01% vs prior close.

Monday–Friday — win rate

Share of sessions that closed green on that weekday. Bars are green at or above 50%, red below 50%.

Top green days

Largest single-session gains (dividend-adjusted), by historical return.

DateReturn
Jul 3, 2008+422.49%
Oct 28, 2008+27.32%
Aug 6, 2008+18.64%
Mar 24, 2020+16.31%
Sep 15, 2005+15.42%
Sep 25, 2002+12.39%
Nov 13, 2008+11.37%
Nov 24, 2008+11.28%
Oct 13, 2008+10.54%
Feb 11, 2009+10.34%
May 6, 2010+10.28%
Mar 13, 2020+9.66%
Jul 29, 2009+8.93%
Aug 12, 2015+8.74%
Apr 17, 2025+8.65%
Oct 1, 2001+8.64%
Nov 4, 2008+8.43%
Mar 10, 2020+8.36%
Feb 16, 2006+7.94%
Feb 1, 2006+7.94%

Worst red days

Largest single-session losses; "Days to recovery" counts trading sessions until close recovered the prior peak (dividend-adjusted).

DateReturnDays to recovery
Sep 20, 200232.77%177
Nov 3, 202228.06%381
Mar 16, 202016.59%31
Mar 13, 202312.93%23
Feb 13, 202312.49%281
Nov 3, 201512.29%129
Feb 11, 202511.49%91
Sep 26, 200111.17%5
Mar 12, 202010.67%33
Oct 15, 200810.57%31
Mar 18, 20209.67%4
Oct 29, 20089.64%4
Feb 3, 20269.15%
Sep 5, 20028.65%292
Aug 5, 20258.53%
Sep 29, 20088.36%135
Sep 17, 20018.33%63
Oct 22, 20088.05%4
Feb 15, 20227.76%
Aug 8, 20117.72%124

Frequently asked questions

What is the daily win rate for Fidelity National Information Services (FIS)?

Historically, Fidelity National Information Services (FIS) closed green on 49.6% of trading days (3090 green, 2826 red, 318 flat), using dividend-adjusted closes and a ±0.01% threshold for green vs red.

What is the current winning or losing streak for Fidelity National Information Services (FIS)?

As of 2026-04-07, Fidelity National Information Services (FIS) is on a 1-day losing streak (consecutive green or red days by the same rules, ignoring trailing flat days).

What does Steady, Balanced, or Explosive mean for Fidelity National Information Services (FIS)?

We label Fidelity National Information Services (FIS) as "explosive" based on the sample standard deviation of daily returns: High daily volatility — frequent large price swings.

What were the best and worst single trading days for Fidelity National Information Services (FIS)?

Largest single-day gain: +422.49%. Largest single-day loss: 32.77%. Tables on this page list the top record green and red days.

What counts as an "extreme" daily move for Fidelity National Information Services (FIS)?

We treat a day as extreme if the absolute dividend-adjusted daily return exceeds 3%. About 7.7% of trading days for Fidelity National Information Services (FIS) were extreme (241 up, 241 down).

Data & methodology

How are green, red, and flat days defined?

We use dividend-adjusted (or close-to-close for non-equity) daily returns. Green: return ≥ +0.01%. Red: return ≤ −0.01%. Flat: between those bounds.

How is the current streak calculated?

We count consecutive green or consecutive red days using the same thresholds. If the most recent session is flat, we skip trailing flat days and measure from the last non-flat close.

What does “vs S&P 500” mean?

On sessions where the S&P 500 (^GSPC) was green, we report how often this stock was also green. Shown only for USD equities when benchmark data exists and the symbol is not the index itself.

Where does the archetype come from?

Sample standard deviation of daily returns: low → Steady, high → Explosive, otherwise Balanced. Labels describe typical daily volatility, not quality of the investment.