I soap almost exclusively with EOs, with a few exceptions. I would suggest visiting the listings for any EOs you intend to use, on an online supplier's website such as Bramble Berry. I like BB because the UI is clean and bold, and they do put CP notes on their EO listings most of the time. "Fast mover" is marketing slang for "accelerates trace"
If not, you can scroll down to read the user reviews for the oils, and see if anyone has complained about acceleration/ricing/seizing.
As an example, on Ylang Ylang III EO, both the BB notes and the reviews note that it accelerates:
https://www.brambleberry.com/ylang-ylang-iii-essential-oil-p4373.aspx
Many soapmakers who work with EOs tend to go by the loose rule of "florals fast, citrus slow". I have found this to be true for the most part, although there have been some exceptions.
My personal list so far:
Slows Trace
Sweet Orange
Grapefruit
Lemon
Bergamot
Does not affect trace/behaves well
Lemongrass
Peppermint
Lavender (except the one time I got dodgy supermarket lavender EO)
Eucalyptus
Ginger
May Chang (Litsea Cubeba)
Tea Tree Oil (Melaleuca Alternifolia)
Rosemary
Cedarwood (Cedrus Atlantica)
Fir (Pinus Sylvestris)
Neroli (Nature Identical)
Moderate accelerant
Jasmine (natural/synthetic blend)
German Chamomile (Matricaria Chamomila)
Rose Geranium (Pelargonium Graveolens)
Ylang Ylang
***
Rose (natural/synthetic blend)
Cinnamon leaf/bark (from other soapmakers' experiences)
Clove (from other soapmakers' experiences)
Pine Tar (from other soapmakers' experiences)
Anything extracted or dissolved in alcohol (from other soapmakers' experiences)
A couple of tricks I use in addition to the ones mentioned by AlchemyandAshes's
post, when working with fast movers:
Blend faster-tracing oils with oils that slow down trace (eg. Ylang Ylang with Sweet Orange)
Take advantage of lecithin in powdered goat milk, as lecithin is purported to slow trace