How to read a signal without giving up your judgment.
A signal is not a promise. It is a faster way to read direction, timing, and risk before you decide what to do.
Why signals matter
Markets move faster than manual attention. Signals compress price, flow, and event context into something you can compare quickly and judge more consistently.
What quant layers add beyond a chart
A chart shows what price did. Quant layers help show how strong the move is, how crowded it feels, and whether the setup still looks usable.
Monitor
The signal is interesting, but still needs more confirmation. The trader watches, defines risk, and waits for cleaner structure.
Higher-confidence
Multiple layers are aligned. The setup is not guaranteed, but it may support a more structured review and planning process.
Low-quality
The market may still move, but signal quality is limited, and some users may choose to wait for better conditions.
How to read a setup
Recommendations should be read as market analysis, not personal instruction. A strong setup can still be wrong for a specific account, timeframe, or risk rule.
What a strong setup tells you
Bias, confluence, risk framing, event pressure, regime shifts, signal quality, and scenario-based examples.
What it still cannot guarantee
Guaranteed returns, personalized suitability, portfolio advice, or any promise that a setup should automatically be traded.
How the language should feel
Use “signal,” “setup,” “bias,” and “example trade logic.” Avoid wording that sounds like required personal advice.
Why that matters
The platform is best framed as a market-analysis platform, not a licensed adviser substitute.
Where this fits in the product
The product map is simple: Pulse explains what changed, Trade frames the setup, and Tools checks whether the data still supports it.
Suggested public page set
Besides Pricing and Sign In, the strongest public structure is: Home, Education, Security, Risk Disclosure, Terms, Privacy, and Contact.
Education is where users learn the model. Security builds trust. Risk and legal pages set the right expectations before conversion.
Built to inform, not advise
Tidava is a market-analysis platform. It should help users read the market more clearly without pretending to be a licensed adviser or a guaranteed decision-maker.
For research and education
Examples should teach how to read a setup, what confirms it, and what weakens it.
Not personal advice
The same setup will not fit every user, account size, jurisdiction, or objective.
You stay in control
The platform can support user-defined strategies and discretionary decisions, but it should not make required choices for them.
Risk stays visible
Trading involves risk, and analysis, examples, and signals do not guarantee results.