Timeframe-first design
Fast and slow expiries behave differently. Instead of forcing one set of rules everywhere, the engine adapts its thresholds per timeframe so the strength score stays consistent.
What changes by timeframe
- •Sensitivity: faster charts react quicker; slower charts need stronger confirmation.
- •Noise control: turbo modes apply stricter filters to reduce whipsaw trades.
- •Minimum data: we require enough candles before scoring a setup.
Context filter (higher timeframe)
A short-term setup is less reliable when it fights a strong higher-timeframe move. We use a higher-timeframe read to dampen counter-trend ideas and boost aligned ones.
What you see in the UI
When higher-timeframe direction is clear, the signal card may show a small 1H badge so you can quickly spot whether the idea is aligned.
Strength and confirmations
Signals are only useful when they’re backed by evidence. The engine combines indicator signals into a single strength score and shows the key confirmations so you can quickly judge whether a setup is worth your attention.
Practical interpretation
- • Higher strength usually means more agreement across indicators.
- • “NO TRADE” appears when conditions are mixed or volatility is unsuitable.
- • Use strength as a filter, not a guarantee.
Using signals on Stockity
The site is branded for Stockity, so the card is intentionally compact: direction, strength, entry reference, and expiry timer. Treat it as a checklist before placing a trade on Stockity.
Risk note
Binary options are high risk. This site provides educational signals and does not guarantee outcomes. If you are new, start with a demo account on Stockity and use small sizing.
We are not affiliated with Stockity. “Stockity” is referenced to describe intended usage by traders on that broker.