What Live Market Alerts Are
Sigloid Live Market Alerts are real-time market structure alerts for supported crypto futures and tokenized TradeFi-style assets. The page shows when live price moves through an important structure level, then gives users the context needed to decide whether the asset deserves deeper review.
The purpose is simple: reduce manual chart scanning. Instead of opening hundreds of charts to find where structure is changing, users can start from the active alerts list, check the market backdrop, open the chart, and read the asset analysis page.
A Live Market Alert is not a trade call. It does not tell users to buy, sell, short, hold, or use leverage. It highlights a structure event and gives research context around that event.
How Alerts Are Detected
Sigloid uses completed daily-candle structure levels as the reference point, then monitors live price against those levels. The main structure window used for Live Market Alerts is the previous 55-day high and previous 55-day low.
- Bullish alert: live price moves above the previous closed-candle 55-day high.
- Bearish alert: live price moves below the previous closed-candle 55-day low.
This means the structure level comes from completed daily data, while the alert itself is live and intraday. The alert can appear before the daily candle closes. Whether the move later becomes a confirmed daily breakout or breakdown depends on the final daily close.
Sigloid also checks whether live price data is fresh before using it. If current price data is missing or stale, the system can skip the alert check instead of forcing a weak signal from bad data.
How To Read An Alert Card
Each alert card is built to answer five questions quickly: which asset moved, which direction it moved, where the structure level was, how far price has moved from that level, and where the user can review the setup in more detail.
- Symbol and asset name: the market where the alert is active.
- Reference Price: the live price area where Sigloid detected the structure break.
- Risk Level: the model-derived invalidation context for the active alert.
- Current Price: the latest available tracked price shown on the page.
- Deviation: how far price has moved from the reference price in the alert direction.
- Alert Time: when the alert was detected.
- Alert Bias: bullish for upside structure alerts and bearish for downside structure alerts.
The card is not meant to replace analysis. It is meant to show the user where to look first.
How Risk Level Works
Risk Level is the active invalidation level assigned to each Live Market Alert. It marks the price area where Sigloid stops treating the alert as an active structure event on the live page.
At the time an alert is created, Sigloid calculates the initial Risk Level from short-term live moving-average context, with a small buffer around the risk area. For bullish alerts, the invalidation level is below price. For bearish alerts, the invalidation level is above price.
After the alert is active, Sigloid updates Risk Level through scheduled structure checks. In the first phase, the level follows short-term risk context. If price continues in the alert direction and the setup becomes more established, the risk framework moves toward breakeven or medium-term trend context.
Once the alert moves into a more mature structure phase, Sigloid uses shorter-term structure levels to keep the invalidation area aligned with the alert bias. For bullish alerts, that means downside structure is used as the invalidation reference. For bearish alerts, upside structure is used as the invalidation reference.
When live price reaches the active Risk Level, Sigloid treats the alert as closed for the live page. The alert is removed from Live Market Alerts so the page continues to show active structures, not expired alerts.
Risk Level is a structure-based invalidation field, not a prediction, personal stop loss, or trade instruction. Users still need their own confirmation rule, risk amount, position size, and execution plan.
Why Market Bias Matters
Live Market Alerts should not be read in isolation. The page shows Sigloid Index context so users can compare individual alerts with the broader market backdrop.
A breakout during a strong market is different from a breakout during a sideways market. A breakdown during a broad risk-off move is different from a single asset breaking down while the rest of the market is stable.
When the Sigloid Index is sideways, independent alerts can be more important because they show assets moving while the broader market is quiet. When the Sigloid Index is trending, alerts that align with the broader regime may deserve more attention.
How Filters Reduce Noise
The live page can become busy when many assets are moving. Filters help users narrow the market without losing the structure of the page.
- All: shows all active alerts.
- Breakouts: shows bullish structure alerts.
- Breakdowns: shows bearish structure alerts.
- Positive Deviation: shows alerts where price is moving in the alert direction after detection.
- Crypto: focuses on crypto assets.
- TradeFi: focuses on tokenized traditional finance-style markets.
- Equity: focuses on equity-linked assets where available.
- Commodity: focuses on commodity-linked assets where available.
If no alert matches the selected filter, the page shows an empty state. That is still useful information because it means no active alert currently matches that view.
How The Workflow Tools Help
Live Market Alerts is not only a list of symbols. It is designed as a research workflow.
- Search: helps users find an active alert by symbol or asset name.
- Chart: opens the live chart so users can inspect price behavior around the alert level.
- Watchlist: saves alerts or assets that the user wants to monitor later.
- Calculator: estimates position quantity from the user’s own risk amount, current price, and Risk Level.
- Detailed asset analysis: opens the asset page for closed-candle context, support and resistance, moving averages, volatility, derivatives data, relationship to BTC or the Sigloid Index, and written interpretation.
The alert tells users that something changed. The tools help users decide whether that change is worth deeper work.
How Telegram Alerts Work
When a new Live Market Alert appears, the Sigloid Telegram bot instantly sends a notification to the Sigloid Telegram group. Telegram is the notification layer. It notifies users as soon as a new alert is detected, while the full review still happens on Sigloid.
The correct workflow is to open the alert on Sigloid, check the chart, review the Risk Level, read the asset analysis page, compare the alert with broader market bias measured by the Sigloid Index, and review how the asset relates to the broader market and BTC before making any trading decision.
How Users Should Use This Page
- Start with the Sigloid Index and market bias.
- Use search or filters to narrow the active alert list.
- Check whether the alert is a breakout, breakdown, or positive-deviation event.
- Compare Reference Price, Current Price, Deviation, Risk Level, and Alert Time.
- Open the chart to inspect the move visually.
- Open the detailed asset analysis page for broader context.
- Use the calculator only if the setup already fits the user’s own plan.
- Add the asset to the watchlist if the alert needs more confirmation.
- Use daily-close confirmation if the user’s process requires closed-candle validation.
What Users Should Not Do
Live Market Alerts are built for research. They should not be treated like automatic trade instructions.
- Do not buy only because an alert is bullish.
- Do not short only because an alert is bearish.
- Do not treat Risk Level as a guaranteed stop loss.
- Do not chase large deviation without reviewing the chart.
- Do not ignore broader market bias.
- Do not use the calculator as a recommendation engine.
Live price can move fast. Intraday alerts can fade. Data availability can vary by market. Sigloid reduces scanning work, but it does not remove market risk or user responsibility.
Public Methodology Reference
This page is the primary public explanation of how Sigloid Live Market Alerts work. It describes the alert framework, the fields shown to users, and how active structure events are managed on the live page.
Sigloid is also preparing a separate technical methodology reference for publication on GitHub. That reference will provide simplified formulas and pseudocode for 55-day structure detection, deviation calculation, Risk Level interpretation, and position-size calculation.
The GitHub reference will support independent review of the rules-based methodology without publishing Sigloid’s production bot, private thresholds, infrastructure, credentials, database design, or proprietary implementation details.
A direct link will be added here when the technical reference is published.
FAQ
Are Live Market Alerts buy or sell signals?
No. They are research alerts. A bullish alert means upside structure changed. A bearish alert means downside structure changed. The user still decides whether the alert matters.
How does Sigloid detect a Live Market Alert?
Sigloid compares live price with completed daily-candle structure levels, mainly the previous 55-day high and previous 55-day low.
What does Reference Price mean?
Reference Price is the price area where Sigloid detected the live structure alert. Deviation is measured from this level.
What does Risk Level mean?
Risk Level is model-derived invalidation context for the alert. It is not a personal stop loss or trading instruction.
Why does each alert link to an asset analysis page?
The alert shows what changed live. The asset page explains the broader context using closed-candle structure, indicators, derivatives data, relationships, and written analysis.
Why does market bias matter?
The same alert can mean different things in bullish, bearish, or sideways market conditions. Market bias helps users read the alert in context.