The indicators page holds forty-two gauges read straight from price. They look busy, but they all follow one simple rule — and once you know it, the whole board reads at a glance.
Open the indicators screen and you'll see three tabs — Momentum, Trend, and Volatility — with forty-two gauges spread across them. Each one is a small slider running from 0 to 100, read fresh from the live price. A reading near the middle is ordinary; out toward an edge means something is stretched.
They all read price itself — not funding, not the crowd, just how price is moving right now.
Here's the one rule the whole board lives by: each gauge reads the temperature, never the direction you should go. A high momentum reading says "this has run hot lately" — not "buy." A wide volatility reading says "the swings are big" — not "sell."
Think of a row of thermometers, not a compass. They tell you the conditions — hot or cold, calm or stormy — and leave the decision entirely to you.
Momentum gauges measure speed — how hard and fast price has been pushing, and whether it has run far enough to look overheated or oversold. Trend gauges measure the lean — is price drifting up, down, or sideways, and how committed is the move. Volatility gauges measure the swings — calm and quiet, or wild and shaking.
You don't need all forty-two. Glancing at one from each family — speed, lean, and swings — already paints a full picture of the moment.
Sometimes one gauge reads "overheated" while another reads "still weak," and that looks like a contradiction. It usually isn't. Each dial looks through its own window — some read the last hour, some the last day. A market can be bouncing upward over the last hour while still falling over the last day, and both readings are true.
Picture filming the same road from a drone and a satellite. The drone, flying low, sees an uphill stretch; the satellite, far above, sees the whole route heading downhill. Neither is lying — they are just looking from different distances. When dials disagree, that gap is itself a reading: short-term and long-term pulling apart.
Three habits make the board click. First, read in groups, not one dial at a time — one lone signal means little, several agreeing means more. Second, tap the ⓘ on any card for a one-line, plain-English note on what high and low mean for that gauge. Third, remember every reading comes from 5-minute candles over the last 24 hours — the same span as the chart beside it, so the dials breathe in time with what you are watching.
These indicators describe how price is moving, not where it is going next. Nothing here is financial advice. A reading is a measurement of the present, never a prediction — always do your own research.