Analyzing indicators — this may take a few seconds on first load.
Each indicator casts one vote: long (+1), neutral (0), or short (−1). The votes are summed and divided by how many are active, giving a normalized score between −1 and +1. A score at or above +0.30 reads long, at or below −0.30 reads short, and anything in between is neutral.
Turnover doesn't point up or down on its own — rising volume can accompany either a rally or a panic. So instead of casting a vote, it scales confidence: a signal backed by above-average trading value is marked strong, while the same signal on thin volume is marked weak.
The oscillators (RSI, Stochastic, Bollinger) measure short-term stretch, but they can't tell you which way the tide is running. The moving averages supply that trend backbone — the same oversold reading means very different things in an uptrend versus a downtrend.
The premium compares the Coinbase (USD) close with the Binance (USDT) close — a rough read on whether US spot demand is leaning into the move. It is noisy and tends to revert, so a meaningful threshold has to be proven before it could be trusted as a vote. It also folds in any gap between USDT and USD, so it's an estimate rather than a clean spread.