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Field Guide

See it work,
then learn to read it.

Move the inputs in the live simulator below to watch the model react, then read the full guide to every panel on the platform.

Interactive Demo

See how the analysis works

Adjust the inputs and watch the probabilistic model output update in real time. This is exactly how the platform processes changing market conditions. No recommendations, just mathematics.

Market Momentum Neutral
Bearish Bullish
News Sentiment Neutral
Negative Positive
Market Volatility Normal
Calm Elevated
Market Regime Sideways
Bear Bull
Quick scenarios
Market Pulse Neutral
Neutral

Setup Quality Fair
48/100
Indicator Snapshot
Monte Carlo Scenario Probabilities
Bull Case
38%
Base Case
34%
Bear Case
28%

Getting the most from the data

How to extract maximum insight
from every analytical layer

Enodara is a quantitative research tool. It gives you rigorous mathematical analysis, not instructions. Here is how to read every tab, card and number the way it was built to be read, and how to form your own informed view from the data.

1
Market Intel Tab

Begin with the Market Explanation

Every session starts here. The Market Explanation card sits at the top of Market Intel and synthesises everything the model sees into plain English. It tells you what the current bias is, which indicators are driving it, what is confirming it, and what is conflicting. Read it before looking at any numbers. It is your executive summary for the current market condition.

The Conviction percentage tells you how strongly the three models agree. 90% conviction means all three models are aligned. 55% means they are split and the picture is unclear. The lower the conviction, the more cautious your interpretation should be.

Pay close attention to the sparkline beneath the signal gauge. This small line chart shows how the model's conviction has been trending across recent refreshes, whether the reading is strengthening, weakening, or holding steady. A conviction reading that is rising toward the current bias is a very different picture from one that has just reversed sharply from the other direction. If the sparkline shows the model shifting against its current reading, head to the Advanced tab for the full probabilistic picture before forming any view.

The Setup Quality score is your single most important number. It combines the model reading, regime alignment, and news sentiment into one score out of 100. Below 40 means too many conflicting factors. Above 75 means strong multi-source agreement. Let this guide how much weight you give the current reading.
2
Market Intel Tab

Cross-reference Key Drivers with Indicator Health

The Key Drivers card shows which indicators the model weighted most heavily in its current analysis. These are not just any indicators. They are the ones that historically showed the strongest relationship with future price direction for this specific asset. The Indicator Health card shows the current reading of every indicator on the platform.

The rows highlighted in gold inside Indicator Health are the exact key drivers. This is where the real analysis happens. If the model reads Bullish and the top key driver also reads Bullish in Indicator Health, that is meaningful confirmation. If the key driver reads Bearish while the overall bias is Bullish, that is a contradiction worth noting before forming any view.

Look at how many of the 15 indicators in Indicator Health are aligned with the overall bias. The summary at the top shows the count. Seven Bullish out of fifteen with only one Bearish is a very different picture from seven Bullish and six Bearish. The spread matters.
3
Market Intel Tab

Read the Context card and Model Votes

The Context card shows two things: the current Market Regime (Bull, Bear or Sideways as detected by the multi-factor regime model) and the News Sentiment (live deep learning sentiment analysis of recent headlines). Both show an alignment tag. "Aligned" means the regime or news supports the current bias. "Contradicts" means the broader environment is pushing in the opposite direction.

The Model Votes card shows how each of the three individual models voted. When all three agree, the ensemble is strong. When one model disagrees, look at which one and at what confidence. A single model at 92% voting against the other two is more significant than a model at 51% dissenting.

A yellow warning banner in the Context card means the model detected a contradiction between the market bias and the regime or news. This does not mean the bias is wrong. It means the market environment is not fully supportive and the reading deserves more scrutiny.
4
Probability Tab

Understand the statistical environment

The Probability tab gives you the full statistical picture of the asset. Start with the Market Regime section to confirm the regime reading and see the factor breakdown: trend, momentum, volatility and skewness all scored individually. The composite score tells you how strong the regime reading is.

The Descriptive Statistics section tells you how this asset typically behaves. Annualised volatility shows how much the price moves on average. Skewness tells you whether gains or losses tend to be more extreme. Kurtosis tells you how often extreme moves happen. A kurtosis above 9 means extreme events occur far more frequently than a normal distribution would predict.

The Bayesian Update section is particularly useful after major news events. It shows how the model updated its regime belief after incorporating live news sentiment. A large shift in the posterior (shown by the pp change numbers) means the news had a meaningful impact on the probabilistic view of the market.

The Value at Risk section gives you the statistical worst-case for a single bar. The 99% CVaR is the average loss in the worst 1% of scenarios. This is a useful reference point for understanding how much the market can move against you in extreme conditions.
5
⋯ Advanced Tab

Verify with Monte Carlo and scenario probabilities

The Advanced tab is where the probabilistic future comes into view. The Monte Carlo fan chart shows 1,000 simulated price paths over the next 30 bars. The blue band in the middle is the most likely zone. The wider the fan, the more uncertain the model is about future direction. A narrow fan with a clear upward slope is a very different reading from a wide fan with paths going in both directions.

The Scenario Analysis card breaks those 1,000 paths into three groups. The Bull Case shows the average outcome of the top 20% of paths. The Bear Case shows the worst 20%. The probabilities show how many paths ended above or below the current price. Compare these probabilities with the Market Intel bias. If Market Intel reads Bullish but 60% of Monte Carlo paths end below current price, the statistical evidence is mixed and worth noting.

The Price Distribution histogram shows exactly where the simulated prices clustered at the end of 30 bars. A heavily right-skewed distribution (bars piling up on the right) suggests statistically more upside paths. A left-skewed distribution suggests downside paths dominated the simulation.

The Fear and Greed gauge combines regime, momentum, trend, news sentiment and volatility into a single score. Extreme Greed readings historically appear near market tops. Extreme Fear readings often appear near bottoms. Neither guarantees a reversal but both are meaningful context for interpreting other data.

The GARCH Volatility panel is one of the most underused tools on the platform. Elevated GARCH vol means the market is in a high-energy state and price moves are likely to be larger than usual in both directions. Compressed GARCH vol often precedes a breakout. Use it to contextualise how much weight to give the current directional reading.
6
Probability Tab

Use Kelly Criterion for position sizing context

The Kelly Criterion section in the Probability tab computes the mathematically optimal position size as a percentage of capital based on the asset's historical win rate and average win-to-loss ratio. This is not a recommendation on what to do. It is a data reference point that quantifies how the historical statistics of this asset translate into a sizing framework.

The Half-Kelly figure is what most quantitative practitioners use as a reference. Full Kelly is mathematically optimal for long-run growth but produces large drawdowns in practice. The Mathematical Edge figure tells you whether this asset has historically had a positive expected value per bar. A negative edge means the asset has historically lost more than it gained per bar on average.

The Kelly result changes with market conditions because it uses the current asset statistics. A Kelly warning means the historical win rate is high but that does not mean future conditions will match historical ones. All sizing decisions are yours to make with full context and judgment.
7
Hedging Tab

Understand cross-asset relationships

If you hold positions across multiple assets, the Hedging tab shows you how the available assets are correlated in the current market. When two assets are highly correlated, holding both does not meaningfully reduce your risk. The hedging engine computes the minimum variance hedge ratio: how much of one asset you would need to hold relative to another to theoretically reduce portfolio volatility.

This is particularly useful during periods of macro stress when asset correlations tend to spike. Assets that sometimes behave as uncorrelated can temporarily move together during risk-off events. The live correlation reading tells you whether the normal relationship is holding or whether it has broken down.

Use the hedging data alongside the regime readings from all available assets. When two assets are in opposing regimes and their correlation is low, the data suggests they are behaving independently. If their correlation is high, they may move together regardless of individual model readings.
8
Community Tab

Enrich your view with the community

The Community tab is a real-time feed of other Enodara users sharing their analysis, observations and questions. Filter by asset to see what others are noticing about the same market. Look for Analysis posts that reference specific data points from the platform. A well-reasoned Analysis post from another data-driven user can surface context you may have missed or frame the data from a different angle.

The community is not a signals service and should not be treated as one. It is a place to compare observations, ask questions and share what the data is showing from different perspectives. Enodara gives everyone the same underlying data. What differs is interpretation, experience and the specific question each user is trying to answer.

Every data point on Enodara refreshes every 5 minutes. The market moves. Revisit the platform regularly during active sessions rather than relying on a single snapshot. A reading taken 30 minutes ago may already reflect different market conditions.
9
All Tabs

Understand why the gauge never reaches its extremes

Every gauge on Enodara is intentionally designed to never reach the full left or right extreme, no matter how strong the reading. This is not a limitation. It is a deliberate philosophical choice. No quantitative model, however sophisticated, can claim absolute certainty about market direction. Financial markets are probabilistic systems, not deterministic ones.

A gauge that could reach 100% would be dishonest. The capped deflection is a constant visual reminder that every reading on this platform is a probability, not a prediction. The stronger the conviction, the further the needle leans, but it never claims to know for certain. That epistemic humility is built into the design itself.

When you see a high-conviction Bullish reading with the needle leaning strongly but not at the edge, that is precisely the point. The model is saying the data strongly suggests one direction, not that the outcome is guaranteed. Your judgment about whether to act on that data is always the final step.
10
All Tabs

Use the question mark tooltips to understand any number instantly

Throughout the platform (on the Probability page, Indicator Health, Key Drivers, VaR, Kelly Criterion and more) you will see small ? icons next to every label and metric. Hovering over any of them instantly shows a plain English explanation of exactly what that number means, how it is calculated and why it matters for interpreting the current market data.

These tooltips are designed for everyone from complete beginners who have never heard of GARCH volatility or CVaR, to experienced traders who want to verify exactly how Enodara defines and computes each metric. You never have to leave the platform or look anything up externally. Every number explains itself.

If you ever encounter a term you do not recognise (skewness, kurtosis, Kelly fraction, Bayesian posterior) hover the ? next to it. The explanation is always there, always contextual, and always written in plain language without assuming prior knowledge.
Your desk

And then, make it your own.

Everything above is how we read it. But this is your desk now. The numbers do not belong to one method, and neither do you. Read them however makes sense to you, cross-reference layers we never thought to connect, compare assets side by side, stack the tabs your own way, and infer what the data is telling you.

We give you rigorous, honest analysis, and then we get out of the way. There is no single correct lens, and the sharpest insights usually come from someone reading the same numbers a little differently. So get creative. It is your sandbox. Read it the way you want.

Common questions

Good to know

A few things people ask before they start reading the data. If your question is not here, we would love to hear it.

Not at all. Every metric on the platform, from volatility to the probability scores, carries a small question mark icon. Hover it and you get a plain English explanation of what the number means and why it matters. Beginners and seasoned quants both get what they need without ever leaving the page.
No. Enodara is a quantitative research and education tool. It publishes mathematical analysis of market data, never a recommendation to buy, sell or hold anything. What you do with the analysis is entirely your own informed decision.
Continuously through the market session. Fresh readings are published roughly every five minutes as new market data arrives, so what you see reflects current conditions rather than a stale snapshot.
It is a calibrated likelihood, not a promise. Markets are not binary, so every reading is expressed as a distribution across bullish, neutral and bearish outcomes. A higher number means the model sees stronger odds in that direction. It never means certainty.
No. The simulator is a sandbox that shows how the inputs (momentum, news, volatility and regime) push the output around, so you can build intuition for the relationships. The live platform runs the full machine learning ensemble on real market data across every asset.
It is free. The complete analytics workflow across every market is available to everyone at no cost.
No, and that is the point. This guide shows how we read each layer, but the numbers do not belong to one method. Stack the tabs your own way, compare assets side by side, connect layers we never thought to, and form your own view. It is your desk.
Enodara is a quantitative research publisher, not a financial adviser. All analytical outputs, model readings, probability distributions and statistical data are published for informational and educational purposes only. Nothing on this platform constitutes a recommendation, solicitation, or advice to buy, sell or hold any financial instrument. All decisions are made solely by the user. Past model accuracy does not guarantee future performance. Enodara is not regulated by any financial authority.