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Private Beta Access
Before You Continue
Important Risk Disclosure
Please review and confirm the following before accessing the Tide Trader beta dashboard.
Tide Trader is provided for educational and informational purposes only.
Nothing in this report, dashboard, scanner output, chart review, or related tools constitutes financial advice, investment advice, legal advice, tax advice, or a recommendation to buy or sell any security or financial instrument.
Trading and investing involve substantial risk, including the possible loss of principal. Past results, model outputs, setup rankings, probability estimates, and trade ideas do not guarantee future performance.
You are solely responsible for your own research, risk management, trade execution, and financial decisions. By continuing, you acknowledge that you understand these risks and agree that your use of Tide Trader is entirely at your own discretion.
This is a private beta experience. Features, layouts, and report elements may change as the platform develops.
Tide Trader Platform - Beta
Members Dashboard
Welcome to the Members Dashboard. This platform is organized by trading use case, so you can go straight to the lane that fits what you are evaluating: Tide for overnight stock planning, Wave for faster intraday equity setups, Horizon for cleaner big-board leadership review, and Raft for calmer multi-day stock setups. Specialty Reports cover Surf for options structure, Trident for crypto flow, and Forge for hard-asset review. Shared Tools include Crest for search across the report family and exit-planning assistance, along with the latest BackTesting Scorecard results across the platform. Introductory Resources include Harbor for steadier long-term investing and Steady Current for dividend-focused passive-income planning, and Informational Pages provide platform context.
The founder originally built these reports for personal use in evaluating setups and executing trades. They still use the reports every day and continue improving the logic and metrics behind each report over time.
Signed In
Equity Reports
Core stock branches organized by pace, style, and experience level.
Overnight Trades
Tide
Like the tide, this branch is built around one next-day cycle. It is optimized for overnight continuation-style setups with live report access and archived report review.
Intraday Trades
Wave
Like market waves, this branch is built around multiple opportunities inside the day. Open the live Wave report, review archived intraday snapshots, and follow the tighter market-hours schedule.
Leadership Focus
Horizon
Horizon widens the perspective to the Nasdaq and S&P 500, helping users focus on cleaner big-board leadership instead of the full equity universe.
Entry Tier Stocks
Raft
Raft is the calmer entry-tier branch of the platform, built around simpler multi-day stock setups, table-first review, and lower-touch trade planning for members who want less screen-time pressure.
Specialty Reports
Branches built for options, crypto flow, and hard-asset structure.
Options Focus
Surf
Surf is the options branch of the platform, now organized as a family built around directional structure, covered calls, secured puts, and premium-movement trading across option-ready stocks and ETFs.
24 / 7 Crypto
Trident
Trident is the crypto branch of the platform, built around always-on digital-asset flow, stronger momentum windows, and structured crypto report review across the global cycle.
Precious Metals
Forge
Forge is the hard-asset branch of the platform, focused on gold, silver, uranium, lithium, miners, and strategic-material structure with organized report review across the London and US session cycle.
Shared Tools
Quick cross-platform utilities for checking guidance and scanning report-ready names without opening every branch one by one.
Introductory Resources
Steadier starting points for members who want extra context before stepping straight into the faster report lanes.
Informational Pages
Shared context pages that explain the language, framework, and posture behind the Tide Trader ecosystem.
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Crest Ticker Search
Search a ticker across the latest Tide, Wave, Horizon, Raft, Surf, Trident, and Forge data to pull current structured exit guidance without opening each report manually.
Enter a ticker to check the latest available exit guidance.
How Crest Helps
Crest is a shared utility, not a full report. It helps you find the latest structured exit references already present across the platform without forcing you to jump between branches.
What It Looks For
Crest searches the latest Tide, Wave, Horizon, Raft, Surf, Trident, and Forge reports for the ticker you enter. If a branch currently carries that name, Crest can surface its latest moderate exit, stretch exit, trail amount, and preferred exit style.
What It Does Not Do
Crest does not replace the report logic or generate brand-new structure from scratch. It is a quick utility for reading the latest live guidance already produced by the report family.
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Crest Exit Tool
Enter your actual entry price and desired return to map a structured limit exit and trail reference. Add a ticker if you also want the latest branch context from Crest.
Enter an entry price to build a structured limit and trail exit plan.
How Crest Exit Tool Helps
This is a calculator-style utility built around your actual entry, not just the report entry. It is meant to help you translate a desired return into a cleaner exit map quickly.
What It Calculates
The tool gives you a fixed Limit Exit, a structured Trail Amount, and a Trail Exit Reference using your entry price and chosen return target.
How Ticker Helps
If you also enter a ticker, the tool adds the latest branch context from Crest so you can compare your personal exit plan against the most recent report-side guidance.
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Scout Access
Scout is the shared quick-scan layer across the platform. These lists show the latest names that actually made the report across Tide, Wave, Horizon, Raft, Surf, Trident, and Forge so you can scan the final field quickly before opening a branch.
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BackTesting Scorecard
We built this system, we stand behind it, and we are not afraid to show how it performs. These branch scorecards use the latest matured rolling sample so beta users can review the most current fair read while we keep improving branch quality and score alignment.
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Loading the latest scorecard...
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Harbor
A weekly list of steadier blue-chip and consistent-growth names for members who want a calmer long-term lane inside Tide Trader. Updates every Monday at 8:00 AM CT.
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Long Term Investment List
Use Nominal Entry as the cleaner current-zone planning reference. Use Better Value Entry as the more patient line if you are waiting for a deeper discount.
Loading the latest Harbor table...
Why can a name still appear here with a negative 1Y return?Harbor is built around steadier businesses, longer-term durability, and investor fit rather than short-term momentum alone. A softer trailing year does not automatically remove a name if the broader quality profile and longer-term case still fit the list.
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Steady Current
A weekly list of steadier dividend-focused names for members who want a calmer passive-income lane inside Tide Trader. Updates every Monday at 8:05 AM CT.
Loading the latest Steady Current table...
Long Term / Passive Income List
Use Nominal Entry as the cleaner current-zone planning reference. Use Better Value Entry as the more patient line if you are waiting for a deeper discount.
Loading the latest Steady Current table...
Why can a name still appear here with a lower short-term return?Steady Current is built around payout durability, business quality, and long-term value retention rather than yield alone or short-term momentum alone. A softer recent return does not automatically remove a name if the broader passive-income case still fits the list.
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Navigation Note: Please use the in-site buttons and navigation controls only. Do not use your browser back button while moving through the Members Dashboard.
Navigation Note: Please use the in-site buttons and navigation controls only. Do not use your browser back button while moving through the Members Dashboard.
Navigation Note: Please use the in-site buttons and navigation controls only. Do not use your browser back button while moving through the Members Dashboard.
Navigation Note: Please use the in-site buttons and navigation controls only. Do not use your browser back button while moving through the Members Dashboard.
Navigation Note: Please use the in-site buttons and navigation controls only. Do not use your browser back button while moving through the Members Dashboard.
Navigation Note: Please use the in-site buttons and navigation controls only. Do not use your browser back button while moving through the Members Dashboard.
Navigation Note: Please use the in-site buttons and navigation controls only. Do not use your browser back button while moving through the Members Dashboard.
Navigation Note: Please use the in-site buttons and navigation controls only. Do not use your browser back button while moving through the Members Dashboard.
Core Options Terms
Call gives the buyer the right to buy shares at the strike price before expiration.
Put gives the buyer the right to sell shares at the strike price before expiration.
Strike Price is the stock or ETF price the option contract is built around.
Expiration is the date the option contract stops existing.
Premium is the price paid or collected for the option contract.
Management Terms In Surf
Covered Call means selling a call against shares you already own.
Secured Put means selling a put while holding enough cash to buy the shares if assigned.
Assignment means the contract turns into a stock transaction and you either lose the shares or buy the shares.
Called Away means your shares are sold because the covered call finished in the money and got assigned.
In The Money means the option already has immediate exercise value based on the stock price.
Out Of The Money means the option currently has no immediate exercise value based on the stock price.
Intrinsic And Extrinsic Value
Intrinsic Value is the amount an option is already in the money.
Extrinsic Value is the time and volatility value layered on top of intrinsic value.
Two contracts can be built on the same stock move but still trade differently because extrinsic value is not the same.
This is one reason Surf stays underlying-led for now instead of pretending every contract is interchangeable.
Implied Volatility
Implied Volatility is the market's pricing of expected movement in the option.
Higher implied volatility usually means more expensive option premium.
Lower implied volatility usually means cheaper option premium.
A good underlying setup can still become a bad options buy if the premium is too inflated.
Delta
Delta is the option's rough sensitivity to a one-dollar move in the underlying.
A higher Delta usually means the option behaves more like the stock.
Calls have positive Delta. Puts have negative Delta.
Freestyle users will usually care about Delta more than Board or Leash users.
Theta
Theta is time decay.
If you are buying options, Theta usually works against you as time passes.
If you are selling options, Theta usually works in your favor.
That is why Board and Leash naturally care more about premium decay than Freestyle.
Vega
Vega measures how much the option price reacts to changes in implied volatility.
If implied volatility rises, long options often benefit.
If implied volatility falls, long options can lose value even if the stock did not move much.
Vega matters most around earnings and other major events.
Gamma
Gamma measures how quickly Delta changes as the stock price moves.
High Gamma can make short-dated options move very fast.
That can be attractive for premium traders, but it also makes bad timing more expensive.
Liquidity And Spread
Liquidity is how easy it is to get in and out of a contract.
Spread is the gap between the bid and ask.
Wide spreads make entry and exit harder and can eat into gains fast.
This is one reason Surf prioritizes option-ready stocks and ETFs instead of every possible ticker.
How To Use Greeks In Surf
Board users mostly care about assignment risk, premium capture, and whether the shares can be kept.
Leash users mostly care about ownership intent, premium collected, and how close the strike sits to likely assignment.
Freestyle users are the most likely to care about Delta, Theta, Vega, and Gamma because they are trading for premium movement.
Use Surf to find the setup and use the Greeks to refine contract choice if you want a deeper options layer.
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Raft BackTesting
Use this Raft-only backtesting view to review how the branch is performing by confidence color and by watch time.
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Loading Raft backtesting...
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Tide BackTesting
Use this Tide-only backtesting view to review how the branch is performing by confidence color and by watch time.
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Loading Tide backtesting...
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Wave BackTesting
Use this Wave-only backtesting view to review how the branch is performing by confidence color and by watch time.
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Loading Wave backtesting...
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Horizon BackTesting
Use this Horizon-only backtesting view to review how the branch is performing by confidence color and by watch time.
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Loading Horizon backtesting...
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Surf BackTesting
Use this Surf-only backtesting view to review how the directional branch is performing by confidence color and by watch time.
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Loading Surf backtesting...
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Trident BackTesting
Use this Trident-only backtesting view to review how the branch is performing by confidence color and by watch time.
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Loading Trident backtesting...
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Forge BackTesting
Use this Forge-only backtesting view to review how the branch is performing by confidence color and by watch time.
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Loading Forge backtesting...
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Top Up (Long) Picks - Confidence Ranked
Fast review cards for the highest-confidence long-side setups
Execution Note: Entry levels are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Top Up (Long) Picks - Risk-Adjusted Rank
Fast review cards for the strongest long-side blend of confidence, phase, and risk
Execution Note: Entry levels are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Top Up (Long) Picks - Highest Return
Fast review cards for the highest stretch-return long-side setups
Execution Note: Entry levels are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Up (Long) Setups
Positive moderate-return setups ranked by profitability probability
Execution Note: Entry levels are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Up ETF Setups
ETF and leveraged-ETF long-side alternatives that qualified on their own.
Execution Note: ETF setups are eligible alternatives, not automatic mirrors of the stock list. Use the listed entry plan and respect extension the same way you would on the stock side.
Top Down (Short) Picks - Confidence Ranked
Fast review cards for the highest-confidence short-side setups
Execution Note: Entry levels are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Top Down (Short) Picks - Risk-Adjusted Rank
Fast review cards for the strongest short-side blend of confidence, phase, and risk
Execution Note: Entry levels are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Top Down (Short) Picks - Highest Return
Fast review cards for the highest stretch-return short-side setups
Execution Note: Entry levels are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Down (Short) Setups
Positive moderate-return setups ranked by profitability probability
Execution Note: Entry levels are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Down ETF Setups
ETF and leveraged-ETF downside alternatives that qualified on their own.
Execution Note: Downside ETF setups are screened separately and may move differently than the underlying stock. Treat them as their own instrument, not as a guaranteed substitute.
Tide Scout
Names that made the current Tide report.
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Raft Setups
A calmer table-first review of selective multi-day stock setups designed for simpler planning and lower-touch trade management.
Execution Note: Raft is built around planned limit entries. If price extends too far beyond the planned entry, it is acceptable to skip the setup and wait for a cleaner opportunity.
Raft ETF Setups
A smaller ETF sleeve for members who want calmer alternatives and stock-theme access at a lower nominal price.
Execution Note: Raft ETF setups stay more selective than Tide or Wave. If an ETF is too stretched or too aggressive for the calmer Raft lane, it stays out.
Raft Scout
Names that made the current Raft report.
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The Core Motto
No trade is BETTER than a Bad trade.
Tide Trader is built on the idea that discipline matters more than constant action. If the structure is not there, the entry is too stretched, or the trade no longer matches the plan, standing aside is the better decision.
Why The System Was Built This Way
Tide Trader was built by an automotive quality systems engineer and certified ISO/IATF QMS auditor. The system reflects that background.
The same mindset used to reduce variation and improve repeatability in manufacturing has been applied here to market scanning and trade review.
Instead of tracking failure rates, scrap, warranty cost, and cost of quality, Tide Trader tracks structure, follow-through, risk, and execution discipline.
The goal is not entertainment or prediction theater. The goal is to build a cleaner decision-support system that can be reviewed, repeated, and improved over time.
Discipline Over Excitement
The report is meant to create structure, not urgency.
A setup appearing on the report does not mean it must be traded.
A missed trade is not a mistake if the entry never stayed actionable.
The goal is not to force participation. The goal is to wait for trades that still make sense when price, timing, and execution are considered together.
Do Not Chase Entries
Minor adjustment is one thing. Chasing is something else.
If price is running too far from the listed entry, reassess the trade instead of stretching the plan just to stay involved.
A practical rule is to keep any live execution adjustment small, typically within roughly 0.3% to 0.5% of the listed entry.
If you need more room than that, let the setup go or wait for the next opportunity.
Respect The Setup, Not The Story
Charts, social media, headlines, and conviction can all create emotional pressure. None of that replaces structure. If the price no longer matches the setup framework, the trade should not be justified by hope, bias, or narrative.
Good process means reading what price is doing now, not what we want it to do next.
Do Not Get Attached To Tickers
In short-term gains harvesting, attachment is expensive. A ticker is not a relationship, a mission, or an identity. It is a setup while the structure supports it, and nothing more.
The standard is simple: Buy/Sell, Enter/Exit, Move On. Getting emotionally attached to certain names can lead to chasing, holding too long, revenge trading, and ignoring structural change. Trade the setup, not the symbol.
Avoid Emotional Trading
Fear of missing out, revenge trading, frustration after a loss, and overconfidence after a win all weaken execution. Tide Trader works best when the user stays calm enough to follow the plan instead of reacting to emotion.
When emotion rises, position quality usually falls. Structured tools like a trailing exit may still close a trade at a loss, but they help remove emotion from the decision to exit. The right response is often to reduce size, tighten discipline, or pass entirely.
Risk Management Comes First
The report exists to help identify structured opportunities, but no ranking removes risk. Position size, exit discipline, and willingness to step aside still matter more than any one signal on the screen.
Capital preservation is not passive. It is an active decision repeated every day.
Diversification Helps Absorb Misses
Tide Trader should be treated like a basket framework, not a one-name certainty machine.
2 tickers: one miss still leaves the basket 50% right.
3 tickers: one miss still leaves 67% working.
4 tickers: one miss still leaves 75% working.
5 tickers: one miss still leaves 80% working.
The point is not that every basket will behave exactly that way. The point is that losses are normal. Assume at least one trade may not work, spread risk across multiple structured names when appropriate, and keep losers controlled enough that the winners still matter.
Minimize Losses, Do Not Expect Perfection
No report, model, or setup framework avoids every loser. The real edge comes from letting stronger trades work while refusing to let bad trades turn into oversized damage.
You do not need every trade to win. You need losses to stay manageable enough that the basket, process, and discipline can still produce forward progress over time.
Use The Report As A Filter
Tide Trader is designed to narrow the field, not to replace judgment. The report helps surface stronger candidates faster, but the trader still has to decide whether the setup remains clean, timely, and executable.
The best use of the report is to eliminate weak ideas quickly and focus only on names that still deserve attention.
New And Experienced Traders Need The Same Thing
Newer traders need structure because the market gives too many mixed signals. Experienced traders need structure because confidence can become complacency. In both cases, consistency matters more than proving a point.
A repeatable process will outlast excitement, intuition, and isolated good trades.
Patience Is A Real Edge
One of the strongest advantages a trader can have is the ability to wait. Not every report needs a trade. Not every ranked name needs an order. Not every move needs to be captured.
Patience protects capital, preserves emotional balance, and keeps the trader aligned with better-quality setups.
Markets Do Not Exist In A Vacuum
If Tide Trader existed in a vacuum, structural accuracy would be far cleaner. Markets do not allow that. Outside forces can interfere with otherwise strong setups at any time.
News
Earnings releases
Lawsuits
Geopolitical and political events
Analyst actions, sector rotation, and viral trends
All of these can shift investor sentiment in ways that are inherently unpredictable. Tide Trader identifies structure, but it cannot remove uncertainty from the market.
Uncontrollable Variables Are Part Of Trading
Sometimes a setup fails because the structure was weak. Sometimes it fails because an outside catalyst changes behavior faster than any model can react. Both realities exist, and traders have to respect both.
That is why diversification, patience, and loss control are so important. The goal is not absolute perfection. The goal is disciplined decision-making in a market that will always include uncontrollable variables.
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Top Up (Long) Picks - Confidence Ranked
Fast review cards for the highest-confidence intraday long-side setups
Execution Note: Entry levels are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Top Up (Long) Picks - Risk-Adjusted Rank
Fast review cards for the strongest intraday long-side blend of confidence, phase, and risk
Execution Note: Entry levels are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Top Up (Long) Picks - Highest Return
Fast review cards for the highest stretch-return intraday long-side setups
Execution Note: Entry levels are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Up (Long) Setups
Intraday continuation setups ranked by confidence and structure
Execution Note: Entry levels are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Up ETF Setups
Intraday ETF and leveraged-ETF long-side setups that qualified on their own structure.
Execution Note: These wrappers can move faster than the underlying stock. Use the same discipline around entry extension, but expect sharper acceleration once the move is active.
Top Down (Short) Picks - Confidence Ranked
Fast review cards for the highest-confidence intraday short-side setups
Execution Note: Entry levels are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Top Down (Short) Picks - Risk-Adjusted Rank
Fast review cards for the strongest intraday short-side blend of confidence, phase, and risk
Execution Note: Entry levels are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Top Down (Short) Picks - Highest Return
Fast review cards for the highest stretch-return intraday short-side setups
Execution Note: Entry levels are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Down (Short) Setups
Intraday continuation setups ranked by confidence and structure
Execution Note: Entry levels are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Down ETF Setups
Intraday ETF and leveraged-ETF downside setups that qualified on their own structure.
Execution Note: These wrappers can be faster and less forgiving than the stock side. Treat them as their own instrument and do not assume a one-for-one match with the common stock.
Wave Scout
Names that made the current Wave report.
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Navigation Note: Please use the in-site buttons and navigation controls only. Do not use your browser back button while moving through the Members Dashboard.
Top Up (Long) Picks - Confidence Ranked
Fast review cards for the highest-confidence leadership long-side setups
Execution Note: Entry levels are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Top Up (Long) Picks - Risk-Adjusted Rank
Fast review cards for the strongest leadership long-side blend of confidence, phase, and risk
Execution Note: Entry levels are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Top Up (Long) Picks - Highest Return
Fast review cards for the highest stretch-return leadership long-side setups
Execution Note: Entry levels are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Up (Long) Setups
Leadership setups ranked by confidence and cleaner big-board structure
Execution Note: Entry levels are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Top Down (Short) Picks - Confidence Ranked
Fast review cards for the highest-confidence leadership short-side setups
Execution Note: Entry levels are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Top Down (Short) Picks - Risk-Adjusted Rank
Fast review cards for the strongest leadership short-side blend of confidence, phase, and risk
Execution Note: Entry levels are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Top Down (Short) Picks - Highest Return
Fast review cards for the highest stretch-return leadership short-side setups
Execution Note: Entry levels are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Down (Short) Setups
Leadership setups ranked by confidence and cleaner big-board structure
Execution Note: Entry levels are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Horizon Scout
Names that made the current Horizon report.
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Top Up (Long) Picks - Confidence Ranked
Fast review cards for the highest-confidence options-underlying long-side setups
Execution Note: Options entries are driven by underlying structure. Live price action, spreads, implied volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Top Up (Long) Picks - Risk-Adjusted Rank
Fast review cards for the strongest options-underlying long-side blend of confidence, phase, and risk
Execution Note: Entry levels are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Top Up (Long) Picks - Highest Return
Fast review cards for the highest stretch-return options-underlying long-side setups
Execution Note: Options entries are driven by underlying structure. Live price action, spreads, implied volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Up (Long) Setups
Options-ready underlying setups ranked by confidence and cleaner intraday direction
Execution Note: Options entries are driven by underlying structure. Live price action, spreads, implied volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Top Down (Short) Picks - Confidence Ranked
Fast review cards for the highest-confidence options-underlying short-side setups
Execution Note: Options entries are driven by underlying structure. Live price action, spreads, implied volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Top Down (Short) Picks - Risk-Adjusted Rank
Fast review cards for the strongest options-underlying short-side blend of confidence, phase, and risk
Execution Note: Entry levels are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Top Down (Short) Picks - Highest Return
Fast review cards for the highest stretch-return options-underlying short-side setups
Execution Note: Options entries are driven by underlying structure. Live price action, spreads, implied volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Down (Short) Setups
Options-ready underlying setups ranked by confidence and cleaner intraday direction
Execution Note: Options entries are driven by underlying structure. Live price action, spreads, implied volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Surf Scout
Underlyings that made the current Surf report.
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Top Up (Long) Picks - Confidence Ranked
Fast review cards for the highest-confidence crypto long-side setups
Execution Note: Crypto entries are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Top Up (Long) Picks - Risk-Adjusted Rank
Fast review cards for the strongest crypto long-side blend of confidence, phase, and risk
Execution Note: Entry levels are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Top Up (Long) Picks - Highest Return
Fast review cards for the highest stretch-return crypto long-side setups
Execution Note: Crypto entries are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Up (Long) Setups
Crypto setups ranked by confidence and cleaner directional flow
Execution Note: Entry levels are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Top Down (Short) Picks - Confidence Ranked
Fast review cards for the highest-confidence crypto short-side setups
Execution Note: Crypto entries are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Top Down (Short) Picks - Risk-Adjusted Rank
Fast review cards for the strongest crypto short-side blend of confidence, phase, and risk
Execution Note: Entry levels are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Top Down (Short) Picks - Highest Return
Fast review cards for the highest stretch-return crypto short-side setups
Execution Note: Crypto entries are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Down (Short) Setups
Crypto setups ranked by confidence and cleaner directional flow
Execution Note: Entry levels are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Trident Scout
Names that made the current Trident report.
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Top Up (Long) Picks - Confidence Ranked
Fast review cards for the highest-confidence hard-asset long-side setups
Execution Note: Hard-asset entries are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Top Up (Long) Picks - Risk-Adjusted Rank
Fast review cards for the strongest hard-asset long-side blend of confidence, phase, and risk
Execution Note: Entry levels are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Top Up (Long) Picks - Highest Return
Fast review cards for the highest stretch-return hard-asset long-side setups
Execution Note: Hard-asset entries are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Up (Long) Setups
Hard-asset setups ranked by confidence and cleaner directional structure
Execution Note: Entry levels are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Top Down (Short) Picks - Confidence Ranked
Fast review cards for the highest-confidence hard-asset short-side setups
Execution Note: Hard-asset entries are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Top Down (Short) Picks - Risk-Adjusted Rank
Fast review cards for the strongest hard-asset short-side blend of confidence, phase, and risk
Execution Note: Entry levels are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Top Down (Short) Picks - Highest Return
Fast review cards for the highest stretch-return hard-asset short-side setups
Execution Note: Hard-asset entries are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Down (Short) Setups
Hard-asset setups ranked by confidence and cleaner directional structure
Execution Note: Entry levels are structured reference points. Live price action, spread, volatility, and timing may require minor adjustment for actual execution.
Forge Scout
Names that made the current Forge report.
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What Raft Does
Raft is the calmer stock branch of the platform. It narrows the focus into a simpler table-first list of selective multi-day setups instead of a heavier card-driven report experience.
The goal is to make the review process feel easier to follow for members who want structure without a high-pressure pace.
Why The Name Fits
A raft is meant to stay steady, carry the essentials, and move with purpose instead of speed. That is the role this branch plays in the product family.
Raft is built for members who want a calmer market workflow, fewer moving pieces, and less screen-time pressure while still reviewing organized stock setups.
Who Raft Is For
Raft is designed for newer market users, first-time Tide Trader members, busy members, travelers, and anyone who prefers a lower-touch workflow.
It is meant to feel more approachable than the faster branches while still giving members structured stock ideas to review.
How Raft Differs
Tide and Wave are built around more active opportunity windows and deeper layered review. Raft is intentionally simpler.
Instead of top-pick card stacks, Raft centers the experience on one primary table with cleaner setup fields, limit-entry discipline, and simpler exit planning.
How To Use Raft
Start with the table, review the setup type, compare the planned entry with the target and stretch values, then decide whether the hold profile and preferred exit fit your style.
If price runs too far from the planned entry or the setup feels unclear, the intended response is patience, not urgency.
What Simpler Does Not Mean
Raft is designed to be easier to read, not to remove the need for discipline. Members still need to manage position size, respect entries, and make their own trading decisions.
The lower-touch format is there to reduce confusion and noise, not to promise easier outcomes.
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What Tide Does
Tide scans approximately 150 liquid tickers across the trading day, filters them through volatility, liquidity, and participation rules, and then narrows them into a structured list of actionable setups.
The goal is not to show everything moving in the market. The goal is to reduce noise and surface the names with the clearest structure for decision-making.
Why The Name Fits
A tide comes through as part of a broader daily cycle, not as a constant series of fast repeats. That is the role Tide plays in the platform: it is built around the overnight branch and the next-trade-day rhythm rather than repeated same-session execution.
Tide is meant to help users stay aligned with that once-per-day cycle and focus on cleaner overnight continuation structure instead of treating every setup like an intraday wave.
What The Report Delivers
Each Tide run provides a ranked scout list, top-pick cards, broader setup tables, structured entry references, moderate and stretch exit targets, and a trailing-exit framework for trade management.
This gives users both a fast-read layer and a deeper review layer inside the same overnight-focused report.
Primary Optimization
Tide is optimized for overnight continuation-style setups. The system is designed to help identify names with enough structure, volatility, and participation to support late-session or scheduled-run trade planning into the next trade day.
It is not built as a pure intraday scalping engine, and users should read it through that lens.
How The System Thinks
The current framework emphasizes tradability over complexity. It looks for liquid names, meaningful movement, relative participation, structural context, and realistic trade-reference levels.
The report is meant to function as a structured filter and decision-support system, not as a replacement for judgment or execution discipline.
Why Multiple Scheduled Runs Matter
Tide runs throughout the day because market conditions change. Different watch windows can surface different leaders, cleaner entries, and more useful continuation setups depending on timing and participation.
That is why the dashboard includes both the current live report and archived report snapshots for comparison.
Overnight Role In The Platform
Tide is the overnight branch of the broader ecosystem. It is the foundation report for users focused on continuation, next-trade-day structure, and cleaner swing-style decision support.
As the ecosystem grows, Tide remains the overnight core while Wave handles the intraday branch.
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What Wave Is For
Wave is the intraday branch of the ecosystem. It focuses on same-session opportunity, cleaner intraday structure, and more immediate execution context than Tide.
The goal is to create a dedicated product for users who want a structured intraday workflow instead of repurposing an overnight report for a different job.
Why The Name Fits
Markets can produce multiple waves during a single session, with cleaner bursts of momentum appearing at different times of day. That is the role Wave plays in the product family: it is built for repeated intraday opportunity windows instead of the overnight hold cycle.
Wave is meant to help users stay in sync with those session-based moves and treat intraday structure as its own discipline rather than forcing Tide to handle a very different job.
How It Will Differ From Tide
Tide is built around overnight continuation. Wave is designed around market-hours participation, tighter execution timing, and higher sensitivity to open-session and power-hour behavior.
That means the cadence, signal weighting, and report timing will be different even though the dashboard style stays consistent.
Schedule Philosophy
Wave is built around a market-hours-focused rhythm, with a single pre-open setup read and tighter report coverage around the open and into power hour.
The aim is not constant refresh for its own sake. The aim is timely intraday decision support when the information matters most.
Execution Philosophy
Because Wave is intraday-focused, execution discipline matters even more. The report is built to support timely action, not emotional reaction, and not constant chasing.
That means the logic and entry framing for Wave are tighter and more session-aware than Tide.
Wave's Role In The Platform
Wave is the intraday complement to Tide. The long-term vision is a cleaner product ladder where overnight and intraday trading each have their own dedicated report logic instead of forcing one system to do both jobs poorly.
Wave is now live inside the Members Dashboard with its own report view, archive flow, and schedule page.
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What Horizon Is For
Horizon is the leadership branch of the ecosystem. It narrows the focus to Nasdaq and S&P 500 names so the report can spend its attention on cleaner, larger-cap market leaders instead of the full ticker universe.
The goal is to give users a broader market perspective without losing the structured trade framing that makes Tide Trader useful.
Why The Name Fits
The horizon is where the broader view begins. That is the role this branch plays in the product family: it looks outward toward major-index leadership instead of drilling into the full market or intraday noise.
Horizon is meant to help users identify cleaner big-board opportunity and stay oriented toward where leadership is actually developing.
Universe Focus
Horizon is intentionally more selective. It works from the Nasdaq and S&P 500 rather than the broader dynamic universe used elsewhere in the platform.
That narrower scope is deliberate. It should produce fewer names, but names that are often more liquid, more familiar, and easier to monitor across the session.
How It Differs From Tide And Wave
Tide is organized around overnight continuation. Wave is organized around same-session continuation. Horizon is organized around market leadership.
That means Horizon is less about covering everything and more about surfacing the cleaner leaders among the most watched major-index names, usually with an expected hold of about 1 to 2 trading days instead of a same-session trade.
Horizon's Role In The Platform
Horizon sits between the broad scanner mindset and the more specialized trader branches. It should help users answer a simple question: what are the major leaders actually doing right now?
That makes it a natural complement to Tide and Wave instead of a replacement for either one.
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What Surf Is For
Surf is the options branch of the ecosystem. It now has a family role: one path for directional structure, one for covered calls, one for secured puts, and one for premium-movement trading across option-ready stocks and ETFs.
The goal is not to scan every contract chain blindly. The goal is to surface the underlying names and option-management choices that support cleaner decisions for different kinds of options users.
The Surf Family
Surf Directional is the live core report for same-session underlying structure. Surf Board is the covered-call companion. Surf Leash is the secured-put companion. Surf Freestyle is the pure options-trading companion for buy calls and buy puts.
That separation keeps each tool aligned to user intent instead of forcing one options page to do four different jobs poorly.
Why The Name Fits
Surf is about working with movement that is already there instead of fighting it. That fits options trading well because option decisions often work best when the underlying is already showing organized structure, momentum, and usable session timing.
The name also keeps Surf visually tied to Tide and Wave while still giving the options branch its own identity.
Why Options Need Their Own Branch
Options add extra variables beyond simple price movement, including spread quality, contract liquidity, and the need for more disciplined timing. That means a good stock report is not automatically a good options report.
Surf exists so the platform can frame intraday opportunity through an options-first lens instead of asking users to translate everything manually from Tide or Wave.
Underlying Focus
Surf is still anchored to the underlying. It looks for stocks and ETFs with cleaner same-session structure, stronger participation, and more realistic move potential, then uses that underlying behavior as the basis for options review.
That keeps the branch grounded in tradable structure instead of drifting into chain noise without directional context.
Session Coverage
Surf runs around the parts of the day that matter most for options users: before the open, during opening expansion, through midday reevaluation, into afternoon focus, and then into power hour contracts.
That timing is meant to help options traders review opportunity when session structure is most actionable instead of watching chains constantly.
Surf's Role In The Platform
Surf is the specialty options branch of the Tide Trader ecosystem. It complements Tide, Wave, Horizon, Trident, and Forge by giving options users a dedicated branch family built around same-session underlying quality, strike planning, and premium-aware decision-making across stocks and ETFs.
It should help users approach options with more structure and less improvisation, whether they are trading directionally, writing calls, or selling puts for planned entry.
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Covered Call Planner Cards
Weekly strike frameworks built from the live Surf directional report for users already holding shares.
Execution Note: These strike levels are structured planning references built from the underlying setup. Final contract choice still depends on premium, expiry, and how willing you are to let the shares get called away.
Covered Call Table
Conservative, balanced, and aggressive weekly strike ideas with room-above-spot and assignment context.
Execution Note: Conservative tries to leave more upside room, Balanced aims for the middle ground, and Aggressive leans harder into premium capture with a higher chance of assignment.
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Secured Put Planner Cards
Paid-entry frameworks built from the live Surf directional report for users willing to own shares at the right level.
Execution Note: These strike levels are structured ownership references built from the underlying setup. Final contract choice still depends on premium, expiry, and whether you would actually be comfortable getting assigned.
Secured Put Table
Conservative, balanced, and aggressive put-strike ideas with room below spot and assignment intent.
Execution Note: Conservative sits farther below current price, Balanced aims for a cleaner paid entry, and Aggressive accepts a higher chance of ownership in exchange for stronger premium.
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Premium-Movement Cards
Buy-call and buy-put opportunity cards built from the live Surf directional report for traders focused on premium price movement.
Execution Note: Freestyle is still driven by underlying structure. These reads are meant to help with premium-movement opportunity, not replace contract selection, spread awareness, or expiration judgment.
Options Trading Table
Directional premium-capture ideas with contract bias, timing context, move potential, and event awareness.
Execution Note: Use this view to decide whether the setup looks better for buy calls, buy puts, or a pass. Stronger movement potential and cleaner timing matter more here than ownership intent.
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What Surf Board Is For
Surf Board is the covered-call companion inside the Surf family. It is built for users who already own shares and want a structured weekly strike framework instead of guessing where to write.
The goal is to balance premium capture, upside room, and assignment willingness in a way that still respects the underlying setup.
Who It Helps Most
Board is best for users who want income or controlled exit management from owned shares. It is especially useful when a name still has structure, but the user wants to monetize the position while deciding how much upside room to leave.
How It Differs From Surf Directional
Surf Directional asks whether the underlying setup is tradable. Surf Board starts after that question and asks how tightly or loosely to write calls against shares that are already owned.
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What Surf Leash Is For
Surf Leash is the secured-put companion inside the Surf family. It is built for users who want to get paid while waiting for stock ownership at a more controlled level.
The goal is not just selling premium. The goal is choosing paid-entry lanes that still make sense if assignment actually happens.
Who It Helps Most
Leash is best for users who want stock ownership, but not necessarily at current price. It helps frame how patient or aggressive to be with put strikes while still keeping the underlying structure in view.
How It Differs From Surf Directional
Surf Directional asks whether the name is setting up well. Surf Leash assumes the name is worth stalking and then helps translate that read into a paid stock-entry framework.
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What Surf Freestyle Is For
Surf Freestyle is the premium-movement companion inside the Surf family. It is built for users buying calls or puts to capture option price expansion from cleaner directional structure.
The focus is movement and timing, not stock ownership management.
Who It Helps Most
Freestyle is best for users who want a cleaner read on whether a name looks more like a lighter starter, a normal core position, or a stronger press-style options trade.
How It Differs From Surf Directional
Surf Directional stays anchored to the underlying setup. Surf Freestyle still respects that structure, but it translates the read into a premium-movement framework for traders using calls and puts directly.
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The Three Strike Lanes
Conservative leaves the most room and is best when keeping the shares matters most.
Balanced aims for a middle ground between premium capture and upside room.
Aggressive sits tighter to price and is more accepting of assignment.
How To Use Board In Real Life
Start with the assumption that you already own the shares.
Use Conservative if your main goal is keeping the shares while still collecting some premium.
Use Balanced if you want a middle ground between income and leaving the stock room to run.
Use Aggressive if you are more comfortable getting called away in exchange for tighter premium capture.
In practice, the strike shown is the stock price level you would center your covered call around for the week.
The report is helping answer: How tightly do I want to write calls against shares I already own?
Callaway Risk And Score
Callaway Risk is the plain-English read on how likely the shares are to get called away if price keeps pushing.
Callaway Score is the numeric version of that same pressure.
Higher numbers mean the strike is sitting tighter to the move and is more likely to lose the shares if price keeps running.
Premium Posture
Premium Posture frames the weekly attitude of the setup.
Room First means the planner prefers giving the stock more room to run, even if that usually means collecting a little less premium.
Balanced Premium means the planner sees a middle-ground tradeoff between premium income and leaving the shares some upside room.
Tighter Income means the planner is leaning harder into collecting premium now, even though that usually brings the strike closer and raises the chance of getting called away.
Optionability
Optionability is Surf's internal read on how usable the underlying looks for options.
It leans on tradability, movement, and overall options-friendliness rather than trying to predict a specific contract premium.
Higher values usually mean the name looks easier to work with for options because it has a cleaner combination of movement, tradability, and structure.
Lower values usually mean the name may still move, but the options setup may be harder to manage cleanly.
Move Zone
Move Zone is Surf's estimated weekly movement band around current price.
It helps explain why the three strike lanes are spaced the way they are.
Wider move zones usually call for more respect for volatility and assignment risk because the stock has more room to travel during the week.
Narrower move zones usually support calmer strike spacing, though they still do not guarantee a quiet week.
Room %
Room % shows how far the strike sits above current price.
Higher room generally means more freedom for the stock to move before assignment pressure gets serious.
Lower room usually means more premium, but also a tighter leash on the upside.
Best Fit
Best Fit is the plain-English use case the planner thinks matches the setup best.
Keep Shares means the setup looks better for a looser covered-call posture where keeping the shares matters more than squeezing the most premium out of the week.
Balanced Income means the setup looks better for a middle-ground covered-call posture where income matters but you still want some upside room.
Exit-If-Called means the setup may be suitable for tighter income if you are comfortable losing the shares at that strike.
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The Three Put Lanes
Conservative sits farther below current price and asks for more cushion.
Balanced aims for a cleaner middle-ground paid entry.
Aggressive sits closer to current price and is more willing to own sooner.
How To Use Leash In Real Life
Start with the assumption that you would be comfortable owning the stock if it gets put to you.
Use Conservative if you want more cushion and are willing to wait for a lower ownership price.
Use Balanced if you want a middle ground between premium collected and a realistic entry level.
Use Aggressive if you are more comfortable owning the shares sooner and want to sell the put closer to current price.
In practice, the strike shown is the stock price level you would center your secured put around for the week.
The report is helping answer: If I want to get paid while waiting to buy shares, how close or far below current price should I sell the put?
Assignment Likelihood And Score
Assignment Likelihood is the plain-English read on how likely ownership is if price pulls in.
Assignment Score is the numeric version of that same pressure.
Higher values mean the strike is sitting closer to where ownership is more likely if the stock dips.
Lower values mean the strike leaves more downside cushion before assignment becomes likely.
Ownership Fit
Ownership Fit frames the style of paid entry the setup supports.
Own Sooner means the setup supports selling a closer put because you would be comfortable buying the shares sooner if assigned.
Paid Patience means the setup looks better for a middle-ground put sale where you want premium but still want a sensible entry level.
Wait For Better Price means the setup looks better for a more patient put sale where price discipline matters more than maximizing premium.
Optionability
Optionability is Surf's internal read on how usable the underlying looks for options.
It helps separate cleaner option-ready names from names that may move but still be harder to manage well with options.
Higher values usually mean the name looks easier to work with for put-selling because the structure, movement, and tradability line up better.
Lower values usually mean you may want to be more selective or more patient before selling puts there.
Move Zone
Move Zone is Surf's estimated weekly movement band around current price.
It helps explain why the put lanes are spaced the way they are.
Wider move zones usually deserve more caution about assignment and price follow-through.
Gap %
Gap % shows how far the put strike sits below current price.
Higher gap usually means more cushion before ownership because price has to fall farther before the strike is threatened.
Lower gap usually means more premium, but also a greater chance of assignment because the strike is closer to current price.
Best Fit
Best Fit is the planner's plain-English read on how the setup is best used.
Own Sooner means the structure can support a closer paid-entry posture if you are already comfortable owning the shares.
Paid Entry means a middle-ground secured-put posture where you want to collect premium but still care about the entry price.
Patient Entry means wait for better price if ownership happens and do not rush the put sale too close to current price.
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Buy Call And Buy Put
Buy Call means the setup currently looks stronger on the long side for premium expansion.
Buy Put means the setup currently looks stronger on the short side.
This is not a guarantee. It is the report's directional read for premium movement.
How To Use Freestyle In Real Life
Start by looking at whether the report says Buy Call or Buy Put.
Buy Call means the stock or ETF looks better for an upside premium trade.
Buy Put means the stock or ETF looks better for a downside premium trade.
Then use Starter, Core, or Press to judge how strongly the report wants to lean into that idea.
Finally, use Entry Framework to decide what the underlying needs to do before the options entry makes sense.
The report is helping answer: Should I be looking for a call or put here, and how strong is the setup if I want to trade the premium move?
Starter, Core, And Press
Starter means a lighter-conviction options setup. It may still be tradable, but the report is saying do not lean on it as heavily.
Core means the cleaner middle-ground setup. It is the more standard-quality read of the three.
Press means the strongest current movement-and-timing read. It is the setup the report thinks has the best reason to lean in more aggressively.
These labels are mainly about setup strength and trade posture, not a direct promise that one lane is automatically low risk.
A Starter setup can still carry real risk because it may be less developed or less clean. A Press setup can still carry real risk too, especially if options are expensive or the move is already fast.
The simplest way to read them is: Starter = lighter, Core = standard, Press = strongest current read.
Expansion And Timing Scores
Expansion Score estimates how supportive the underlying is for option price movement.
Timing Score estimates how favorable the current structure looks for acting now rather than just liking the name in general.
Higher values in both usually point to cleaner premium-movement conditions.
A higher Expansion Score means the setup looks more capable of producing the kind of stock move that can help option premium expand.
A higher Timing Score means the setup looks more actionable now instead of just being interesting in a general sense.
Optionability
Optionability is Surf's internal read on how usable the underlying looks for options.
It helps prioritize names that are better suited for options activity instead of only looking at stock movement.
Higher values usually mean the name looks easier to work with for directional options because it combines better structure, tradability, and movement quality.
Lower values usually mean the stock may still move, but the options setup may be less efficient or less clean to trade.
Move Zone
Move Zone is Surf's estimated weekly movement band around current price.
It helps show how much room the underlying may have for premium expansion.
Think of it as the report's rough movement map for the week, not as a promise that price will reach the full zone.
Momentum Window
Momentum Window is the report's read on what kind of move-development window the setup is in right now.
Lighter Build Window means the move may be starting to organize, but it does not yet look forceful enough to treat as a stronger premium-expansion setup.
Active Window means the move is underway and tradable, with enough structure and participation to deserve attention.
Press Window means the move currently looks more forceful, better timed, and more supportive of a stronger premium-expansion posture.
Entry Framework
Entry Framework translates the underlying setup into a plain-English trigger style.
The stock or ETF price is the trigger first. The option premium comes second.
Breakout through means wait for the underlying to push through that price level before considering the options entry.
Pullback near means wait for the underlying to retrace toward that level before considering the options entry.
Think of it as: Breakout through = buy strength and Pullback near = buy the retest.
The framework is there to help with timing. It does not mean any option premium is automatically a good price just because the stock hit the level.
Best Fit
Best Fit is the planner's plain-English use case for the setup.
Starter Call means the setup currently looks better for a lighter-conviction upside premium trade.
Directional Call means the setup looks like a more standard upside call trade built around a cleaner bullish read.
Momentum Call means the setup looks stronger for a more forceful upside premium-expansion trade.
Starter Put means the setup currently looks better for a lighter-conviction downside premium trade.
Directional Put means the setup looks like a more standard downside put trade built around a cleaner bearish read.
Momentum Put means the setup looks stronger for a more forceful downside premium-expansion trade.
It is meant to help users quickly understand the flavor of the trade, not replace judgment on sizing or contract choice.
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What Trident Is For
Trident is the crypto branch of the ecosystem. It focuses on always-on digital-asset flow, higher participation bursts, and structured long/short review across the global trading cycle.
The goal is not to track every token. The goal is to surface the cleaner crypto names showing enough movement, liquidity, and directional structure to be worth attention.
Why The Name Fits
A trident is direct, sharp, and designed to move through difficult conditions. That fits crypto better than a slower market metaphor because digital assets can rotate quickly and stay active around the clock.
The branch is meant to help users stay structured inside a market that can feel fast, noisy, and emotional.
How Crypto Differs
Crypto does not follow the same session boundaries as equities. Participation, momentum, and volatility can surge at different points in the global cycle, and the market does not shut down at the end of the US cash session.
That is why Trident uses its own watch windows and its own flow-oriented filtering rather than simply copying Tide or Wave timing.
What The Report Delivers
Each Trident run provides a ranked scout list, top-pick cards, broader setup tables, structured entry references, moderate and stretch exits, and an exit-trail framework for trade management.
This gives users the same fast-read and full-detail structure they already know from the rest of the platform, adapted to crypto behavior.
24 / 7 Flow Matters
Because crypto never really closes, timing matters differently. Some watches are intended to catch Asia transition, Europe flow, US risk windows, or late-cycle rotation instead of just the standard equity trading day.
That schedule should help users stay oriented to when meaningful crypto movement is more likely to develop.
Trident's Role In The Platform
Trident is the specialty crypto branch of the Tide Trader ecosystem. It complements Scout, Tide, Wave, and Horizon by covering a market that is structurally different from stocks and options.
It should give crypto-focused users a structured process without forcing them to treat digital assets like ordinary equities.
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What Forge Is For
Forge is the hard-asset branch of the ecosystem. It focuses on gold, silver, uranium, lithium, major miners, and related strategic-material structure across the London and US session cycle.
The goal is not to scan every commodity-adjacent symbol. The goal is to surface the cleaner metals names showing enough movement, liquidity, and directional structure to be worth attention.
Why The Name Fits
A forge is where material is shaped with heat, pressure, and structure. That fits this branch well because metals, uranium, and lithium names can look steady on the surface while still requiring disciplined timing and structured trade management underneath.
The name also gives Forge its own identity inside the family without forcing hard-asset markets into a crypto or equity metaphor that does not really fit.
Why Metals Deserve Their Own Branch
Precious metals behave differently from the broader equity universe. Gold and silver often respond to rates, the dollar, risk sentiment, macro headlines, and safe-haven flows in ways that do not line up cleanly with ordinary stock leadership.
That is why Forge gets its own watch windows and a tighter hard-asset universe rather than being treated like just another equity report.
Universe Focus
Forge works from a curated hard-asset universe that includes core gold and silver ETFs, selected physical-trust vehicles, major miners, a focused uranium sleeve, and a tight lithium sleeve built around liquid ETFs and leading strategic-material names.
That narrower scope is deliberate. It should produce fewer names, but names that are easier to monitor and more aligned with genuine hard-asset flow.
Session Coverage
Forge is structured around the parts of the day that matter most for hard-asset behavior, including London flow, the US open, midday metals structure, uranium-sensitive US trading windows, and the closing metals window.
That timing should help users stay oriented to when meaningful metals, uranium, and lithium movement is more likely to develop instead of simply reusing the standard Tide or Wave cadence.
Forge's Role In The Platform
Forge is the specialty hard-asset branch of the Tide Trader ecosystem. It complements Scout, Tide, Wave, Horizon, and Trident by covering a macro-sensitive metals and materials space that deserves its own structure and timing.
It should give hard-asset-focused users a structured process without forcing them to treat gold, silver, uranium, and lithium names exactly like ordinary equities.
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Glossary Note: If any report terminology, metric, or label is unclear, open Trading Terms before using the report for a decision.
Start With The Header
Up (Long) Setups and Down (Short) Setups show how many actionable names survived the full narrowing process and cleared the report's profitability standards.
Market Session tells you the context of the scan.
Watch shows which scheduled run produced the report.
Scheduled Time shows when that watch is intended to run across time zones.
Use Top Pick Cards For Fast Review
Confidence Ranked cards surface the cleanest directional reads first.
Risk-Adjusted Rank cards surface the strongest blend of confidence, phase, and risk.
Highest Return cards surface the names with the biggest projected upside or downside extension.
Each ticker only appears once across those three card rows, so the report shows more unique opportunities instead of repeating the same name in every section.
Each card gives the ticker, confidence, risk-adjusted rank, phase/risk context, entry, exit trail, and both moderate and stretch return targets.
Choose The Row That Matches Your Intent
Do I want the cleanest directional read? Start with the Confidence Ranked row.
Do I want the best risk-adjusted structure? Start with the Risk-Adjusted Rank row.
Do I want the biggest return potential? Start with the Highest Return row.
Use The Tables For Full Detail
Up (Long) Setups and Down (Short) Setups show the full ranked list of setups that survived the narrowing process with more fields visible at once.
The most important columns are typically Event, Conf, Risk Rank, Pullbk, Breakout, Pref, Moderate, Stretch, Trail, and Exit Pref.
If any of those labels are unclear, use the glossary before acting on them.
What Sector / Type Means
Sector / Type gives quick context about what kind of exposure the setup represents.
For common stocks, that usually means the industry sector. For ETFs, metals, crypto, or other specialty names, it may describe the asset type, material theme, or exposure category instead.
What Confidence Means
Confidence is a structured probability-style ranking signal, not a guarantee. It blends tradability, participation, directional quality, and structural context.
The legend color scale helps you quickly spot stronger setups, but users should still apply judgment and risk management.
How To Use Phase And Risk
Phase describes where the setup sits in its current structure. Risk gives a fast read on how clean or extended that setup appears.
In general, cleaner lower-risk structures may be easier to work with, while high-risk or extended names may require more caution.
What Risk-Adjusted Rank Means
Risk-Adjusted Rank is a practical setup-quality score on a 0% to 100% scale. It starts with confidence, then adjusts for phase and structural risk.
The most ideal setups usually show both strong Confidence and a strong Risk-Adjusted Rank. A high-confidence Extended / High-risk setup can still be directionally strong, but it may rank lower than a cleaner Early or Reset setup.
What The Event Column Means
Event flags when a setup is sitting near a quarterly earnings catalyst or recent earnings reaction. It is there to help users recognize when a name may not behave like an ordinary setup.
After Close Today and Before Open Tomorrow are the highest near-term event-risk labels.
Within 3 Trading Days is an early warning that earnings are getting close.
Post-Earnings means the name is still near a recent earnings event and may remain more reactive than usual.
Depending on the report branch, a near-term event can also lower confidence, raise the risk label, or remove the setup entirely if the event risk is too close.
An event label does not automatically mean the trade is invalid, but it should make users more deliberate about risk and expectations.
Entry Structure
Pref identifies which entry style the current model favors.
If it says Pullback, the setup is better suited to waiting for retracement into the pullback level.
If it says Breakout, the setup is better suited to waiting for price confirmation through the breakout level rather than entering early.
Pullbk and Breakout show the actionable entry levels.
Exit Structure
Exit Pref indicates which exit style the current setup more naturally favors.
If it says Limit, the setup currently looks better suited to using the listed exit targets as fixed-profit objectives.
If it says Trail, the setup currently looks better suited to letting the move develop while managing it with a trailing exit.
Moderate and Stretch remain the projected targets, while Trail shows the exit-trail amount used for structured management.
A Limit style exit usually requires more user monitoring because it only exits if price reaches the target.
A Trail can help cap reversal damage, but it can still sell the trade at a loss if the move never develops or reverses too quickly.
Some experienced stock holders may choose to sell covered calls while waiting for a better stock exit, but that is an advanced income-and-exit management choice, not part of the standard Tide exit framework.
Execution Note
Entry levels are structured trade-reference points, not guaranteed fills. Depending on live price action, spread, liquidity, and timing, small execution adjustments may be needed.
Use the listed levels as the framework, then apply judgment to actual order placement as market conditions develop.
Use Tide Scout As Breadth Context
Tide Scout is the ranked candidate grid shown near the bottom of the report.
It reflects the broader pool of names that stayed live in the system scan for that run.
From that broader pool, Tide Trader only carries forward setups that also meet the report's final quality standards for the main cards and tables.
Private Beta Note
This dashboard is in private beta. Layouts, calculations, labels, and product sections may evolve as the system improves.
Use the report as a structured decision-support tool, and expect ongoing refinement as Tide Trader moves toward full launch.
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BackTesting Note: We built this system, we stand behind it, and we are not afraid to share how it performs. This page explains what the scorecard is measuring and how members can use it with confidence as the platform matures.
What BackTesting Means Here
BackTesting is the system’s way of checking how recent report setups actually performed after their hold windows had enough time to finish.
The goal is to keep the platform honest about what is working, what is weaker, and where the system still needs improvement.
What The Scorecard Is Trying To Do
The scorecard exists to make the system better and to share that progress openly. It gives a plain-English performance snapshot so the team can keep improving branch quality, watch quality, and score alignment in the open.
That gives members a clear view of which branches and watch times are holding up best right now while the weaker areas continue to improve.
How To Read Branch Scores
The branch score at the top of each card gives a fast read on how that report family has been performing in the latest matured rolling sample.
Mod Win Rate shows how often setups reached the moderate objective.
Str Win Rate shows how often setups reached the stretch objective.
Audited Setups shows how many matured setups were included in that sample.
How To Read Watch Win Rates
The watch section breaks the branch down by scheduled run time so members can see which windows are performing best right now.
During beta, that is often the fastest way to tell where the system is strongest and where it is still being optimized.
Key point: Higher win-rate watches usually deserve more trust than weaker watches while the weaker ones are still being tuned.
What The Color Breakouts Mean
The color sections show how confidence colors and risk-adjusted colors have actually been performing inside each branch and watch.
That helps the team judge whether stronger-looking scores are really lining up with better outcomes instead of just sounding stronger on paper.
Daily In Beta, Weekly After Launch
During beta, the scorecard updates daily so the team and beta users can review the most current matured results while the system is being tightened.
After full launch, the plan is to keep a weekly scorecard so members can continue to see the results and use the system with confidence in how it performs.
How To Use It During Beta
Start by looking at which branches are holding up best overall.
Then check the stronger watch times inside that branch.
Use the live report as normal, but be more selective around watches that are still showing weaker win rates.
Use stronger recent performance as added confidence, then keep applying the same discipline, sizing, and trade management standards.
How Members Can Use It
The scorecard helps members lean toward the stronger parts of the system with more clarity. It gives useful context around which branches and watch times have been performing best in the recent matured sample.
That makes it easier to use the live reports with a better sense of where the system is currently strongest.
Why Some Areas Still Look Weaker
Some branches, directions, or watch times still look weaker because the system is being improved in the open during beta.
That visibility is part of the process. It helps the team keep tightening the softer areas while members can see the system getting stronger over time.
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Market Tone Note: This page is meant to help members think about environment and posture. It is not a promise that any one label can explain every move in the market.
What Market Tone Means
Market Tone is a plain-English read on the kind of environment traders are stepping into. It is meant to describe the feel of the tape, not predict every outcome.
The goal is to help members adjust posture, selectivity, and expectations before they decide which report family fits the day best.
Trend Expansion
This is the cleaner, stronger environment. Directional movement is carrying, leadership is following through, and continuation setups usually have more room to work.
Traders should still avoid late chasing, but this tone usually supports cleaner continuation behavior than a mixed or choppy tape.
Key point: Favor the cleaner continuation setups, but do not chase extended names.
Orderly Continuation
This is a constructive environment with steadier follow-through than outright breakout heat. Moves are developing, but they are doing it in a more controlled way.
Patience still matters, but quality continuation setups often deserve more trust here than they would in a noisier session.
Key point: Stay patient and lean into the cleaner setups rather than forcing speed.
Mixed Rotation
Some pockets are working while others are fading, and leadership can shift around during the day. Breadth may not line up cleanly with what a few big names are doing.
This usually favors selectivity, cleaner entries, and resisting the urge to treat every headline or pop as broad market strength.
Key point: Be selective and trust only the cleaner names instead of treating strength as broad.
Range / Chop
This is the environment where price action gets noisier, follow-through becomes less reliable, and setups can look fine at first before stalling out.
That usually means smaller size, more patience, and a higher bar for entries instead of forcing activity just to stay involved.
Key point: Size down, slow down, and raise the bar for every trade.
Defensive Conditions
This is a more defensive environment. Upside follow-through is weaker, failed bounces are more common, and traders usually need stronger proof before trusting long exposure.
That usually means slower entries, more skepticism toward upside continuation, and more respect for downside pressure until conditions improve.
Key point: Trade smaller, stay more defensive, and wait for cleaner confirmation before getting aggressive.
How To Use Tone Without Overreacting
Market Tone should shape posture, not replace judgment. It is there to help members think about selectivity, pacing, and what kinds of setups deserve more trust.
The best use is usually to adjust behavior around the reports, not to force one big all-or-nothing conclusion about the entire market.
How The System Will Eventually Populate It
The long-term plan is for the dashboard to infer Market Tone from platform-native market and report behavior.
The aim is a steadier, more repeatable read of the environment as the system matures.
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Basics Note: This page explains the report language in everyday terms. If you want the more exact metric and label definitions afterward, open Trading Terms.
What A Setup Means
A setup is a trade opportunity that currently meets the system's conditions. It does not mean the trade is guaranteed to work. It means the ticker is organized enough to deserve attention.
Think of it as a name that earned a closer look, not an automatic order.
What Structure Means
Structure is the shape price is forming. It answers a simple question: does this move still look organized, or is it getting messy?
Cleaner structure usually means price is easier to work with.
Messier structure usually means more hesitation, noise, or reversal risk.
Entry And Exit
An entry is the price area where the trade would begin. An exit is the price area where the trade would be closed.
Entry is where you get involved.
Exit is where you take profit, limit damage, or end the trade.
Long And Short
Long means the setup wants price to go up. Short means the setup wants price to go down.
You do not need to think about this as advanced market language. It is simply the direction the trade is trying to capture.
Pullback And Breakout
Pullback means waiting for price to come back into a better area before entering. Breakout means waiting for price to confirm strength or weakness by moving through a key level.
Pullback is closer to waiting for a better price.
Breakout is closer to waiting for confirmation.
Moderate And Stretch
Moderate is the closer, more conservative exit target. Stretch is the farther, more ambitious exit target.
They are not promises. They are structured reference points for what a smaller move and a larger move could look like if the trade develops well.
Limit And Trail
A Limit exit is a fixed target. A Trail exit is a moving protective exit that follows price as the trade moves in your favor.
Limit requires price to actually reach the target.
Trail helps reduce emotion because the exit follows a rule instead of hesitation or hope.
What Phase Means
Phase describes where the setup sits in its current move. It helps explain whether the trade still looks fresh, is trying to rebuild, or may already be getting stretched.
Early usually means the move still looks relatively fresh.
Reset usually means price cooled off and may be trying to rebuild.
Extended usually means the move has already traveled a meaningful distance.
Unclear usually means the structure is mixed or less organized.
Phase matters because it helps shape the risk label. As a setup gets more extended or less clear, timing risk usually increases.
Confidence And Risk
Confidence is the system's ranking signal for how clean and tradable the setup currently looks. Risk is the caution label that reminds you how much structural uncertainty is still present.
Higher confidence does not mean guaranteed profit. It means the setup currently looks more organized than lower-ranked names around it.
How To Use This Page
Use Trading Basics first if the report language feels unfamiliar.
Use Trading Terms next if you want the more exact definitions.
Use How To Read Report after that to see how the pieces fit together on the actual report pages.
Navigation Note: Please use the in-site buttons and navigation controls only. Do not use your browser back button while moving through the Members Dashboard.
Navigation Note: Please use the in-site buttons and navigation controls only. Do not use your browser back button while moving through the Members Dashboard.
Navigation Note: Please use the in-site buttons and navigation controls only. Do not use your browser back button while moving through the Members Dashboard.
Navigation Note: Please use the in-site buttons and navigation controls only. Do not use your browser back button while moving through the Members Dashboard.
Navigation Note: Please use the in-site buttons and navigation controls only. Do not use your browser back button while moving through the Members Dashboard.
Navigation Note: Please use the in-site buttons and navigation controls only. Do not use your browser back button while moving through the Members Dashboard.
Navigation Note: Please use the in-site buttons and navigation controls only. Do not use your browser back button while moving through the Members Dashboard.
Navigation Note: Please use the in-site buttons and navigation controls only. Do not use your browser back button while moving through the Members Dashboard.
Navigation Note: Please use the in-site buttons and navigation controls only. Do not use your browser back button while moving through the Members Dashboard.
Navigation Note: Please use the in-site buttons and navigation controls only. Do not use your browser back button while moving through the Members Dashboard.
ATR
Average True Range is a volatility measure. In this report it helps estimate how much a ticker typically moves and is part of the exit-target logic.
ATR%
ATR% expresses ATR as a percentage of price. It makes volatility easier to compare across low-priced and high-priced stocks.
RVOL / Intraday RVOL
Relative Volume compares current trading activity to a recent baseline. Higher RVOL suggests stronger participation and more active price discovery.
Scout Score
Scout Score is the early ranking signal used to prioritize RVOL-qualified candidates before the final narrowing logic is applied.
Confidence
Confidence is a structured probability-style ranking signal, not a guarantee. It blends volatility, participation, directional quality, and setup structure.
Risk-Adjusted Rank
Risk-Adjusted Rank is a 0% to 100% setup-quality score that combines confidence with phase and risk. It helps users compare which setups are cleaner to work with, not just which ones have the highest directional confidence.
Sector / Type
Sector / Type shows the main industry sector, asset class, material theme, or exposure category tied to the setup.
That means a stock might show something like Technology or Financial Services, while an ETF or specialty asset might show something like Index ETF, Crypto, Gold, or Uranium.
Phase
Phase describes where the setup sits in its current structure.
Early: the setup still looks relatively fresh, with room for the move to develop if participation holds.
Reset: the setup has pulled back or cooled off and may be trying to rebuild in a cleaner area.
Extended: the setup has already moved meaningfully and may offer less room with more timing risk.
Unclear: the structure is mixed or less clean, so direction may still work but the setup is not as organized.
Risk
Risk is the structural caution label paired with phase. Cleaner setups tend to carry lower risk, while unclear or extended setups carry higher risk.
Long
Long means the setup is structured for upside movement. The trader benefits if price rises from entry toward the listed exits.
Short
Short means the setup is structured for downside movement. The trader benefits if price falls from entry toward the listed exits.
Pullback
Pullback is the lower-risk retracement-style entry level. It assumes the trader wants price to pull back before entering.
Breakout
Breakout is the continuation-style entry level. It assumes the trader wants confirmation through strength or weakness before entering.
Preferred
Preferred identifies which entry style the current model favors for that setup.
If it says Pullback, the setup is better suited to waiting for retracement into the pullback level. If it says Breakout, the setup is better suited to waiting for confirmation through the breakout level rather than entering early.
Exit Pref
Exit Pref identifies which exit style the current setup currently favors: a fixed Limit target approach or a Trail approach.
If it says Limit, the setup currently looks better suited to taking profits at the listed targets. If it says Trail, the setup currently looks better suited to letting the move develop while using trailing management to respond to reversals.
This is a management preference, not a guarantee. It helps frame whether the setup currently looks better suited to fixed target monitoring or to trailing management.
Limit Exit
Limit Exit means the setup currently favors using the listed exit targets as fixed target objectives rather than leaning primarily on trailing management.
A limit exit generally requires more user monitoring because it will only sell if price actually reaches the target. It does not automatically close the trade if price reverses away from the target.
Moderate Exit
Moderate Exit is the nearer projected exit target. It is designed to represent the more conservative structured return objective.
Stretch Exit
Stretch Exit is the farther projected exit target. It represents the larger move scenario and usually carries more execution uncertainty.
RTN $ / RTN %
RTN means return. The dollar version shows the projected move in dollars, and the percent version shows the projected move relative to entry.
Exit Trail
Exit Trail is the structured trailing amount used for trade management. It is not a guarantee of fill, but a management reference for protecting gains.
A trailing exit follows the trend as price moves in the trade's favor and can help limit loss when the move reverses. It is still possible for a trail-based exit to close the trade at a loss if the setup does not extend enough before rolling over, but it also helps remove emotion from the exit decision by using a predefined structure instead of hesitation or hope.
Covered Calls For Exit Management
Covered calls are an advanced options strategy where a trader who already owns the shares sells call options against that stock to collect premium income.
Some traders use covered calls when they do not want to exit the shares at a loss and would rather collect premium while waiting for a better stock exit. That can be a valid choice for some users, but it changes the trade from a simple stock-management decision into an options-management decision with its own risks, obligations, and upside cap.
In this platform, covered calls should be understood as an optional advanced management tool, not as the default meaning of Limit, Trail, or the listed exit targets.
Market Session
Market Session identifies whether the report was generated during pre-market, market hours, after-hours, or another defined watch period.
Watch
Watch is the named scheduled run that produced the report, such as Morning Leaders, Lunch Time, Scout Watch, or Last Chance Run.