The problem it solves isn't too little information. It's too much noise.
What traders lack is rarely more posts — it's a filter with a cool head. X is full of charts, positions, sarcasm, and ads, with the occasional real signal flashing past. X Signal Tracker first decides whether a post is actually a trade view before analyzing anything further.
You don't see the raw feed. You see something closer to a trader's notebook: who's discussing which name, long or short, whether there's an entry, a stop, a target, or a trigger — and whether high-quality accounts are converging or splitting on it.
- Find genuine trade intent firstPosts with a clear ticker, a clear direction, and execution details get extracted first; vague sentiment, small talk, and empty retweets get filtered out.
- Compress signal strength into a readable takeawayThe system grades strength but spares you the scoring process. All you need to know is why a signal is worth a look — and where its risk sits.
- Watch cross-account convergenceWhen several high-quality accounts call the same name directionally, it spells out the agreement and the splits — helping you judge whether a new market theme is forming.
What you get is a briefing that's short, sharp, and skimmable.
- 01
Market Signal Summary
Organized by theme — the day's most discussed, most contested, and most directionally aligned names come first.
- 02
Signal Table
Only clear trade signals and strong directional views make the cut, so you can scan account, tier, ticker, direction, and time in seconds.
- 03
Key Signal Details
At most a handful of strong signals get expanded, each with a few lines on the original intent and the trade parameters — no long threads eating your attention.
- 04
Verification Reminders
Flags which signals come from public social media and which need further checking — so hype doesn't get mistaken for certainty.
When should you use it?
Pre-market, use it to see which names global traders are watching. Intraday, check whether a name is drawing multi-account convergence. After the close, review the day's genuinely valuable signals — instead of being dragged around by viral sentiment.
It won't make the judgment call for you, and it won't dress up public social media as intelligence. What it does is simpler and more important: turn down the noise, and put the trade ideas worth your own second look on the table.