A rules-based engine that enters and exits on RSI, EMA and VWAP signals over 1-minute bars — with daily loss caps, position limits, and an automatic flatten before the close.
⚠ Day trading carries a high risk of loss and isn't suitable for everyone. See the risk note below.
The engine trades a single session at a time — sizing every entry off your risk budget and flattening everything before the bell.
Entries trigger on tunable momentum and trend signals — an EMA cross confirmed by RSI, with an optional above-VWAP filter. No discretionary guessing.
Each entry risks a fixed percentage of equity. A daily loss cap, a concurrent-position limit, and a gross-exposure ceiling keep a bad day contained.
Open positions auto-flatten before the 4:00 PM ET close, and the session resets each morning. No overnight surprises.
An entry only fires when momentum, trend, and intraday strength line up — each one tunable to your style.
You set the risk per trade and how a winner is managed; the account caps do the rest.
Plus an optional Max $ per entry cap, and filters for liquidity and quality — Min price, Max spread %, Rel-volume min, Open skip, Cooldown, and a SPY > 20EMA regime gate.
One-click bundles fill the form so you're not starting from a blank slate — every field stays editable afterward.
Keeps the entry filters strict — smaller bets, above-VWAP and SPY-regime checks on — so trades only fire on clean setups.
Loosens the gates — faster EMAs, a wider cross window, lower RSI and volume bars, filters off — so it trades more readily. More activity, more risk.
Looks at the symbol's recent daily price action and fills a ride / protect / stand-aside set, showing its reasoning. It's parameters to review — facts, not advice.
Intraday trading involves a substantial risk of loss and is not suitable for every investor. Frequent trading can amplify losses, and stops may fill worse than expected on gaps or fast markets. Daily loss caps and position limits reduce — but do not eliminate — that risk. Access requires accepting a one-time risk acknowledgement, and you should only trade capital you can afford to lose.