The Opportunity Radar grid surfaces every ticker on your watchlist that has at least one opportunity signal firing today. If you have never looked at it before, the rows look cryptic. This article explains what each row means, so you can scan the grid in under 10 seconds and know where to look next.

One Row = One Ticker × One Day

Each row on the grid is a single ticker's daily snapshot. The grid does not show every stock you track — it shows only the ones where at least one opportunity rule fired in the last 24 hours. Empty grid = quiet market day. A crowded grid = many names lit up simultaneously, often a regime shift.

1
Ticker + company name
Left-most column. Click the ticker to jump straight to its data page. The small label underneath is the ticker's preset group (e.g. "High-Dividend," "UK Yield 3," "Semis") so you can group-scan instead of reading every row.
2
Signal badges
Coloured pills indicating which rule(s) fired. Green = opportunity (IV high, price near floor, oversold RSI). Amber = watch-only (earnings approaching, ex-dividend within 7 days). Red = risk tag travelling with the opportunity (sector stress, gap history).
3
Conviction score
Right-most column, 0-100. This is not a recommendation — it is the count of independent signals firing on this ticker, weighted by historical hit rate. Scan the column top-down; anything > 60 deserves a look.

The 10-Second Scan Routine

The grid is sorted by conviction score descending, so the top rows are always the highest-signal names. A fast daily routine:

  1. Read top 5 rows only. Ignore anything below row 5 unless you have extra time.
  2. Look at the signal badges, not the score. The score tells you "something is firing"; the badges tell you what.
  3. Click through any row with a red badge alongside green. That combination means an opportunity exists but a known risk is attached — the data page will explain which.
If the grid is empty for 2+ days, the opportunity rules themselves may be too tight for current market volatility. Check the threshold config rather than concluding "nothing is happening."

What the Grid Is NOT

The grid is not a buy list. It is a shortlist of tickers worth investigating today. Every firing signal is a hypothesis that still needs context — valuation, position size, earnings proximity, your own thesis. Treat the radar as a search-narrower, not a decision-maker.

One row = one ticker × one day
Read top 5 rows · look at badges · click red-on-green
The grid narrows the search — it does not replace your judgement

Open the Opportunity Radar →