Sentiment Engine
Markets move on more than just price. Tone, narrative and news flow all influence how traders behave. The Sentiment Engine helps you see this clearly by translating scattered information into intuitive scores and labels that sit alongside your technical view across Forex, Commodities, Stocks, ETFs, Indices and Crypto.
From noisy headlines to a clear sentiment read
- Summarizes market tone for each symbol into a numeric score and verbal label.
- Makes it easier to see when sentiment supports or challenges your trade idea.
- Helps you notice shifts in narrative that might not be obvious from charts alone.
- Gives context for how markets may react around events or key levels.
Use sentiment as a risk filter, not a crystal ball
Sentiment is most powerful when it is used to guide risk and timing, not to force every trade. FlexiAnalysis is built with this in mind: the Sentiment Engine is there to help you decide when to press, when to be cautious and when to stand aside — especially when technical structure and sentiment disagree.
Interpreting sentiment labels
- Strongly Negative: tone and news flow are broadly against risk in that market.
- Negative: sentiment leans against longs but is not extreme.
- Neutral: no clear lean; structure and events matter more.
- Positive: tone and news flow lean in favor of bullish scenarios.
- Strongly Positive: strong supportive narrative behind bullish ideas.
Example sentiment-based rules
Many traders and desks find it useful to set simple, explicit guidelines such as:
- Allow full risk only when structure, bias and sentiment agree.
- Cut position size when sentiment is Neutral or mixed.
- Avoid fresh entries directly against strongly negative or positive sentiment.
- Pay extra attention to sentiment shifts after key events or news clusters.
Combining sentiment with education and coaching
For educators and mentors, having a clear sentiment read alongside levels and charts makes it easier to talk about why a trade made sense at the time — or why it was riskier than it looked. Students and junior traders can see how experienced traders weigh structure and sentiment together instead of treating them as separate worlds.