Every directional call is logged before the move and scored after the window closes, so traders can judge Aurora on outcomes, not opinions.
Built for traders who want clean signals, clear proof, and a reason to trust the next call.
Session-level calls from the killzone engine. This is the part traders use to judge whether the session bias actually held.
News-driven consensus built from event impact on assets. Useful when you care about a specific headline and what it moved.
One view across strip and killzone calls. It shows how often the call was right, how far price moved, and how much adverse move came first.
The bias is not a black box. It comes from the live state, the active drivers, the conditions that can break it, and the result after the window closes.
Aurora begins with what the market is doing right now: session alignment, 4H/D1/W1 direction, tape confirmation, and whether the setup is actually clean.
It then maps the move to the drivers behind it: macro shifts, event class, live catalyst risk, and whether the same driver has historically led to follow-through.
Every thesis has break conditions. If the counter-scenario shows up, the bias weakens or flips. That keeps the logic honest instead of pretending every call is permanent.
Once the window closes, Aurora measures direction, favorable excursion, adverse excursion, and net move so traders can see whether the idea actually paid.
This week is the 7d window. Use it to follow the current run without losing the longer 30d and 90d views.
Pre-session directional bias scored against the killzone candle. Aurora commits a direction before each session opens — or passes if conviction is too low.
Each bar = one trading session window. Aurora only scores sessions it commits to a direction.