How these signals are made
Every stock is scored automatically, several times each trading day, using a mix of hard numbers and — for the strongest setups — an AI analyst that also reads the news. Here's the whole method, in plain English.
1. Fresh data from the PSX
A few times an hour during market time, the system downloads live prices and volumes for the whole Pakistan Stock Exchange, plus the KSE-100, All-Share and KMI-30 indices. It keeps years of daily history for each stock so it can measure trends properly.
2. The math engine (runs on every stock, always free)
For each stock it works out the things a technical trader looks at:
- Trend — is the price above or below its 50-day and 200-day averages?
- Momentum — is buying or selling pressure building (MACD)?
- Overbought / oversold — has it run up too fast, or been beaten down too far (RSI)?
- Stretch — how far the price is from its normal range (Bollinger Bands).
- Volume — is the move backed by real trading, or is it thin and unconvincing?
- Relative strength — is it beating the KSE-100, or lagging behind it?
Each of these "votes" buy or sell, and the votes are combined into a single score from −100 (strong sell) to +100 (strong buy). The system also suggests a stop-loss and target so your losses stay small.
3. The AI analyst (on the strongest signals)
A few times a day, an AI brain takes the best buy and sell candidates and goes deeper. It reads Pakistani business news and the wider picture — the SBP interest rate, inflation, the IMF, the rupee, oil prices, politics, and company announcements like results and dividends — and it checks which stocks people are actually talking about. Then it writes a plain-English verdict that the pure math can't give you on its own.
4. It comes to you
Signals appear on this site, and a well-organised email digest is sent a few times each trading day listing exactly what was monitored and the top buy/sell ideas with reasons.
How to read a signal — honestly
This is a research tool, not a crystal ball. No system can reliably predict the market — if one could, nobody would share it. What this does well is scan everything quickly, stay disciplined, and explain its thinking. The real value is consistency and risk control, not fortune-telling.
Our advice: treat the signals as a starting point. For your first few weeks, paper-trade them — write the calls down and watch how they play out before you risk real money. Always use the suggested stop-loss.