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Confidence Scoring: How to Size Your Trades With Auguris Signals

Each Auguris signal comes with a confidence percentage. High conviction? Go bigger. Lower confidence? Size down or skip. Here is how confidence scoring works and how to use it in your trading.

What Is the Confidence Score?

The confidence score is a percentage from 0% to 100% that reflects how strongly our model believes in a given signal. It is calculated by weighing multiple factors together — including RSI, volume deviation, ADX, and historical pattern performance.

A higher score means more indicators are aligned in the same direction. A lower score means the setup is mixed or less certain.

How to Read It

ConfidenceMeaningSuggested Action
80–100%Strong alignment across all indicators. High conviction setup.Full position size. This is the kind of signal worth acting on quickly.
60–79%Most indicators agree but one or two are neutral. Solid setup with minor uncertainty.Standard position size. A good trade with manageable risk.
40–59%Mixed signals. Some indicators support the trade, others do not.Reduced position size or wait for confirmation before entering.
Below 40%Weak alignment. The setup lacks conviction.Consider skipping entirely or using it only as a watchlist alert.

Why It Matters

Not every signal is created equal. Markets are noisy, and even good systems produce setups that range from near-certain to speculative. The confidence score gives you an instant way to filter.

Without it, you would treat every signal the same — risking the same amount on a shaky setup as on a textbook one. That is how accounts blow up.

With confidence scoring, you can:

  • Scale position size — Allocate more capital to high-confidence trades and less to lower ones.
  • Filter your trades — Only act on signals above your personal threshold (e.g. 65%+).
  • Reduce emotional decisions — The number removes guesswork. You do not have to debate whether a setup “looks good enough.”

A Practical Example

Say you receive two signals in the same hour:

  1. BTC Long — 87% confidence. RSI is oversold, volume deviation is +65%, ADX is at 32. Everything lines up.
  2. ETH Long — 48% confidence. RSI is neutral, volume is slightly below average, ADX is at 18. The trend is weak.

With confidence scoring, the decision is straightforward. You take the BTC trade at full size. For ETH, you either skip it or enter with a fraction of your normal position and a tighter stop.

Setting Your Own Threshold

There is no single “right” cutoff — it depends on your risk tolerance and trading style.

  • Conservative traders might only act on signals above 70%.
  • Moderate traders might use 55% as their floor.
  • Aggressive traders might take anything above 40% but scale size accordingly.

The key is consistency. Pick a threshold, stick with it, and let the confidence score do the filtering for you. Over time, you will see how different cutoffs affect your results and can adjust from there.

Pattern Detection: How Auguris Identifies Candlestick Patterns in Every Signal

Our algorithm identifies candlestick patterns like Doji, Hanging Man, Spinning Top, and more — flagged in every signal. Here is what each pattern means and why it matters for your trades.

Why Candlestick Patterns Matter

Candlestick patterns have been used by traders for centuries. They compress price action into visual shapes that reveal the battle between buyers and sellers within a given timeframe.

A single candle can tell you whether momentum is shifting, whether a trend is exhausting, or whether indecision is setting in. When our algorithm detects one of these patterns, it flags it alongside the other indicators so you get the full context without having to read the chart yourself.

Patterns We Detect

Doji

A Doji forms when the open and close prices are nearly identical, creating a candle with a very small body and wicks on both sides.

  • What it means: Indecision. Neither buyers nor sellers won the session.
  • How to use it: A Doji after a strong trend can signal a potential reversal. At support or resistance levels, it becomes especially meaningful. On its own in a ranging market, it is less significant.

Hanging Man

A Hanging Man appears at the top of an uptrend. It has a small body near the top and a long lower wick — at least twice the length of the body.

  • What it means: Sellers pushed price down significantly during the session, but buyers managed to recover most of it. The recovery looks bullish on the surface, but the selling pressure underneath is a warning.
  • How to use it: Treat it as an early reversal signal. If the next candle confirms with a bearish close, the uptrend may be losing steam.

Spinning Top

A Spinning Top has a small body with upper and lower wicks of roughly equal length. It looks similar to a Doji but with a slightly larger body.

  • What it means: Indecision, but with a bit more activity than a Doji. The market moved in both directions but settled near where it started.
  • How to use it: Like the Doji, a Spinning Top is most useful after a sustained move. It suggests the trend may be pausing or preparing to reverse.

Hammer

A Hammer appears at the bottom of a downtrend. It has a small body near the top and a long lower wick.

  • What it means: Sellers drove price down during the session, but buyers stepped in aggressively and pushed it back up. The rejection of lower prices is a bullish signal.
  • How to use it: Look for confirmation on the next candle. A bullish close after a Hammer strengthens the case for a reversal.

Engulfing Patterns

A Bullish Engulfing occurs when a small bearish candle is followed by a larger bullish candle that completely covers the previous body. A Bearish Engulfing is the opposite.

  • What it means: A decisive shift in control. The second candle overwhelms the first, showing that one side has taken over.
  • How to use it: Engulfing patterns are among the strongest single-session reversal signals. When flagged alongside high volume deviation, they carry extra weight.

Marubozu

A Marubozu is a candle with no wicks — or very small ones. The open equals the low (bullish) or the high (bearish), and the close equals the opposite extreme.

  • What it means: Total dominance by one side. Buyers or sellers controlled the entire session without any significant pushback.
  • How to use it: A Marubozu often signals the start or continuation of a strong trend. Pay attention to the ADX reading alongside it.

How Patterns Appear in Signals

When a pattern is detected, it is included directly in your Telegram signal message. You will see the pattern name alongside RSI, volume deviation, ADX, and the confidence score.

For example, a signal might include:

Pattern: Hammer RSI: 28 | Vol Dev: +72% | ADX: 31 | Confidence: 84%

This tells you at a glance: oversold conditions, strong volume, a developing trend, a bullish reversal pattern, and high confidence. All the context you need in one message.

Patterns Are Context, Not Commands

No single pattern guarantees a move. A Doji at the top of a rally is meaningful. A Doji in the middle of a choppy range is noise.

That is why Auguris never sends a pattern in isolation. Every detection is combined with RSI, volume, ADX, and confidence scoring to filter out weak setups. The pattern adds a layer of context — it is not the signal itself, but part of what makes the signal actionable.

Technical Indicators: Understanding the Data Behind Every Signal

Every Auguris signal includes three key technical indicators — RSI, volume deviation, and ADX — so you can see the full picture at a glance. Here is what each one means and how to use them.

RSI (Relative Strength Index)

RSI measures the speed and magnitude of recent price changes on a scale from 0 to 100. It helps you gauge whether an asset is overbought or oversold.

  • Above 70 — The asset may be overbought. Price could be due for a pullback.
  • Below 30 — The asset may be oversold. Price could be ready for a bounce.
  • Around 50 — Neutral momentum, no strong directional bias.

RSI is most useful for spotting potential reversals. When a signal fires with an extreme RSI reading, it adds conviction that the move is reaching a tipping point.

Volume Deviation

Volume deviation compares the current trading volume against the recent average. It is expressed as a percentage above or below normal activity.

  • High positive deviation (e.g. +80%) — Significantly more volume than usual. This often confirms that a price move has real participation behind it.
  • Near zero — Volume is in line with the average. The move may lack strong commitment.
  • Negative deviation — Lower than normal volume. Price action during low volume periods can be less reliable.

Volume is the fuel behind price moves. A breakout on high volume deviation is far more meaningful than one on thin volume. Every Auguris signal includes this metric so you can quickly judge the strength of the setup.

ADX (Average Directional Index)

ADX measures the strength of a trend regardless of its direction. It ranges from 0 to 100.

  • Above 25 — A trend is present and gaining strength.
  • Above 50 — A very strong trend is underway.
  • Below 20 — The market is ranging or choppy. Trend-following strategies may underperform.

ADX does not tell you whether the trend is up or down — only how strong it is. Combined with the signal direction, it helps you decide whether to ride the momentum or wait for a cleaner setup.

Putting It All Together

When you receive an Auguris signal, you get all three indicators in a single message. Here is how to read them together:

ScenarioRSIVolume Dev.ADXInterpretation
Strong bullish setup< 40High positive> 25Oversold asset with volume confirmation and a developing trend
Weak breakout> 60Near zero< 20Price moved up but without volume or trend strength — caution
Trend continuation50–65Positive> 35Healthy trend with volume backing it up

No single indicator tells the whole story. By combining RSI, volume deviation, and ADX, Auguris gives you a quick but comprehensive snapshot of market conditions — so you can make better decisions, faster.