Janira

Read a market both ways.

Plain answers to the questions behind Janira - what it reads, what the terms mean, and why every number is anchored, not guessed.

What is a market reader?

A market reader describes the current state of a market - what supports a move and what opposes it - instead of issuing buy or sell signals.

Janira is a descriptive market reader. For any instrument - indices, FX, metals, commodities, equities, crypto, even the VIX - it lays out the strengths and the weaknesses, each anchored to a real number from the live order flow, and leaves the decision to you. It never tells you what to do.

What does "reading both sides" mean?

Reading both sides means giving equal weight to the bullish case and the bearish case, rather than picking a direction.

Most tools sell you confidence in one direction. A both-sides (bi-contrarian) reader argues the case for and the case against with the same depth and the same numbers - so the trade you don't want to see has nowhere to hide. You weigh them; you decide.

Is Janira financial advice?

No. Janira is purely descriptive and never issues a verdict, signal, recommendation, probability or price target.

It shows both sides of the market and the figures behind them, then stops. It is not financial advice and not a recommendation. What you do with the read is yours alone.

What is order flow, and what is a "worked level"?

Order flow is the live buying and selling pressure behind price; a worked level is a price the market has reacted to repeatedly, measured by its touch count.

Order flow includes taker buy/sell skew, OBV, absorption and wick behaviour. A worked level's touch count tells you how proven it is: a level touched ten times in a window is far more proven than one touched once. Janira shows the touch count for every level, so robustness is visible, not asserted.

What is confluence (MA, VWAP, Volume Profile, Fibonacci)?

Confluence is when several independent references line up at the same price, which makes that price stronger.

A worked level that also sits on a moving average, the VWAP, a Volume Profile node (POC, VAH, VAL) and a Fibonacci retracement is a cluster of agreement. Janira computes each of these from real bars and points them out when they overlap - and omits any it cannot compute rather than inventing it.

What is intermarket ("salle de marché") analysis?

Intermarket analysis reads an instrument through its cross-asset drivers instead of in isolation.

The dollar (DXY) moves inversely to gold and risk; real yields (the US 10-year) are the cost of carry for non-yielding assets; the VIX sets the risk-on/risk-off regime; gold/silver divergence, copper (growth) and oil (inflation) round out the picture, alongside the broad index. Janira weaves these live figures into a descriptive desk-style read.

How is Janira different from ChatGPT or Gemini for markets?

General chatbots have no live market feed, so they often state confident but invented figures; Janira only states numbers it actually computes or fetches, and flags what it doesn't have.

Ask a general model for a level or a moving average and it will frequently produce a plausible-looking number that is simply made up. Janira's whole design is the opposite: every figure is a real value you can verify, and when data is missing it says so. Same rich, two-sided structure - real numbers instead of hallucinated ones.

See it on a live market.

Pick an instrument and a thesis - get both faces, with the numbers.

Open the reader →