61.8 SIGNALS · LEARN
COMPLETE GUIDE · 12 MIN READ

What is 61.8 Signals?

61.8 Signals is a Fibonacci 61.8% retracement alert system across 15 markets — indices, commodities, bonds, the US Dollar, and crypto. Built around a single principle: fewer alerts, higher quality, honest about what we don't trade.

This guide walks you through every feature, top to bottom — from the math behind the strategy, to the dashboard, to placing your first simulated trade.

Open Dashboard Open Telegram Bot

01 The math behind 61.8

61.8% is the inverse of the golden ratio φ ≈ 1.618. The same proportion appears in nautilus shells, the Parthenon, and 90+ years of market chart analysis.

The formula

φ  = (1 + √5) ÷ 2  ≈ 1.6180339887...
1/φ = (√5 − 1) ÷ 2  ≈ 0.6180339887...

The 61.8% Fibonacci retracement level is 1 ÷ φ expressed as a percentage. When a market makes an impulsive move and pulls back, the 61.8% level is a common reversal zone — both because of math and because every trader watches it.

GOLDEN RATIO · VISUAL PROOF
WHOLE = A B ≈ 0.618 × A A − B ≈ 0.382 × A A ÷ B = B ÷ (A − B) = φ
The shorter green segment (B) divided by the longer yellow segment (A−B) equals the same φ ratio as the whole over B. That self-similar ratio is the golden ratio — and 0.618 of A is its inverse.
WHY IT WORKS The level itself is trivial to find — every charting tool draws it. The actual edge comes from knowing when it'll hold versus when it'll break. That's where 61.8 Signals adds value.

01b The vocabulary we use

Three terms keep coming up across the dashboard, charts, and Telegram alerts. Learn them once and everything below clicks faster.

BurstOne clean directional move — a swing from low to high (UP burst) or high to low (DOWN burst). The fib is always drawn on the most recent burst.
CorrectedPrice has retraced exactly 61.8% of the burst. Once corrected, the burst is "done" — the bot starts watching for the next burst forming in the opposite direction.
ChainEach corrected retracement becomes the start of the next burst. Auto-Fib rolls over automatically as the chain advances. You can trade the same instrument all day as it walks through one burst after another.

Throughout this guide you'll see "burst" instead of "impulse" and "corrected" instead of "retraced 61.8%." Same concepts, simpler vocabulary that matches how an experienced trader reads the chart by eye.

02 The strategy in plain English

Three components: detect a burst, wait for it to be corrected (retraced 61.8%), and only fire if the volatility regime makes mean reversion likely.

Bursts are read on 15-minute candles by default — the same timeframe most discretionary traders use to spot mean-reversion setups by eye. Entry labels on the chart and Telegram alerts are tagged with the order side: BUY E1 when the burst was UP (you're entering long on a pullback), SELL E1 when the burst was DOWN (you're entering short on a bounce). TP and SL labels stay generic.

Why BUY on an UP burst (and SELL on a DOWN burst)?

This is the part that confuses most new users. The bot is not predicting reversals — it's betting that strong, recent momentum resumes after a deep pullback. You're trading against the short-term retracement, with the original burst direction:

UP burstPrice ran from low to high. It now pulls back 61.8% of the way down. You BUY the dip — betting the up-move resumes back toward the burst high. BUY E1 / E2 / E3 are three progressively deeper buy levels.
DOWN burstPrice dropped from high to low. It now bounces 61.8% of the way back up. You SELL the rally — betting the down-move resumes back toward the burst low. SELL E1 / E2 / E3 are three progressively higher short-entry levels.

In both cases you are trading against the current direction of price action (which is the retracement), and with the direction of the original burst (which is the dominant move). When the entry hits and price reverses back toward the burst-extreme TP, the trade pays. When price keeps retracing through all three entries and breaches the burst origin (the 100% level), the shared stop-loss fires and the position exits. See § 02b for the SL placement and per-entry R:R math.

SHORTHAND "Fade the pullback, ride the burst." The pullback is the lie. The burst is the truth — until price proves otherwise by breaking the 100% level.

The 3-entry ladder

When an impulse is detected and price starts retracing, the system offers three entries — each at a deeper retracement level:

3-ENTRY LADDER · UP SETUP EXAMPLE
0% (impulse high) TP1 · 50% E1 · 61.8% E2 · 76.4% E3 · 88.6% SL · stop E1 E2 E3 TP1 SL
Three entries fire as price retraces deeper. Each has the same stop-loss and the same TP ladder. If E1 holds and price reverses, you only fill E1. If price keeps falling, E2 and E3 give you scaling-in opportunities.

Take-profit ladder

TP1 (Conservative)50% retracement — most likely to hit
TP2 (Moderate)38.2% retracement — mid-tier target
TP3 (Extra)23.6% retracement — stretch target

The volatility-regime gate

Before any signal fires, we check the instrument's volatility coefficient:

VolC = recent average daily range ÷ older average daily range
  • VolC < 1.0 — volatility falling, regime favors mean reversion → signal fires.
  • VolC > 1.0 — volatility rising, regime hostile to retracement plays → signal silenced.
CURRENT STATE Four of our 15 instruments are vol-gated right now: SPX, NDX, Russell 2000, and Silver. They appear on the dashboard with a gray badge, but the bot won't broadcast their signals to Telegram until their VolC drops below 1.0.

02b Risk management — the shared-stop ladder

Three entries, one stop-loss, placed just past the burst extreme. The ladder lets price retrace deeper without forcing a single perfect entry, and the shared stop fires only when the entire setup is invalidated.

The rule

All three entries on a signal (E1, E2, E3) share the same stop-loss. The stop sits just past the 100% level — the original burst origin — with a small instrument-specific buffer:

SL = burst-extreme ± instrument-specific buffer (the "stopBuffer")

For a BUY (an UP burst), SL goes just below the burst low. For a SELL (a DOWN burst), just above the burst high. If price ever closes through the SL, the burst's direction is dead — the whole ladder exits together.

Per-instrument buffers

Each instrument has a tuned stopBuffer that fits its typical wick size. Major ETFs like SPY/NDX/RUT use buffers around 0.05–0.1% of price; gold and silver around 0.15–0.3%; crypto (BTC, ETH, SOL, AVAX, XRP, LINK) around 0.2–0.5%. The buffer keeps the SL out of random noise without giving up so much room that losses get heavy.

Why this differs from a fixed R:R

Because the SL is anchored to the burst extreme (not to the entry), the risk-to-reward ratio varies by which entry fires:

E1 (61.8% retracement)Furthest from burst extreme → widest SL relative to TP. Lowest R:R per unit risked, but it's the highest-probability fill.
E2 (midpoint)Closer to the burst extreme → tighter SL distance → better R:R if you ladder in here.
E3 (100% retracement)Right at the burst origin → SL is just the buffer away → best R:R, but only fills on a full round-trip.

The intuition: by laddering, you average down naturally if the move retraces deeper, and the single shared SL caps the worst case. When price reverses back toward TP, all three entries profit together. The 60-day backtest results (see § 03) are computed with this shared-stop formula.

NOTE Earlier copy on this page advertised a strict 0.5 : 1 R:R using "SL = entry ± 0.5 × |entry − TP1|". That formula was active briefly during testing but placed the SL between E1 and E2, blocking the ladder from filling at the deeper entries. The shared-stop formula above is what the live scanner uses and what the published backtests measure.

03 The multi-instrument dashboard

The dashboard shows all 15 instruments at once, each as a mini-card with a live price, setup status, and a small candle chart. Click any card to drill into the focused chart view.

61-8-APP DASHBOARD · MINI-CARD GRID
⚡ Our vol-regime filter only alerts during market conditions where the strategy historically wins. 💵 US Dollar (UUP) ENTRY 1 SIGNAL · UP $28.50 +0.18% VolC 0.59 ✓ · 90.5% wins 🏛️ Dow Jones SCANNING 41,250 −0.32% VolC 0.85 ✓ · 57% wins 📊 S&P 500 (SPY) ⚠ VOL↑ 1.12 GATED 7,365 silenced VOL REGIME UNFAVORABLE ₿ Bitcoin SETUP VALID 76,840 VolC 1.00 · ~15 min resolve 🥇 Gold (GLD) RETRACING $412.01 VolC 0.88 ✓ · 77% wins 🥈 Silver (SLV) ⚠ VOL↑ 1.35 GATED $66.54 VOL REGIME UNFAVORABLE
Schematic mockup of the dashboard at sixty-one-eight.pages.dev/61-8-app. Lime-bordered cards have an active signal; gray-bordered cards are scanning; red-bordered are vol-gated and won't broadcast to Telegram.

What each card shows

  • Instrument name + icon — quick visual identification.
  • Phase — SCANNING (waiting for impulse), SETUP VALID (impulse found, watching for retracement), ENTRY_1/2/3_SIGNAL (signal fired).
  • Current price + day change — live ticker.
  • Mini candle chart — recent price action with HIGH/LOW markers and fib lines.
  • VolC + win rate badge — instrument's vol regime status and backtest win rate.

04 The focused chart

Click any dashboard card to open the focused view. This is where you'll spend most of your time — live candles, all the fib levels, entry pills, and the expected-resolution projection.

61-8-SINGLE · FOCUSED CHART
▲ HIGH 41,696 ▼ LOW 41,180 41,700 41,520 41,250 41,180 TP1 TP2 E1 E2 E3 SL → EXPECTED RESOLVE ~85min · p25-p75 band
The focused chart. Notice: ▲ HIGH and ▼ LOW labels float clear of the candles (not on top). Entry/TP/SL pills sit inside the right edge of the plot. Price sidebar has been widened so big bold numbers don't crowd the candles. The gold expected-resolution rectangle projects where price is likely to head.

What you can do on this view

  • Watch live — chart refreshes every 5 seconds with new candle data.
  • Toggle Auto-Fib — turn the automatic fib detection on/off (default ON).
  • Toggle Hint — show/hide the gold status hint ("Retracing → wait for 61.8%") that overlays the chart.
  • Resize the Hint — drag the bottom-LEFT corner of the hint to make it bigger or smaller.
  • Adjust Min Impulse + Stop Buffer — per-instrument config to fine-tune detection sensitivity.
  • Draw a manual fib — test your own analysis (see Section 6).
  • Run sim trades — backtest the current setup on past candles (see Section 8).

04a Min Impulse — the noise filter

"Min Impulse" is the single most important configuration knob on the focused chart. It tells the analyzer how big a price move has to be before it counts as a real impulse — versus random noise that the strategy should ignore.

What it actually measures

An "impulse" in 61.8 is the price range between an absolute high and an absolute low within a recent lookback window of candles. For an UP setup, the impulse is measured from the low to the high preceding it; for a DOWN setup, from the high to the low. Either way, the size is just |high − low|.

The Min Impulse threshold says: if that range is smaller than this number, treat it as noise. Don't compute fib levels. Don't fire any signals.

if (impulseSize < minImpulse) {
  phase = 'IMPULSE_TOO_SMALL';
  return; // no fib levels drawn, no signals broadcast
}

Why the threshold exists

  • Filter out micro-moves. A 0.02-point wobble on UUP isn't a real impulse — it's tick noise. There's nothing meaningful to retrace.
  • Improve signal-to-noise ratio. Without this filter, the analyzer would fire on every minor swing, generating dozens of low-quality alerts per hour.
  • Keep retracement targets meaningful. A 61.8% retracement of a 5-cent move is 3 cents — too small to trade profitably against any reasonable spread.
  • Protect the backtest stats. Including tiny noise-impulses would inflate trade counts and distort win-rate calculations.

Per-instrument defaults

Min Impulse scales with the instrument's typical daily range, so the default value varies widely. A 50-point move on Bitcoin is trivial; a 50-point move on UUP would never happen.

US Dollar (UUP)~0.04 — low-volatility currency ETF
T-Bonds (TLT)~0.05 — bond ETF
Gold (GLD)~0.10 — gold ETF
Crude Oil (USO)~0.10 — oil ETF
Silver (SLV)~0.50
Dow / SPY / QQQ~5 — index ETFs
Russell 2000 (IWM)~1
Ethereum / Solana~5 / ~0.5
Bitcoin~50 — extreme intraday range

These are tuned to roughly half of each instrument's recent 30-day average daily range. That ratio gives the analyzer enough room to detect a meaningful intraday swing without firing on every minor tick.

The "Auto" button — what it actually computes

Next to the Min Impulse and Stop Buffer fields, the Auto button pulls the instrument's average daily range over the last 30 trading days from the worker's market-history endpoint, divides it by 2, and writes the result into the Min Impulse field.

// Pseudo-code for what Auto does:
const dailyRange = avg(candles.map(c => c.h - c.l)); // 30-day mean
const recommended = dailyRange / 2;
inputMinImpulse.value = recommended.toFixed(2);

Why half of the daily range? Because we want to detect intraday swings, not full-day moves. Half-day-range is empirically a reasonable threshold: small enough to catch real impulses, big enough to filter out chop.

The "30-day avg" status line displayed in the cfg-row shows this number live, so you can see how the auto value compares to the instrument's actual recent volatility.

How to tune it manually

Increase Min Impulse (e.g., 50 → 80 on BTC)Fewer setups detected. Higher quality. Misses smaller-but-still-valid impulses.
Decrease Min Impulse (e.g., 50 → 30 on BTC)More setups detected. Higher noise. May fire on chop or micro-trends.
Match Auto exactlyRecommended starting point. Conservative balance.
RULE OF THUMB Start with the Auto value. If you're getting too many low-quality signals, increase by 25-50%. If the chart sits in "IMPULSE_TOO_SMALL" phase for hours and you're missing visible setups, decrease by 25%. Don't tune more than once a week — give the change time to play out across multiple setups.

What happens BELOW the threshold

When the current price action's impulse falls below Min Impulse, the chart enters IMPULSE_TOO_SMALL phase. You'll see:

  • HIGH and LOW markers still drawn — so you can see what range the analyzer is measuring.
  • NO fib levels rendered — there's nothing to retrace from.
  • NO entry pills — no E1/E2/E3/TP/SL pricing.
  • NO Telegram broadcast — the bot stays silent on this instrument.
  • Status text: "Waiting for a bigger impulse" or similar.

This is the analyzer being honest: I don't see anything worth trading right now. It's not broken; it's behaving correctly.

Relationship to other parameters

Stop BufferIndependent. Even if Min Impulse passes, Stop Buffer controls how much cushion the stop gets past the impulse extreme.
Vol-regime gateLayered. First the impulse must be ≥ Min Impulse. THEN the vol-coefficient is checked. Both must pass for a Telegram broadcast.
Satisfaction logicOnce an impulse is detected (passes Min Impulse), it's tracked individually. Even if a later micro-impulse falls below Min Impulse, the original tracked impulse keeps going until retraced 61.8%.

Common mistakes

DON'T
  • Set it to 0 or "tiny." You'll get flooded with noise alerts and the backtest stats will lose all meaning. The analyzer was designed assuming meaningful filtering.
  • Crank it up to "huge" hoping to only catch monster moves. You'll wait days between setups, the strategy underperforms on small-impulse days, and you defeat the point of having a 15-market scanner.
  • Use one number for all instruments. Bitcoin's noise floor IS higher than UUP's signal. The per-instrument defaults exist for a reason.
  • Re-tune daily. The 30-day average changes slowly. Tuning Min Impulse every day is over-fitting; let it stabilize.

A worked example

Suppose you're watching UUP and the 30-day average daily range is reported as 0.085. The Auto button writes 0.04 into Min Impulse (rounded down from 0.0425).

  • UUP swings from 28.45 to 28.51 over 30 minutes — that's a 0.06 impulse. Above 0.04 → analyzer registers it, draws fib levels, watches for retracement.
  • UUP wiggles between 28.49 and 28.51 for 20 minutes — that's a 0.02 impulse. Below 0.04 → analyzer ignores it, phase stays "IMPULSE_TOO_SMALL".
  • UUP makes a clean 28.40 to 28.60 move — that's a 0.20 impulse. Well above 0.04 → strong setup; signal fires if it retraces to the 61.8% level (~28.48) AND vol-coefficient is favorable.

Why this is one of the most underrated knobs

Most retail traders fixate on entry signals — "the strategy" — and ignore the meta-question of when the strategy is even worth running. Min Impulse is the gatekeeper for that. A well-tuned Min Impulse is the difference between a system that signals 50 times a day (mostly noise) and one that signals 5 times a week (mostly actionable).

If you only adjust two knobs on the dashboard, make them Min Impulse and your position sizer's Risk %. Everything else is downstream of those two.

04b Auto-Fib Pending — anticipating the next burst

The focused chart has two toggles in the controls bar: Auto-Fib 1 and Auto-Fib Pending. Knowing what each does turns the chart from a snapshot of one burst into a live preview of the next one.

Auto-Fib 1The current burst — the one the bot is actively trading. Pills are labeled BUY E1 / SELL E1 / TP1 / etc.
Auto-Fib PendingThe NEXT burst, projected from the current burst's last extreme. Pills are prefixed with "P" (P BUY E1, P TP1, etc.) and the anchor markers are cyan / red with a small "P" label.

Pending fires as soon as ANY retracement starts off the current burst's end — you don't have to wait for the 61.8% line to be hit. As price moves further in the new direction, the pending fib stretches and its entries/TPs reposition. When the current burst gets corrected, the chain advances and the pending fib becomes the new Auto-Fib 1.

USE CASE Pending is most useful right after price tags an Entry on Auto-Fib 1. While the trade plays out you can already see where the NEXT short or long would sit if this burst reverses — so you're never caught flat-footed by a chain advance.

04c Chart reference markers

A few visual aids show up on every focused chart:

Green ▼ (above a candle)Auto-Fib 1's HIGH anchor — the candle whose high defines the burst's top.
Red ▲ (below a candle)Auto-Fib 1's LOW anchor — the candle whose low defines the burst's bottom.
Cyan ▼ + "P"Pending Fib's HIGH anchor — the candle Pending is projecting from.
Red ▲ + "P"Pending Fib's LOW anchor — the candle Pending's other endpoint sits on.
White dotted vertical lineNY cash market open (9:30 AM ET, Mon–Fri). Helps you spot whether a setup formed during US session vs. overnight. DST-aware.
Lime horizontal line (bold)The 61.8% retracement of the current burst — the line price needs to tag for E1 to fire.
Dashed lime/red linesE2 (midpoint between E1 and E3) and SL (just past 100%). Drawn as additional reference levels alongside the standard fib lines.

Chain advance — what to expect over time

As the chart updates, watch the green ▼ and red ▲ markers move. When price forms a new opposite-direction extreme, the algorithm rolls over: the OLD burst's end becomes the NEW burst's start, and the markers reposition to the new candles. This is the chain in action. No reload, no toggle, no manual reset — auto-fib follows the chart.

04d Strategy performance — 60-day backtest

Honest measurement. The strategy was back-tested over 60 days of 15-minute candles across all 15 instruments using the same algorithm that runs in production.

What "profitable" means here

Profit factor (PF) above 1.0 means the strategy made more money than it lost. PF of 2.0 means $2 won for every $1 lost. PF below 1.0 means the strategy bled.

Results — sorted by profit factor

NASDAQ 100PF 2.67 · 58% win rate · 38 trades · +172 pts
Russell 2000PF 1.81 · 48% win · 48 trades · +28 pts
S&P 500PF 1.74 · 50% win · 68 trades · +47 pts
Dow JonesPF 1.72 · 53% win · 70 trades · +325 pts
T-Bonds (TLT)PF 1.59 · 44% win · 36 trades · +$0.18
US Dollar (UUP)PF 1.50 · 43% win · 28 trades · +$0.03
EthereumPF 1.43 · 46% win · 50 trades · +$21.79
BitcoinPF 1.28 · 40% win · 144 trades · +$643.71
Silver (SLV)PF 1.09 · 37% win · 75 trades · +$0.21
Crude Oil (USO)PF 1.09 · 39% win · 80 trades · +$0.54
Gold (GLD)PF 1.08 · 41% win · 75 trades · +$0.65

11 of the 12 mainstream instruments are profitable. The three smaller-cap cryptos (Solana, Avalanche, XRP, Chainlink) had too few qualifying setups in the window to yield meaningful statistics — they're not excluded but the sample is too thin to call.

WHAT THIS DOES NOT CLAIM Past performance is not future performance. Win rates can drift with market regime, and the vol-regime gate (volC > 0.98 suppresses signals) is part of why these numbers work — instruments with rising volatility are silenced before they hurt the record. Treat the table as a "this strategy is mathematically sound" datapoint, not a guarantee.

How to read this with the chart

The pills on every focused chart (E1/E2/E3, TP1/TP2/TP3, SL) reflect the same entry and stop rules used to generate these backtest numbers. The Telegram alerts include the exact Entry / SL / TP prices to use. No mental math required.

05 Auto-detected signals

The Auto-Fib analyzer continuously scans for impulses and watches for 61.8% retracements. When all conditions align, it broadcasts a signal to Telegram.

The phase machine

SCANNINGNo impulse yet — system is watching for a qualifying move.
SETUP_VALIDImpulse found, price is retracing — not yet at 61.8%.
ENTRY_1_SIGNALPrice reached 61.8% — primary entry fires.
ENTRY_2_SIGNALPrice reached 76.4% — secondary entry fires.
ENTRY_3_SIGNALPrice reached 88.6% — final entry before invalidation.
BROADCAST POLICY Only ENTRY_1/2/3_SIGNAL phases broadcast to Telegram. SETUP_VALID is silent (it's the "warming up" phase — not yet actionable). The worker also dedupes — same instrument + direction + phase + impulse band gets ONE alert per 15-minute window, even if multiple browser sessions post the same setup.

The "satisfaction" filter

Once an impulse has been retraced 61.8%, the analyzer retires it. This prevents the same setup from re-firing every 10 seconds while price wobbles around the level. The next signal will only fire when a brand-new impulse forms.

06 Manual fib drawing

Want to test your own setup ideas? Draw your own fib anywhere on the chart. Same entry/SL/TP math as the auto analyzer — but using your anchor points.

  1. Click DRAW MANUAL FIBCursor changes to crosshair mode.
  2. Click two points on the chartThe first click sets the impulse start (100%), the second sets the end (0%). Direction is determined by which is higher.
  3. Drag the endpoints to adjustBlue draggable nodes appear at start and end. Move them to refine your anchors.
  4. Read the levelsBlue dashed lines show 23.6 / 38.2 / 50 / 61.8 / 76.4 / 100%. Blue E1/E2/E3/SL/TP1/TP2/TP3 pills appear on the LEFT side (auto-fib pills stay on the right).
PRO TIP Anchor the START of your fib at the impulse origin (the start of the trending move) and the END at the most recent extreme. The system computes 61.8% retracing FROM the end back toward the start. Direction-aware — works the same for UP or DOWN setups.

07 Position sizer

Fixed-fractional risk model — the same method used by professional discretionary traders. You set your account balance and risk tolerance; the sizer computes how many shares to buy per entry.

The math

position_size = (account_balance × risk_pct) ÷ (entry_price − stop_loss)

Example:

  • Account: $10,000
  • Risk per trade: 1% = $100
  • Entry (E1): $28.50
  • Stop: $28.25
  • Risk per share = $0.25
  • Position size = $100 ÷ $0.25 = 400 shares

Three sizing modes

Split across 3 (default)Risk budget ÷ 3, each entry gets one-third. Max total risk if all 3 fill = your configured %.
Each full riskEach entry sized to full risk % independently. Max total risk = 3× configured % (aggressive).
Equal sharesSame share count per entry, equal to the minimum across the three. Simpler but uneven dollar risk.

Industry best-practice defaults

Conservative0.5% risk per trade
Standard (default)1.0% risk per trade
Aggressive2.0% risk per trade (do not exceed)
WHY THIS MATTERS Most account blow-ups come from over-sizing, not from bad signals. With proper 1% sizing, you'd need ~35 consecutive losses to lose 50% of your account — statistically rare for any positive-expectancy system.
PRIVACY NOTE Your account balance is stored in your browser's localStorage only. It is never sent to our server.

08 Sim Trade

Test what would happen if you took the current setup. Two buttons: SIM AUTO walks the analyzer's setup forward through candles; SIM MANUAL does the same for your drawn fib.

SIM TRADE OUTPUT · EXAMPLE
AUTO UP US Dollar (UUP) 5/20/2026, 1:30 PM E1 @ 28.47 × 400 → TP1 @ 28.62 · +$60.00 E2 @ 28.42 × 400 → TP1 @ 28.62 · +$80.00 E3 — never filled (price didn't reach 28.25) Filled 2/3 · W 2 · L 0 +$140.00 MANUAL UP US Dollar (UUP) 5/20/2026, 1:32 PM E1 @ 28.51 × 380 → TP1 @ 28.62 · +$41.80 E2 — never filled (price didn't reach 28.46) E3 — never filled (price didn't reach 28.30) Filled 1/3 · W 1 · L 0 +$41.80
Side-by-side AUTO (lime) and MANUAL (blue) sim trade results. Each row shows entry @ price × shares → exit type @ price · dollar P&L. The bot beat the manual fib here ($140 vs $41.80) because the bot's E1 was deeper into the retracement, allowing E2 to also fill.

What the sim is doing

  1. Computes E1, E2, E3, SL, TP1, TP2, TP3 from the active setup (auto or manual).
  2. Walks candle data forward from the setup's anchor point.
  3. For each entry, checks whether price reached the entry level — if yes, marks it filled.
  4. For each filled entry, walks further forward and checks SL or TP1/TP2/TP3 hit first.
  5. Multiplies (price P&L) × (your computed position size) to get dollar P&L per entry.
  6. Pushes the result into a log card with a colored AUTO or MANUAL badge.
REMEMBER Sim trades are theoretical. They model fills at the exact fib level, no slippage, no fees, no partial fills. Real broker fills may differ — especially for thin instruments.

09 Bot vs You — lifetime leaderboard

Every sim trade updates a running total stored on your device. AUTO totals (the bot's setups) sit next to MANUAL totals (your setups). Over time, you'll get hard data on whether your eye beats the analyzer.

LIFETIME LEADERBOARD · BOT vs YOU
🏆 LIFETIME — BOT vs YOU · since 5/1/2026 👤 YOU LEAD 🤖 AUTO (bot) +$847.32 22 runs · 47 fills · 38W / 9L 👤 MANUAL (you) +$1,124.55 18 runs · 36 fills · 31W / 5L
Lifetime stats persist across page reloads and browser restarts. RESET STATS button (not shown) wipes both with a confirmation prompt. CLEAR LOG below only clears the recent sim log — the leaderboard is sticky.
RESEARCH USE Run 30+ AUTO sims and 30+ MANUAL sims before drawing conclusions. Small samples are dominated by noise. The leaderboard becomes meaningful around 50+ runs each.

10 Telegram alerts

Signals are delivered to your phone via Telegram. No app needed beyond Telegram itself. Free during preview. Cancel anytime.

What each signal looks like

EXAMPLE SIGNAL · SIXTYONEEIGHTBOT
⚡ 61.8 Signal — Dow Jones 🟢 UP · ENTRY 1 SIGNAL 📍 Price: 41,250 ↩ Retrace: 62.5% 🎯 61.8% level: 41,200 Indicator alert only. Not investment advice. Execute on your own broker.
Real signal layout. Indicator-only — we never execute trades on your behalf. You decide whether to take the trade and place the bracket order with your broker.

Bot commands

/startWelcome message + linking instructions.
/link CODELink your Telegram account to your dashboard. Get CODE from the dashboard's "Get my link code" button.
/statusShow your subscription status and link state.
/unlinkDisconnect Telegram from your dashboard.
/helpList all commands.

11 Get started — 90 seconds

  1. Open the dashboardVisit sixty-one-eight.pages.dev/61-8-app in your browser. Bookmark it.
  2. Open the Telegram botTap t.me/SixtyOneEightBot on your phone. Tap START.
  3. Get your link codeOn the dashboard, scroll to the "Connect Telegram" panel. Click Get my link code. You'll see a 6-character code.
  4. Send it to the botIn Telegram, type /link XXXXXX (your code). Hit send.
  5. ConfirmThe bot replies "✓ Linked." Signals will arrive automatically as they fire.
OPTIONAL Configure your Position Sizer (Account $ and Risk %) so the sim trades give you dollar-denominated P&L. The default of $10,000 / 1% is a sensible starting point.

12 Reading the resolution projection zone

When the dashboard finds an active 61.8 setup, the focused chart overlays a projection zone on the right side. This zone shows where the trade is statistically expected to resolve — either by hitting your Take-Profit or your Stop-Loss — based on historical backtest data for that instrument.

SL TP1 TP2 E1 E2 E3 p25 7m ~15m p75 20m → TP Cons → TP Cons where price would land if the trade WINS median resolution fastest 25% slowest 25% NOW

What each element means

→ TP Cons
An arrow pointing to the Conservative Take-Profit price level (TP1, the 50% retrace level). It marks where price is expected to land if the trade wins.
~15m (median)
The median time to resolution — half of historical trades resolved within this many minutes. A bright vertical line marks it visually.
p25 7m
The 25th percentile: the fastest 25% of historical trades resolved within 7 minutes. If your trade resolves before this line, it's unusually quick.
p75 20m
The 75th percentile: the slowest 25% of trades took longer than 20 minutes. If your trade is still open past this line, it's lingering longer than typical.
Shaded zone
The combined time × price window where resolution is most likely. Roughly: 50% of past trades land somewhere inside this rectangle.
NOW line
The vertical white dashed line marks the current candle. Everything to the right is projection (statistical, not predicted).

How to use it

  • Set your alarms by the median. When ~15m says 15 minutes, set a phone alarm for 15 minutes after entry. If the trade hasn't resolved, check it manually — something unusual is happening.
  • Use p75 as your patience ceiling. If the trade is still open past p75, the historical pattern says it's running long. Consider manually closing or tightening your stop.
  • Per-instrument differences are real. BTC resolves in different time-windows than SPX. Solana resolves differently from Gold. The numbers update per instrument so you don't have to memorize them.
  • Past performance is not a guarantee. These are statistical projections from historical backtest data. They're directionally useful but not precise.
WHERE THE DATA COMES FROM Resolution times are computed from the back-test engine running over the last 60 days of 15-minute candles per instrument. The system tracks each historical setup from impulse-detected to TP-or-SL hit, records the time elapsed, and summarizes the distribution as 25th/50th/75th percentiles.

FAQ Frequently asked questions

Getting started

Is 61.8 Signals really free?

Yes — during preview. We're capping the free phase at 100 subscribers. After that, $25/week. Cancel anytime, no annual lock-in. Existing free subscribers will be grandfathered or given paid upgrade options when the time comes.

What if I don't use Telegram?

Telegram is currently the only delivery channel. It's free, available on iOS / Android / desktop, and the bot setup takes 90 seconds. We may add SMS or email delivery in the future, but Telegram's free push notifications make it the best UX for now.

How long does setup take?

About 90 seconds end-to-end: open dashboard → click "Get my link code" → send /link CODE to the bot → done. Signals start arriving as they fire.

What does my account need to start using this?

Any brokerage account that supports bracket orders (entry + stop-loss + take-profit). Most major brokers do: Schwab, Interactive Brokers, TastyTrade, Tradovate. For crypto: Binance, Kraken, Coinbase Advanced. Robinhood has limited bracket support.

Strategy

Why 61.8%? Why not 50% or 76.4%?

61.8% is the inverse of the golden ratio φ (≈ 1.618). Every Fibonacci retracement charting tool draws it. Because so many traders watch it, it tends to act as a self-reinforcing support/resistance zone. The empirical edge has held in our 22-day backtest across the 11 currently-eligible instruments.

What are the risks of using 61.8 Signals?

All trading involves risk of capital loss. Past performance (whether from backtests or live signals) does not guarantee future results. 61.8 Signals is an indicator-only service; we provide alerts but you make all execution decisions. Position sizing, broker choice, and risk tolerance are your responsibility.

The vol-regime filter and 3-entry ladder are designed to control risk, but no system eliminates the possibility of losing trades — or losing weeks. Use proper position sizing (≤1% risk per trade is the industry standard) and never risk capital you can't afford to lose.

This is not investment advice. Consult a licensed financial advisor before making trading decisions.