COMPARISON · FAHALI VS CHARTING & DATA TOOLS

Charts show you the market.
Fahali tells you what it will do.

TradingView, Coinglass, and Kaiko are exceptional tools — for what they are. One charts the market. One surfaces crypto data. One provides data feeds. None of them detect structural anomalies, reconstruct institutional capital flows, or forecast regime shifts. Fahali is not a replacement for any of them. It is a different category entirely.

Four tools, four purposes

Charting platform

TradingView

Industry-standard charting software with technical indicators, screeners, and a social community. Excellent for visual price analysis. Does not detect anomalies, reconstruct flow, or forecast regimes.

Crypto data dashboard

Coinglass

Aggregates crypto exchange data: open interest, liquidations, funding rates, exchange flows. Shows you the numbers. Does not interpret them, detect structural patterns, or generate probabilistic forecasts.

Market data API

Kaiko

Institutional-grade market data provider covering centralized and decentralized exchanges. Supplies raw and derived data via API. Does not include detection engines, inference layers, or autonomous monitoring.

Risk intelligence

Fahali

Autonomous risk surveillance with 18 detection layers, 7-engine consensus, sub-300ms tick-to-decision. Detects anomalies, reconstructs capital flow, maps contagion, and delivers plain-English forecasts with reasoning traces.

At a glance

CapabilityTradingViewCoinglassKaikoFahali
Charting & technical analysisBasic
Exchange data aggregationConsumed only
Market data APIDetection API
Anomaly detection
72h probabilistic forecast
Capital flow reconstructionBasic flows
Contagion mapping
Dark pool monitoring
Reasoning trace per signal
Autonomous 24/7 operation
Read-only by design
Price (starting)Free–$49/moFree–$99/moCustom$19–$4,999/mo

Detailed comparison

TradingView

TradingView is the industry standard for charting and technical analysis. It offers thousands of indicators, multi-chart layouts, Pine Script for custom strategies, and a large social community. TradingView shows you price action and lets you draw conclusions. It does not draw conclusions for you — there is no detection engine, no inference layer, and no autonomous monitoring. The user must stare at charts and identify patterns manually. This works for discretionary traders but does not scale across 9,000+ instruments operating 24/7.

When to use TradingView: You need to analyze price action visually, draw trend lines, apply technical indicators, or share chart ideas with a community.

Coinglass (formerly Bybt)

Coinglass aggregates crypto exchange data — open interest, funding rates, long/short ratios, liquidation levels, and exchange flows. It is an excellent dashboard for understanding what is happening in crypto derivatives markets. What Coinglass does not do is interpret that data: it surfaces open interest but does not detect anomalous OI divergence; it shows funding rates but does not flag regime shifts in funding stress; it reports liquidations but does not model liquidation cascade risk.

When to use Coinglass: You need a quick view of crypto market data — OI, funding, liquidations — across multiple exchanges in one dashboard.

Kaiko

Kaiko is a market data provider serving institutional clients with historical and real-time trade data from centralized and decentralized exchanges. It is an API-first product: you integrate Kaiko feeds into your own infrastructure and build your own analysis. Kaiko does not include detection algorithms, forecasting models, or signal generation — it provides the raw material for those, not the finished intelligence.

When to use Kaiko: You are building your own trading or analytics infrastructure and need reliable, institution-grade market data feeds.

The honest answer

Fahali is not a replacement for any of these tools. It is a layer that sits above them. TradingView shows you price. Coinglass shows you crypto data. Kaiko supplies data feeds. Fahali detects, forecasts, and explains — it tells you what the market is doing that it should not be doing, where capital is moving before it appears on the tape, and what happens next. The most sophisticated users run TradingView for charting, Coinglass for data, and Fahali for detection — each tool at its layer in the stack.

Frequently asked questions

Does Fahali integrate with TradingView?

Yes. Fahali alerts can be piped into TradingView via webhook for visual overlay. Many users run TradingView charts with Fahali signals overlaid as a second opinion layer.

Does Fahali use Kaiko or Coinglass data?

Fahali consumes market data from direct exchange feeds (CME, Cboe, Deribit, Coinbase Prime, Binance L2) rather than relying on third-party data aggregators. This ensures sub-300ms tick-to-decision latency and avoids the latency tax of an intermediate data provider.

Can I replace my data tools with Fahali?

No. If you need charting, use TradingView. If you need crypto derivatives data, use Coinglass. If you need data feeds, use Kaiko. If you need to know what the market is going to do before it does it, use Fahali alongside them.

The detection layer your stack is missing.

14-day trial · No card required · Runs alongside your existing tools