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Macro Sentiment Index FAQs

chevron-rightHow is the Macro Sentiment Index calculated?hashtag

MSI computes z-scores for each component over a lookback period, adjusts directionality (e.g., VIX is inverted), applies user-defined weights, and calculates a weighted average. The result is smoothed optionally with a moving average.

chevron-rightWhat does a reading of +1.5 mean?hashtag

A score above +1 indicates strong risk-on sentiment. At +1.5, most risk assets are performing well relative to history, potentially signaling euphoria or complacency. Monitor for reversals or volatility spikes.

chevron-rightCan I use MSI for crypto trading?hashtag

Yes. Bitcoin and crypto markets are highly sensitive to global liquidity and risk appetite. MSI serves as an excellent macro filter—avoid aggressive longs when MSI is deeply negative.

chevron-rightWhy is the VIX given a negative sign in scoring?hashtag

Because rising VIX reflects fear and risk aversion. In MSI logic, higher fear = lower sentiment, so its z-score is negated to align with the overall scale.

chevron-rightIs MSI leading or lagging?hashtag

It is primarily coincident, reflecting current market sentiment. However, due to z-score normalization and aggregation, it can act as a leading indicator when divergences appear (e.g., price up, MSI down).

chevron-rightIs CSI suitable for intraday trading?hashtag

No.

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