Trading Terminal

The Terminal is where analysis becomes action. Everything you've been reading in the Screener, the Dashboard, and your indicators leads here — to the moment you decide to put capital on a setup and manage it through to the exit.

Written By Emama Platform

Last updated About 2 months ago

The Terminal supports two distinct order types: Single Orders for precise, asset-specific entries, and Group Orders for deploying across multiple positions simultaneously using the Smart function. Understanding both — and knowing when to use each — is what the module is built around.


Accessing the Terminal

The fastest way to get to the Terminal is directly from the Screener. Click any ticker in your list, and the chart window opens. From there, navigate to the Orders tab — your selected ticker is already populated in the entry field, so you go straight to setting up the trade.


Single Orders

A Single Order is a direct, asset-specific trade entry. Use it when you've identified a specific setup on a specific asset and want precise control over the entry.

To place a single order:

  1. Open the asset from the Screener — the ticker populates automatically in the Orders tab

  2. Fill out the right-side panel (the terminal remembers your last inputs, so recurring setups go faster)

  3. Hit Buy or Sell

The left-side panel settings are relevant for Group Orders — you can ignore them for single trades.

Position Parameters

Leverage — Your desired leverage multiplier (e.g., ×25). Note that the leverage you specify affects the calculation of your available balance, but the actual leverage applied on the exchange is determined by the exchange itself based on trade volume and its own rules. Maximum supported: ×125.

Volume — The total size of the position, including leverage. For example: a $8 position size at ×25 leverage requires $0.32 in margin.

Stop Loss — Set as a percentage of your position size. A 5% SL on an $8 position means a maximum loss of $0.40.

Take Profit — Set the same way. A 5% TP on an $8 position means a target gain of $0.40.

Once placed, the trade appears in the Open Positions tab.


Recommendations Panel — TSS

Before placing any order, the Recommendations section gives you a quick read on the asset's current trend state via the TSS (Trend Strength Score).

TSS is a weighted average of the asset's deviation from its MA across timeframes, with higher weights assigned to longer-term timeframes:

  • Short-term TFs carry a weight of 0.5

  • Medium-term TFs carry a weight of 1

  • Long-term TFs carry a weight of 2

This weighting means that the dominant trend — the one that actually matters for most setups — has more influence on the score than short-term noise.

How to read TSS:

  • Positive TSS — the asset is in an uptrend; the higher the value, the stronger the trend

  • Negative TSS — downtrend; the deeper the value, the more established the decline

  • Near zero — weak or ranging market; no clear directional bias

The Symbol view button opens the full chart for the asset, letting you run a proper structural analysis before committing to the trade.


Group Orders (Smart Function)

Group Orders let you open multiple positions simultaneously across a filtered set of assets — all with a single action. This is the index-style trading approach: instead of betting everything on one asset, you spread exposure across the strongest or weakest names in the market, letting statistical distribution work in your favour.

To place a Group Order, make sure the Smart function is enabled on the left side of the Orders tab.

Setting Up a Group Order

Tag — Filter your candidate pool by color tag. Selecting a specific tag narrows the group to only the assets you've tagged with that color. White tag means the entire list is eligible.

Frame — The timeframe used to evaluate candidates. For example: if you want to short assets that are weak on the 15-minute timeframe, set Frame to 15m.

Type — What metric to rank and select candidates by. Options:

  • Value — a fixed numeric threshold

  • Deviation Power — rank by DP; strongest or weakest deviations first

  • Duration — rank by DUR; longest-running trends above or below MA

  • DP + Duration — combined ranking; assets with both strong deviation and persistence

Condition — For all non-Value types, this sets the sort direction for candidates:

  • > selects in descending order — highest values first (e.g., most extended assets for a short)

  • < selects in ascending order — lowest values first (e.g., most oversold for a long)

For the Value type, the Condition field works as a filter threshold: only assets above or below the specified value are eligible.

Max orders — How many individual positions to open within the group. The terminal selects the top candidates from your filtered pool up to this number.

Fee % — Only active in Demo mode. The terminal charges double the entered value to simulate realistic round-trip costs (entry + exit).

Leverage, Volume, Stop Loss, Take Profit — Same logic as Single Orders, applied uniformly across all positions in the group.


Managing Open Positions

Once positions are open, they appear in the Open Positions tab. Group Order positions are displayed as collapsible groups — click a group to expand it and see all individual trades within it.

The right-hand panel gives you three levels of control: All positions, a specific Group, or an Individual position.

The Percentage Field

The percentage input at the top of the management panel is shared by both the averaging and partial close functions. Enter the percentage you want to add or reduce, then select which action to apply it to.


Averaging Positions

The Add function averages into positions — it increases the size of existing trades by the specified percentage.

Averaging the full portfolio:

Action

What it does

Average +

Adds the specified % to every profitable position

Average –

Adds the specified % to every losing position

Average Long

Adds the specified % to every long position

Average Short

Adds the specified % to every short position

Averaging a group: The Add button on the group row applies the specified percentage to every position within that group.

Averaging an individual position: Select the position, then use the individual-level Add control.


Partial Closes (Reduce)

The Reduce function partially closes positions — it takes a portion of the trade off the table without fully exiting.

Reducing the full portfolio:

Action

What it does

Average +

Takes partial profit from every profitable position

Average –

Reduces the size of every losing position

Average Long

Partially closes every long position

Average Short

Partially closes every short position

Reducing a group: The Reduce button on the group row applies the partial close to every position in that group.

Reducing an individual position: Select the position, then use the individual-level Reduce control.


Closing Positions

To close positions, select the appropriate option from the close controls:

Action

What it closes

Close +

Closes All profitable positions

Close –

Closes All losing positions

Close Long

Closes All long positions

Close Short

Closes All short positions

Close All

Closes Everything — singles and groups


Post-Trade Analysis

Every closed position is a data point. Click on any closed trade and the asset's chart opens with your trade automatically marked on it:

  • Open — your entry point

  • Add — any averaging actions you took

  • Close — your exit point

This gives you a clean, visual record of exactly how you managed the trade — where you entered, whether you added correctly or too early, and where you exited relative to where the move went. Over time, reviewing these regularly is one of the most direct ways to identify what's actually working in your execution versus what just felt right in the moment.