Teaching AI to see what traders see
A chart is a compressed visual history of every decision every market participant has made over a given period. Experienced traders read it intuitively — they see patterns, levels, and inflection points. But that intuition takes years to develop, and even experts miss things when they're scanning dozens of charts quickly.
Kabra Vision automates the visual part of technical analysis.
How it works
You select a ticker, a timeframe, and the indicators you want to overlay — RSI, MACD, Bollinger Bands, Stochastic, ATR, SMA, EMA, VWAP, or any combination. Kabra generates a high-resolution chart and feeds it to an AI vision system that has been trained to interpret financial charts the way a seasoned technical analyst would.
The output is structured:
- Patterns identified — double tops, head and shoulders, channels, flags, triangles, wedges, and candlestick formations, each with a reliability assessment
- Key levels — support and resistance zones with price, strength rating, and context
- Indicator readings — what each selected indicator is saying and whether signals confirm or contradict
- Trade setup — directional bias, confidence percentage, suggested entry, stop-loss, target, and risk-reward ratio
Why visual analysis matters
Numbers tell you what happened. Charts tell you how it happened — the velocity of moves, the conviction behind reversals, the volume patterns that confirm or deny breakouts.
Some information only exists in the visual structure. A symmetrical triangle compressing into an apex. A volume divergence on the third test of resistance. A wick rejection at a Fibonacci level. These are spatial relationships that mathematical indicators alone don't capture.
Configurable depth
You control the analysis depth through indicator selection. A minimal setup (price + volume) produces a clean pattern-focused analysis. A full setup (RSI, MACD, Bollinger, Stochastic, ATR, Volume) produces a comprehensive multi-indicator confluence assessment.
Each active indicator adds a layer of analysis — and a token to the cost — so you're incentivized to choose the indicators that matter for your specific trade thesis.
When to use it
- Before entering a position: confirm the pattern you think you see
- On unfamiliar tickers: get a rapid structural assessment
- During earnings season: quickly scan dozens of charts after hours
- For trade documentation: structured analysis that you can reference later