Launch Terminal
Getting Started Guide

How to Use
Trojan Intel Terminal

Research any ticker in 30 seconds. Understand real-time entry signals, dilution risk, and price spike history before you trade.

Search Any Ticker. Get Instant Intel.

Trojan Intel Terminal is designed to answer one question: "Do I still have time to get in?" Here's how to start using it.

Step 1: Type a Ticker

Enter any stock symbol into the search bar at the top of the terminal. Results load instantly with real-time data.

Step 2: Read the 4 Grades

The assessment panel shows four color-coded grades that tell you whether the stock is worth entering right now. Green = favorable, yellow = neutral, red = unfavorable.

Step 3: Dig Deeper

Scroll down for SEC filings, past price spike outcomes, session breakdowns, and reverse split history. Everything you need to make a decision.

4 Grades. 4 Questions Answered.

Each grade answers a specific question you should be asking before entering a trade. Two grades update in real-time every 60 seconds. Two are based on historical data.

Entry Quality
"Should I get in right now?"

Compares recent volume (last 10-15 minutes) against session averages. Shows if momentum is building, steady, or fading. Tells you if buyers are still aggressive or if you're late.

Volume vs 10-Day Median 15-Min Momentum Float Rotation 30-Min Volume Trend
Favorable Neutral Unfavorable
Price Action
"Is it holding or breaking down?"

Tracks price vs session open, high of day, and VWAP. Shows if buyers are still in control or if the stock is rolling over. Includes spread analysis for liquidity.

Price vs Session Open Distance From HOD VWAP Position Bid/Ask Spread
Favorable Neutral Unfavorable
Dilution Risk
"Am I about to get diluted?"

Scans SEC EDGAR for active offerings (424B), shelf registrations (S-3/S-1), and tracks reverse split history. Warns you before they dump shares on your head.

424B Active Offerings S-3/S-1 Shelf Filings Reverse Split History 8-K Financing Keywords
Low Moderate High
Price Spike History
"What happens after this stock spikes?"

Identifies past +30% moves and 5x volume days, then tracks what happened 5 days later. Shows if this stock tends to hold gains, fade slowly, or crash hard.

+30% Single-Day Moves 5x Volume Spikes 5-Day Outcome Analysis Held / Faded / Crashed
Good Mixed Poor

Real-Time Updates

Entry Quality and Price Action grades refresh every 60 seconds during market hours. Dilution Risk and Spike History are based on historical data and update when new filings or price events are detected.

The Numbers That Matter

The price panel gives you an instant snapshot of the stock's current state. No fluff — just the data momentum traders need.

Key Data Points

Price & Change

Current price with dollar and percentage change from previous close. Color-coded green (up) or red (down) so you can read it at a glance.

Float, Shares Outstanding & Market Cap

Float size matters for momentum stocks. A low-float stock with heavy volume can move much faster. Float percentage shows you how much of the outstanding shares are actually tradeable.

Volume

Current session volume. Compare this to the stock's average to gauge interest. High relative volume confirms momentum.

Dilution Risk, Decoded

The SEC Filings panel scans EDGAR for the last 90 days of filings and flags anything that could affect the stock's float and price. Each filing is categorized by severity.

Filing Severity Levels

Critical High Routine

Critical filings are active offerings (424B prospectuses) and effectiveness notices (EFFECT) — these mean shares are being sold into the market right now or very soon.

High filings include shelf registrations (S-1, S-3) that give the company the ability to sell shares in the future. Not immediate dilution, but a loaded gun.

Routine filings are standard reports (8-K current reports, 10-Q quarterlies) that don't directly signal dilution but may contain relevant information.

Active Offering Warning

When the terminal detects a 424B filing, you'll see a prominent warning banner. This means the company has an active prospectus and is likely selling shares into the open market — a headwind for price.

Reverse Splits

The terminal also tracks reverse split history over the last 12 months. Multiple reverse splits are a major red flag — they often indicate a company repeatedly diluting shares, reverse-splitting to stay listed, then diluting again. This cycle destroys shareholder value.

Learn From the Past Before You Enter

The Spike History panel identifies every time this stock had a +30% move or a 5x volume day in the last 12 months. Then it tells you what happened in the 5 trading days after each spike.

Three Possible Outcomes

Held — Price stayed near or above spike levels
Faded — Price slowly gave back gains
Crashed — Price dropped hard (50%+)

If a stock shows "4 crashed, 1 held" — that's a pattern. It doesn't guarantee the next move will crash, but it tells you this stock has a history of not holding gains. Factor that into your risk.

Pattern Recognition

Stocks with active dilution (424B filings) that also have a history of crashing after spikes are the highest-risk entries. The terminal gives you both data points so you can connect the dots.

Pre-Market, Regular Hours, After Hours

Momentum stocks often move the most during pre-market and the first 30 minutes of regular trading. The session breakdown splits the day into distinct windows so you can see exactly where the action happened.

Pre-Market (4:00 AM - 9:30 AM ET)

Shows pre-market price, change, and volume. A stock that gaps up 40% in pre-market may already be extended by the time regular hours open.

Regular Hours (9:30 AM - 4:00 PM ET)

Expandable detail showing open, high, low, close, volume, and change for the regular session. This is where you see if the stock held its pre-market gains or gave them back.

After Hours (4:00 PM - 8:00 PM ET)

After-hours activity can signal whether momentum will carry into the next day. Low after-hours volume with price holding is generally constructive.

Get the Most Out of the Terminal

Check dilution risk before anything else. A stock running 50% with an active 424B offering is a trap more often than an opportunity. The SEC filings panel takes 2 seconds to scan.
Entry Quality changes fast. A stock can go from "Favorable" to "Unfavorable" in minutes as volume fades. If you're watching a runner, keep the terminal open — it updates every 60 seconds.
Use Spike History as a filter, not a rule. If a stock has crashed after every spike, it doesn't mean it will this time — but it should make you more cautious with position size.
Pre-market context matters. A stock that's already up 80% in pre-market with fading volume is a very different setup than one that's up 20% with accelerating volume. The session breakdown shows you the difference.
Multiple reverse splits = stay away. If a company has done 3+ reverse splits in a year, it's likely in a dilution-reverse split cycle. The terminal tracks this automatically so you don't have to dig through filings.
Research takes 30 seconds, not 30 minutes. Type the ticker, scan the 4 grades, check for active offerings, glance at spike history. That's your full due diligence before deciding whether to look closer or move on.

Ready to Start?

Launch Trojan Intel Terminal and research your first ticker.