FynovScore™: The Composite Indicator That Rates Every Asset from 0 to 100

Investing

FynovScore™: The Composite Indicator That Rates Every Asset from 0 to 100

Information isn't scarce on the markets — synthesis is. See how Fynov distils momentum, sentiment, volatility and fundamentals into a single 0–100 score, and how to use it to prioritise your decisions in seconds.

FynovScore™: The Composite Indicator That Rates Every Asset from 0 to 100

In financial markets, information is not what's scarce — synthesis is. The FynovScore™ is Fynov's answer to that problem: a single number between 0 and 100 that summarises the health of an asset at a given moment.

What the FynovScore™ measures

The score is built from four analytical dimensions, combined into two complementary layers: a quantitative technical analysis layer and a qualitative AI analysis layer. The weighting between these two layers is part of Fynov's proprietary methodology.

1. Momentum (technical) RSI, MACD, Bollinger Bands and moving averages are combined to assess short- and medium-term price dynamics. An asset in an uptrend with rising momentum scores high on this dimension.

2. Market sentiment Fynov aggregates news analysis, social signals and global sentiment indicators (Fear & Greed, crypto funding rates, options flow) to measure how the market perceives the asset.

3. Volatility risk ATR (Average True Range), the standard deviation of returns and beta relative to the market. High volatility without a clear trend is penalised: it signals uncertainty, not opportunity.

4. Fundamental health For stocks: P/E, P/B, revenue growth, balance-sheet strength. For crypto: on-chain metrics (MVRV, NVT, exchange flows). This dimension anchors the score in the asset's economic reality.

These four dimensions feed the AI, which synthesises the signals, weighs the contradictions and produces the final score. This hybrid architecture makes the FynovScore™ robust against purely technical false signals.

How to read the score

ScoreReadingWhat it means
56 – 100StrongPositive alignment across most dimensions
41 – 55NeutralMixed signals, status quo likely
0 – 40WeakConditions deteriorating, caution advised
Important: A strong score reads as Bullish and a weak score as Cautious, but neither is a recommendation to buy, hold or sell. It's a prioritisation tool, not an oracle, and not investment advice.

FynovScore in practice

Example 1 — Filter your watchlist You follow 30 assets. Rather than analysing them one by one, you first look at those scoring above 70: these are your priority candidates for deeper analysis.

Example 2 — Monitor a position you hold You hold ETH. Its FynovScore drops from 72 to 38 in a week — the stance shifts from Bullish toward Cautious. That alone isn't a reason to act, but it's the cue to revisit your thesis and check whether something has fundamentally changed.

Example 3 — FynovScore alerts On Fynov, you can set an alert that triggers when an asset falls below a score threshold you define. You don't have to watch the dashboard constantly.

Updates

The FynovScore™ is recalculated daily for every tracked asset. The Pro and Business plans allow up to 5 and 15 assets with automatic recalculation, plus monthly credits for on-demand recalculations.

What the score does not do

The FynovScore™ is not a predictor of future returns. It measures the current state of the asset based on available data. Unexpected macroeconomic events, surprise announcements or regulatory changes can move any asset regardless of its score.

Use it like a GPS, not an oracle: it tells you where you are and which direction you're heading, but the decision to take the wheel remains yours.

FAQ

What does the FynovScore™ actually measure?

Four dimensions in one number: momentum, market sentiment, volatility risk and fundamental health — combined across a technical layer and an AI layer into a single 0–100 reading of an asset's current health.

What counts as a good or bad score?

56 and above reads as a Bullish (strong) alignment, 41–55 is Neutral, and 40 or below is Cautious (weak). It's a prioritisation cue, not a buy, hold or sell call.

How often is it updated?

Daily, for every tracked asset. You can also set an alert that fires when a score crosses a threshold you choose, so you don't have to watch the dashboard.


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