The morning brief that actually does the reading for you.
Every morning before the London open, SentimentFX runs every overnight headline across crypto, FX and equities through FinBERT for sentiment scoring. Claude turns the structured signal into a 60-second plain-English brief on what matters today. Delivered to your inbox before you've finished the kettle.
- Daily morning brief by email
- Full per-ticker sentiment + headlines
- Divergence flags
- Archive access
- Everything in Brief
- Live dashboard, 42 tickers
- Sentiment alerts (email)
- CSV export · 1,000 API calls/mo
How the brief is generated
At 06:55 London time, SentimentFX pulls every headline from the last 24 hours that mentions one of the tracked tickers. Each one is scored with FinBERT — a transformer model fine-tuned on financial text — producing a value between -1 (very bearish) and +1 (very bullish). The volume-weighted mean is compared against the prior 24 hours to detect sentiment shifts, and against the matching 24-hour price move to detect divergences.
Claude (Sonnet 4.6) then synthesises a plain-English summary: the most important signal first, any notable moves, and one actionable observation. No bullet points. No "good morning". No padding.
What you get vs. what's free
Free readers can browse the public archive (you're looking at it) and see the AI summary paragraph for any past day. Use this to decide whether the brief is worth £9.99/mo before paying for anything.
Paid subscribers get the full brief by email each morning, including per-ticker sentiment scores, 24h price moves, the highest-impact headline of the day, and divergence flags. The same content surfaces on the app dashboard if you prefer to read in-browser.
Why daily, why morning
The biggest news moves overnight while the UK sleeps — Asian trading hours for crypto, US earnings + FOMC statements for equities. By 07:00 London you've missed the action; the brief catches you up in 60 seconds so you can enter the day knowing what already happened. Anything that breaks during the day fires through the in-app alert system instead.
Not financial advice. Sentiment signals are probabilistic, not certain.