Understand Doji Screener Results
What this helps you do
This guide helps you read and interpret the results inside the Doji Screener so you can understand what each row represents and how the data points fit together. It shows you how to evaluate timing, quality, and risk at a glance before opening a chart.
This matters for Wallstreet.io traders because opportunity radars work best when you can quickly recognize which setups align with your style and which ones offer the strongest edges.
What your Doji Screener results represent
When you run the Doji Screener, you get a table of stocks where a recent Heikin-Ashi Doji has appeared, based on the timeframe and filters you chose.
Each row could be viewed as a stock where a possible new PayDay Cycle could be starting, with stats that tell you how that setup has behaved in the past and what kind of risk you might be taking.
You can think of the table as a set of “opportunity cards.” The screener shows you where the Doji happened. The columns help you decide which symbols are worth a closer look on the chart.
We show you the stats so you can decide what is worth your risk.
A simple way to read any row
When you look at a row, you can read it in three quick passes.
1. Check timing
If HA Doji Today = Yes, this is a fresh setup.
If HA Doji Today = No and Last Doji Date is several bars back, that setup may be less urgent and you may need to look at how the stock has moved since that Doji.
2. Check PayDay Cycle potential
Longer average length and a stronger rating suggest that, historically, Doji events on this symbol have been followed by more sustained PayDay Cycles. Shorter average length or weaker grades tell you that these cycles have often been quick or choppy.
These are historical tendencies, not promises about the future.
3. Check volatility and risk profile
A small Doji relative to the recent range usually means a tighter risk zone around the candle. A very large Doji means a wider zone from top to bottom and more price movement inside that bar.
Low or Medium risk scores usually pair with smaller candles. High risk scores show you where the move could be wider and more volatile.
Once you have a feel for these three layers, you can scan down the list and very quickly see which symbols match your risk and time preferences.
How the columns work together
Instead of reading each column in isolation, treat them as a small story about that symbol.
Here are a few common combinations you might notice:
That combination says: “A new Doji has just formed, past Doji based PayDay Cycles on this symbol have often had decent follow through, and the candle size is not extreme.” You may still want to confirm with your own chart view, indicators, and risk rules before taking any action.
Some symbols will show:
This can signal stocks where Doji based PayDay Cycles tend to be quick, shorter bursts rather than long swings. That may appeal to traders who prefer faster turns and quicker decision cycles.
You will also see symbols where:
These setups can move a lot in a short time. They may offer large potential swings, but the distance from the top of the Doji to the bottom of the Doji is also wider, which affects how you think about stops and position size.
None of these patterns are “good” or “bad” on their own. They simply describe the character of the setup so you can match it with your own style.
Connecting results to the PayDay Cycle framework
Behind the scenes, the Doji Screener is trying to answer one question:
“Where are PayDay Cycles likely to be starting, based on how this stock has behaved around Doji candles in the past?”
Together, they help you see how a simple candlestick pattern has played out historically on this symbol, so you are not trading Dojis in the dark. You still decide how and whether to trade it using your own rules, account size, and risk tolerance.
What to do after reviewing the results
Once you understand what the table is telling you, your next steps are usually:
For step-by-step workflows, you can use:
Discover Tab Reference Guide
Discover Tab How-To Guide
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Smart Studies Reference Guide
Scan Tab Reference Guide
Scan Tab How-To Guide
Watchlists How-To guide
Watchlists Reference Guide
Chatrooms Reference Guide
Community Wall How-To Guide
Community Wall Reference Guide
Streams Reference Guide
Streams How-To Guide