Best-in-class chart-based tripwires for entries, exits, and “something changed—look now” moments.
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FAQ (fast answers)
Are TradingView alerts worth it for dividend capture?
Yes—if you use them to protect your process: alert your entry zone, your “recovery achieved” exit zone, and any break of key support so you don’t sit through a slow-motion loss.
What alerts should a Yield Raider set first?
Start with (1) entry price zone, (2) exit/recovery zone, (3) “break support” alert, and (4) percent-move alert for sudden dumps that often follow bad news.
Will I get spammed?
You can—if you set too many alerts or use noisy indicator conditions. Keep alerts simple and only on the symbols you’re actively trading or stalking.
What TradingView Alerts do well
- Price level alerts: “Tell me when it hits X.”
- Indicator / condition alerts: moving average crosses, RSI thresholds, trend breaks, etc.
- Workflow-friendly: you can build a repeatable “alert recipe” and reuse it.
The Yield Raider alert recipe (copy this)
For every planned capture trade, set these 4 alerts:
1) Entry Zone (your preferred buy level or range)
2) Recovery/Exit Zone (your “good enough, take the win” level)
3) Break Support (below the level that tells you “this isn’t recovering”)
4) Percent-Move Shock (ex: down 2–4% in a day — your “check the news” trigger)
Watch-outs
- Alert overload: too many alerts = you start ignoring them. Keep it tight.
- Noisy indicators: if you build a Frankenstein alert with 7 conditions, it will fire when you least want it.
- Plan limits: some alert counts/features depend on your plan—start with fewer, smarter alerts.
Best alternatives
- TrendSpider: more automation-heavy alert workflows (great, but can be overkill).
- TC2000: fast, clean trader workflows.
- StockCharts: classic platform with powerful scans + alerts once you learn it.
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