📊Analytical Method of Confluence: How Independent Signals Alter the Probabilistic Picture of a Trade
Confluence of Signals: Why Three Weak Pieces of Evidence Together Equal One Strong One
It's Tuesday evening, you open the chart, and the moving average has just crossed the price from below. Your heart races — "this is it." Your finger hovers over the button. But two days later, the price drops by 6%, and you stare at the chart feeling like you've been deceived. You were misled by a single isolated signal that you believed in as if it were evidence in court. Yet it was more like an anonymous text: "something's happening, maybe."
One Signal is a Witness, Three Signals are Evidence
Imagine a court case based on a single witness who isn't entirely sure. The chance of error is high. Now add fingerprints, a video recording, and a bank statement — each imperfect on its own, but all pointing in the same direction. This is what is called confluence in analysis: a point where multiple methods independently converge and say the same thing.
The key word is independently. When you have three indicators that essentially calculate the same thing (like three different moving averages), you don't have three pieces of evidence — you have one piece of evidence said three times. It's like three brothers swearing to the same alibi. True confluence mixes different perspectives: trend, price level, volume, fundamentals, sentiment.
Why It Works: A Bit of Probability Math
Let's put it in numbers, because that's where it shines.
Let's say you have one signal with an approximate 55% success rate — slightly better than a coin toss. That sounds dull. Now imagine a second, independent signal with the same success rate, and a third as well. If they are truly independent and you require all three to agree, your trade profile changes significantly:
- You have fewer opportunities (logically — it's rarer for three things to agree at once).
- But the opportunities that pass the filter have a significantly higher success rate than a lone signal.
And now the important part, what the data says — and what it does NOT. Confluence does not increase the return of an individual trade. It doesn't make anything certain. What it does: improves the signal-to-noise ratio. It filters out a lot of random fluctuations that would otherwise cost you fees and nerves.
Want to know more? Ask the QMA AI advisor
The advisor knows the whole platform and its data. If the answer is not in the QMA database, it looks it up and explains it in plain language.
Open the AI advisor →Related articles
A company has a score of 78/100 and looks great. However, until you see what this number is made of, you're buying a pig in a poke. We'll show you how the four pillars reveal where beauty is just painted on.
6 minTwo companies are priced at 500 CZK per share. One is cheap, the other is overpriced — and you'll only know the difference when you stop looking at the price tag and start calculating. A data guide to the difference between price and value.
6 minMomentum is not magic, but a statistical anomaly that academics have been describing for over 30 years. We will show you how it is calculated, why it works at all — and where its catch lies.
See it live: QMA scores 17,000+ stocks for you
Full access to the 5-pillar analysis, smart-money signals, strategies and the whole-market screener. No commitment, cancel anytime.
📬 Free weekly QMA Brief
Market overview + 1 education piece + a look at the top-rated name. No account.
QMA is an analytical tool, not investment advice. You can unsubscribe anytime with one click.