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Answers to common questions about TriggrTrackr.

What is a 'trigger'?
A trigger is any event or milestone that could move a stock's price — an earnings report, a product launch, a regulatory decision, or an overdue update on a deal that was promised months ago. TriggrTrackr finds both the confirmed ones (with a date) and the inferred ones (based on what the company has said).
How is this different from just reading news?
News tells you what happened. TriggrTrackr traces what's coming. It reads the last several press releases for a stock, maps out commitments the company has made, identifies overdue milestones, and projects what should logically happen next — so you can position ahead of the announcement rather than react to it.
Why is it taking so long?
Depending on the amount of relevant publicly available news, TriggrTrackr will take up to 50 seconds to find everything it needs in order to provide the best coverage and most recent news articles.
What does 'Triggers to Watch' mean?
These are inferred milestones with no confirmed date yet. For example: a company said 'deal expected within 3 months' six months ago — that deadline has passed and an update is overdue. Or Phase 1 trials completed — Phase 2 should follow. These appear as watch items rather than on the dated timeline.
Which markets and exchanges are supported?
All major global exchanges via Yahoo Finance, with enhanced Nordic coverage. Nordic micro-caps that don't appear in Yahoo's default search results are surfaced via ticker pattern matching.
Where does the data come from?
Various news source incuding GlobeNewswire and SEC EDGAR along with several local news sources.
How often is data refreshed?
The first time you look up a stock, TriggrTrackr does a full analysis. On return visits after one hour, it checks for new articles published since the last run and only analyzes those.
The coverage is limited in my country, what do I do?
Send us a mail at info@triggrtrackr.com and we will look into it!

Still have questions?

info@triggrtrackr.com