How to Build Daily Trading Bias Using MRKT

Table of Contents
- Why Traders Struggle to Define Bias
- Starting From the MRKT Dashboard
- Understanding Swing and Intraday Bias
- Using Price Projections as Directional Reference
- Why Fundamentals and Events Can Flip Bias
- Monitoring Live Headlines for Confirmation
- The MRKT Bias Workflow Step by Step
- FAQ
- Conclusion
Why Traders Struggle to Define Bias
Many traders know they should have a bias before trading, but they rarely follow a structured process to define it.
Instead, bias is often built from isolated chart observations or recent price movement. This leads to uncertainty, frequent directional changes, and inconsistent execution.
Bias should not be a guess.
It should be the result of structured context.
The MRKT workflow provides a clear sequence that helps traders build session bias using positioning, projections, fundamentals, and real-time information.
Starting From the MRKT Dashboard

The bias-building process begins on the MRKT main dashboard.
From this view, traders can immediately access key components of market context:
- Charts for structural positioning
- Live headlines for real-time developments
- Fundamental drivers impacting each asset
- Upcoming economic calendar events
Scrolling further provides a broader view of market sentiment and additional tools that help contextualize the trading environment.
This dashboard functions as a starting point for session interpretation rather than execution.
Start With Context Before Execution
Use the MRKT dashboard to see structure, sentiment, and catalysts together.
Understanding Swing and Intraday Bias

Within the chart view, MRKT provides both swing and intraday bias.
These two perspectives allow traders to understand directional positioning across different horizons.
By selecting either bias, traders can view the underlying fundamentals influencing that timeframe. This helps determine whether price movement is supported by broader context or represents short-term noise.
Understanding multi-timeframe bias alignment improves clarity and reduces conflicting expectations during execution.
Using Price Projections as Directional Reference
Once bias is understood, the next step is analyzing price projections.
Price projections provide forward reference areas where price is statistically likely to migrate.
Traders can use these levels to:
- Identify potential pullback zones
- Define continuation targets
- Evaluate reward relative to bias
Rather than searching for arbitrary levels, projections anchor expectations to contextual direction.
Why Fundamentals and Events Can Flip Bias

Bias is not static.
Fundamental developments and economic events can alter market expectations and shift directional context.
MRKT highlights the fundamental drivers supporting each asset while also outlining potential events capable of changing bias.
Recognizing what could invalidate bias is as important as defining bias itself.
This awareness improves risk management and prevents traders from holding outdated views.
See What Can Change Your Bias
Track fundamental drivers and upcoming events impacting direction.
Monitoring Live Headlines for Confirmation

Live headlines provide real-time insight into evolving market conditions.
High-impact commentary, policy signals, or geopolitical developments can quickly reinforce or challenge bias.
MRKT’s headline stream allows traders to monitor these developments while also understanding their potential asset-specific impact.
This ensures bias remains adaptive rather than static.
The MRKT Bias Workflow Step by Step
The bias-building process can be summarized as a simple sequence:
- Review bias positioning
- Analyze price projections
- Evaluate fundamental drivers
- Monitor live headlines
After completing this workflow, traders know what conditions to expect and what opportunities to prioritize.
Bias becomes a navigational framework rather than a directional opinion.
FAQ
What is trading bias?
Trading bias is contextual understanding of directional probability based on structure, liquidity, and macro drivers.
Why is bias important before trading?
Bias filters low-quality setups and helps traders focus on opportunities aligned with the broader environment.
Can bias change during the session?
Yes. Fundamental developments, sentiment shifts, and structural validation can update bias.
How do price projections help bias?
Price projections provide forward reference levels that support directional expectations.
Why monitor headlines when bias is defined?
Because real-time developments can reinforce or invalidate the existing narrative.
Conclusion
Defining bias is not about predicting direction. It is about understanding context.
MRKT provides a structured workflow that helps traders move from uncertainty to clarity by integrating bias positioning, projections, fundamentals, and real-time developments.
When this sequence becomes routine, execution becomes more selective, risk management improves, and session navigation becomes intentional.
Consistency begins with context.