Every one of those events reprices something — the market just hasn't heard yet. EARLYWIRE reads the seismographs, satellites, ships and grid filings directly and hands you the affected tickers, a median of ~19 minutes before the newswire.
Real production signals, shown with a 1-minute public delay. Operators see them instantly.
Each category is labeled by how far its proof has come. Measured means lead time and realized moves are public on the scorecard; nothing is promoted before it earns it.
REMIT, UMM and ENTSO-E outage filings, parsed the second they post. Median alert ~19 minutes before the newswire.
Own detector on ~7,800 stations plus USGS and EMSC. One quake becomes per-company signals with shaking intensity per site.
Three VIIRS satellites over 25,000 mapped plants, with flare-aware thresholds so a working refinery isn't news.
Major events crossing mapped industrial assets. Only critical intersections surface.
Global AIS — dark vessels, jamming zones, sanctioned hulls. Tracked now, scored once it earns attribution.
Global ADS-B including military airframes. Buildups alert only at critical mass.
Every alert's lead time against the newswire and every next-session market move is recorded and recomputed continuously — the same tables the product runs on.
The full desk: live signals with confidence and estimated effect, the map, situation graphs, alerts to Slack and webhooks, desk chat, and the scorecard. Sign up, test everything free for an hour, then pick a seat — no card until you do.
No — there is no technical analysis anywhere in the system. EARLYWIRE reads primary sources (grid filings, transponders, seismic networks, satellites) and tells you which tickers each event touches. On power outages, the median alert has landed about 19 minutes before the newswire.
Every signal carries a confidence rate and an estimated effect taken from that category's own realized market moves — and the same numbers are published, continuously recomputed, on the scorecard. Categories that haven't earned an estimate say "learning" instead of pretending.
A squawk is fast audio without instruments attached. Here the event arrives sourced, scored, and already mapped to tickers — and you can check the service's lead time on the scorecard instead of taking it on faith.
We sell speed to ground truth, not a strategy. What you do with an event is your edge; a hundred desks can trade the same signal a hundred ways.
The desk locks and nothing charges — there's no card on file. If the hour convinced you, you claim a seat and we reopen it the same day; if not, you walk away.