Charlie explained
Charlie explained
Charlie is darwintIQ's AI Market Analyst.
Charlie does not replace the core platform data. It sits on top of the live darwintIQ context and turns that context into a readable market interpretation.
Charlie is available inside every paid darwintIQ plan, but the allowed symbols, workflow set, and daily request volume depend on your tier.
Instead of manually combining:
- live Trading Model rankings
- regime state
- cluster dominance
- stability and health context
- recent market structure
Charlie produces a structured analyst-style read that explains what the current setup appears to mean.

What Charlie is for
Charlie helps answer questions like:
- What matters most on this symbol right now?
- What regime seems to dominate?
- Does the setup look fresh, mature, or fragile?
- What is the main risk in the current structure?
- How do the strongest models compare with the latest signal?
The main advantage is speed of interpretation. The underlying darwintIQ data is still there, but Charlie helps you understand the current structure faster.
Access model
Charlie currently follows plan-based access rules:
- Single Symbol: 5 analyses per day, only on the subscribed market, with the core interpretation workflows
- Pro: 20 analyses per day per symbol, all normal workflows, and 3 model comparisons per day
- Pro+: 50 analyses per day per symbol, all workflows, and the broadest comparison access
What Charlie uses
Charlie works from the current darwintIQ model and market context, including:
- symbol state
- trend / regime context
- model fitness and stability
- dominant cluster information
- recent change in the live population
- signal context where available
That means Charlie is not a generic chatbot. It is a controlled interpretation layer built on the live darwintIQ workspace.
The current Charlie workspace also surfaces plan, usage, and live context chips directly in the header so you can see the current regime/bias context without opening a separate panel.
What Charlie does not do
Charlie is not a signal service and does not give trade instructions.
Charlie does not:
- tell you to buy or sell
- issue trade alerts
- replace your own execution decisions
- guarantee that a current read will continue
The UI reinforces this with an explicit No advisory output notice in the locked/upgrade state.
The purpose is interpretation, not advice.
How to read Charlie output
Typical Charlie notes include:
- Bottom line: the shortest useful interpretation of the current setup
- Bias: the current directional or tonal lean
- Regime: the structure Charlie believes is dominant
- Confidence: how robust that read appears
- Main risk: the most relevant caveat or failure point
Charlie is most useful when you want to move from raw model context to a readable market brief without losing the underlying nuance.