The educational crash-recovery research tool for people with real lives
CrashDash is an educational stock research scanner built for people who don't want to manually sift through hundreds of charts every day.
It helps you learn about crashed, unloved, and forgotten stocks that might be setting up for recovery—the kind of price movements most people only notice after they've already happened.
The concept is simple:
No trading room.
No 10 screens.
No fake Instagram lifestyle.
Just educational research signals you can study to improve your understanding of market behavior.
CrashDash was built by someone who:
The idea was simple:
So over several years, the rules, patterns, and ideas from manual scanning were turned into an engine—and that engine became CrashDash.
This is a research and education tool, not a "get rich quick" scheme. It's designed to help you learn about market patterns, not to tell you what to trade.
Let's be honest:
CrashDash is built for people who:
We focus on learning about crashes, consolidations, and recovery potential—not scalping pennies all day.
CrashDash didn't appear overnight:
It's still improving. The goal is always the same:
Less time staring at charts, more time learning about informed decision-making patterns.
CrashDash is NOT financial advice.
This tool is for educational and informational purposes only. We do not:
All investment decisions are yours alone. You are responsible for your own research, risk management, and trading choices.
Signals shown are educational examples based on historical patterns. Past performance does not indicate future results. Markets are volatile and unpredictable—always consult with a qualified financial advisor before making investment decisions.
As Warren Buffett famously said:
That idea inspired CrashDash—but it only really works on specific types of crashes and setups. That's what the engine tries to help you learn about and identify.
The signals are simple enough for beginners to understand,
but serious enough that experienced traders can still find educational value.