Why daily trading signals actually suit Australian hours
Most trading content is written for people in London or New York — Australians get told to trade sessions that run in the middle of our night. Here is the honest version: daily trading signals in Australia work better than almost anywhere else, because the market's busiest hours land after work, not during it. The London open hits around 5pm AEST (6pm AEDT in summer), right as most of the east coast knocks off, and the big US data drops land mid-to-late evening. You can hold down a full-time job and still be at the screen for the best part of the trading day.
Each signal arrives with a precise entry price, one or more take profit (TP) targets and a stop loss (SL). You place the order in a couple of minutes — often as a pending order before dinner — and the stop loss caps your downside while you sleep. Nothing here is guaranteed profit: signals are professional analyst opinions, and losing trades are a normal part of trading.
This page is the busy-Aussie companion to our head guide on the best trading signals. And one rule before anything else: never follow a daily-signal service that hides its results. Ours are published week by week — wins and losses together — on the performance page, averaging 94% accuracy by points across 25 published weeks.
How to get daily signals: free, or paid with trade management
There are exactly two ways to receive our daily signals, and both replace subscriptions that typically cost up to $2,500 a year (roughly A$3,800). The key difference: the paid plan includes live trade management after entry — stop-loss updates, partial profit-taking and early exits when momentum turns.
If you plan to trade anyway, the free path usually wins on pure maths: the deposit doubles as your trading capital, so you are not paying for the signals at all — the money sits in your own account and you trade with it. If you already have a broker you like, the bot subscription keeps things simple: no new account, just the alerts.
The two ways to get daily trading signals
| Free (fund a broker account) | Paid (Telegram bot) | |
|---|---|---|
| Subscription cost | None | Monthly or annual plan |
| How to start | Open a Base Markets account and deposit $400 (about A$600) | Subscribe via the Telegram bot |
| Your capital | The $400 stays in your account — you trade with it | No broker account required |
| Markets covered | Gold, forex, oil, indices, crypto | Gold, forex, oil, indices, crypto |
| After-entry management | Issue alerts | Stop updates + partial profits + early exits |
| Best for | Anyone planning to trade anyway | Anyone who wants the signals without opening an account |
The AEST playbook: which markets fire when, Sydney time
Multi-market trade alerts are a genuine advantage on Australian time, because the five markets peak at different hours of our day. The Sydney and Tokyo sessions cover the morning, London arrives at knock-off time, and the London–New York overlap — the most active stretch for gold and forex signals — runs late evening. Crypto never closes, so weekend signals still have a home.
Every signal is issued with a fixed entry, target and stop that do not change after publication (except through paid-tier trade management), so pending orders do the waiting for you. A routine that works for a lot of Australian subscribers: check the channel over breakfast for anything from the US close, place pending orders in the early evening as London ramps up, and let the stop loss stand guard overnight.
Markets and their best windows on Australian Eastern time
| Market | Best window (AEST) | Prevailing signal style |
|---|---|---|
| Gold (XAUUSD) | 5pm–1am — London through the US overlap | Short-term + swing |
| Forex majors (incl. AUD/USD) | Any time — 24-hour market; the Aussie is liveliest in our morning and the US evening | Short-term + swing |
| Indices (US500, NAS100, DJ30) | 11:30pm US cash open; pending orders earlier | Short-term momentum |
| Oil (WTI/Brent) | Late evening, around US data | Short-term |
| Crypto (BTC, ETH) | Any time — 24/7 market | Selective swing |
Short-term signals with realistic targets vs swing trades
We issue two styles that fit a working week. Short-term signals usually resolve within hours and aim for realistic point targets — modest, achievable moves rather than fantasy calls — so an evening at the screen covers them. Swing signals run from a day to several days: you set entry, target and stop once and go about your week, which suits anyone whose evenings are already spoken for.
The golden rule in both styles: realistic targets, a stop loss on every trade, and risk of 1–2% of capital per position. On a A$2,000 account that means risking A$20–40 per trade — small enough that a losing streak stings but never wipes you out. For the fundamentals behind these rules, start with what trading signals are.
Short-term vs swing at a glance
| Criterion | Short-term | Swing |
|---|---|---|
| Trade duration | Minutes to hours | One to several days |
| Monitoring needed | An evening check-in or two | Almost none after order placement |
| Target size | Modest, realistic points | Larger moves at a measured risk-reward |
| Best for | Free evenings after work | Flat-out weeks and FIFO rosters |