How Excalium filters the noise.
Excalium watches primary sources in real time, uses AI to keep only what's material, and tags every story so you can act on it. Here's exactly what happens between news breaking and an alert reaching you.
Read the primary sources
We poll first-party feeds continuously — SEC EDGAR filings (8-Ks), company and research-lab blogs, financial wires and major news, and the tech press. We go to where news breaks, not to rewritten aggregator copy.
Keep only what's material
An AI layer reads each item and judges whether it actually matters. Routine, procedural and immaterial items are dropped. What survives gets a one-line “what happened” written in plain English.
Tag the company, ticker & event
Every story is resolved to the company and ticker it affects and labelled by event type — earnings, M&A, funding, legal, leadership, guidance and more — and near-duplicate reports of the same event are collapsed, so you can filter the feed to exactly what you care about.
Surface what's yours PRO
Add your holdings and Excalium matches each event to the stocks you own, calls it a tailwind or headwind with the reasoning, and pushes it to your Telegram the moment it lands.
Where the news comes from
A few of the primary sources Excalium reads. The feed favours first-party filings and announcements over second-hand summaries.
What Excalium is — and isn't
Straight about the limits, so you know exactly what you're reading.
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Informational only
Excalium is not financial advice and not a trading tool. It surfaces and explains news — the decisions are yours. Always do your own research.
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AI isn't perfect
The model can occasionally misclassify a story, miss one, or over- or understate how much it matters. Every card links to the original source — verify before you act.
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Timing & data
Prices and some feeds may be delayed, and alert speed depends on when a source actually publishes. Excalium is fast, not a market data terminal.
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Coverage
The focus is material, market-moving events — with especially deep coverage of tech — rather than every headline ever written.