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How to read the dashboard

A complete visual guide to all the elements of the main screen

Updated 16/07/2026 · 3 min read

The Arbicsx dashboard is your control center: it is designed to give you a clear reading of your capital, performance over time, and the technical status of the connected broker within seconds. Learning to read it well means stopping the reaction to isolated numbers and starting to interpret the service's trend as a whole.

In this guide, we will see, section by section, what the main screen shows, which indicators to observe first, and which behaviors to avoid when data fluctuates. The goal is not to memorize every button, but to become autonomous in interpretation.

Before opening the dashboard, make sure the broker is correctly connected. The status indicator at the top right must be green: only then is the data shown updated in real time.

The three areas of the dashboard

The main screen is divided into three logical areas, always visible on both desktop and mobile. Recognizing them is the first step to avoid getting lost among the metrics.

  • Capital area: shows available balance, active protection, and general account status.
  • Performance area: aggregates overage netto, funded cycles, and pass rate over different time horizons.
  • Technical area: collects broker status, click funded, and any synchronization alerts.

Capital area

The balance you see is not just the nominal capital: it is already filtered by active hedges and reflects the actual status of the account at this moment. Below the balance, you will find two qualitative indicators — protection and capital health — which help you understand how much operating margin you have available without having to calculate it manually.

Performance area

Here you will find the overage netto, which is the operating result of your capital net of hedges. It is the most important data to observe, but it should always be read across two horizons: since registration and the current month. Comparing the two values prevents you from giving too much weight to a single bad day or a particularly positive month.

A good user does not look at the dashboard three times a day: they consult it calmly, look for the trend, and ignore the daily noise.

Key metrics, explained without jargon

Acronyms can be intimidating, but behind every label, there is a simple concept. We summarize the most important metrics in a table so you can refer back whenever you have a doubt.

MetricMeaningWhere to look
Overage nettoOperating result net of hedgesPerformance area, at the top
Pass ratePercentage of cycles successfully completedPerformance area, metrics row
Click fundedNumber of capital activations in the periodTechnical area, left row
DrawdownMaximum negative excursion in the periodCapital area, details tab
CoverageAmount protected by the hedging mechanismCapital area, under the balance

How to read the trend over time

Each metric supports three time horizons: daily, weekly, and monthly. The rule of thumb is simple: do not use the daily view to make decisions. The daily view serves to monitor technical status; the weekly and monthly views serve to read performance.

Fig. 1 — The weekly view clearly shows the trend, while the daily view should only be used for technical checks.

A small experiment

Try for a week to look at the dashboard only once a day, always at the same time. You will notice that most intraday fluctuations cancel out and that the trend is much more stable than it seems at first glance. It is the first step toward a healthy relationship with your data.

If a data point seems out of scale, do not make immediate decisions. First, check the broker status and synchronization: in most cases, it is a technical delay, not a real anomaly.

Desktop and mobile: the differences

The mobile version shows the same information as the desktop version but organized into a single vertical column. Some advanced views (extended tables, multiple charts) are only available on desktop; mobile prioritizes the quick glance, while desktop prioritizes analysis. Use mobile for daily monitoring and desktop for periodic data reading.

Tip: you can filter the performance view with the range=30d parameter in the dashboard URL.

If you have read this far, you already have the tools to independently interpret 90% of the cases you will find in the dashboard. We will cover the rest in the guides dedicated to individual metrics.

Next steps

Now that you know how to read the structure of the dashboard, the next step is to deepen your understanding of individual metrics. We recommend reading the guides on overage netto, pass rate, and funded cycles: these are the three concepts that will recur most often in your daily experience with Arbicsx.

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