Live monitoring of GBP cryptocurrency markets across multiple exchanges. The Noctis 69 dashboard observes market breadth, momentum, spreads and volatility in real time.
The live dashboard opens in a full browser window for the best monitoring experience. Real-time GBP prices, cross-exchange spread, market breadth, momentum and volatility — all in one broadcast-style view.
Open Live Dashboard →Opens in a new tab · Data from Coinbase & Kraken · Not financial advice
The Noctis 69 dashboard cycles through a series of distinct views, each designed to surface a different aspect of the GBP cryptocurrency market. Understanding what each view measures — and what it does not — is important context for anyone using it as a monitoring or research tool. This page explains the core views, the significance of GBP-specific liquidity data, and answers common questions about how the live feed works.
The dashboard rotates through a sequence of broadcast-style panels. Each panel has a specific analytical focus. Below is a plain-English explanation of what each view is showing and how to interpret the data you see on screen.
Displays GBP-denominated price change across all tracked assets simultaneously using colour intensity. Green cells indicate assets gaining in the period shown; red cells indicate losses. Larger cells represent higher 24-hour GBP volume — so a large red cell is more significant than a small one.
Breadth tracks the ratio of rising assets to falling assets across all tracked GBP pairs. A breadth reading above 60% rising suggests broad market participation in any upward movement. Below 40% rising typically indicates broad selling pressure rather than isolated moves in one or two assets.
Shows the percentage difference between the Coinbase GBP price and the Kraken GBP price for the same asset at the same moment. A spread of 0.1–0.3% is typical under normal liquidity conditions. Wider spreads — particularly above 0.5% — can indicate thin order books, data lag, or unusual market activity on one exchange.
Ranks assets by the rate of price change over the short-term period captured by the live feed. The Movers view highlights the top gainers and losers. Momentum shows directional strength — an asset with both high price change and rising volume is typically showing stronger momentum than one moving on low volume.
Measures price dispersion relative to the recent range for each tracked GBP pair. High volatility does not indicate direction — it indicates that prices are moving quickly in either direction. Assets with elevated volatility on the dashboard warrant closer attention during monitoring sessions.
Shows how closely different GBP assets are moving together during the current session. A correlation close to +1.0 means two assets are moving in the same direction at the same time. When correlations break down — especially between Bitcoin and altcoins — it can indicate market rotation or asset-specific news events.
Plots where the current GBP price sits within each asset's recent high-low range. An asset trading near the top of its range is in a different position to one in the middle or near a recent low. This view provides context that raw price numbers alone do not.
Visualises the relative depth of GBP order book activity across tracked pairs. Assets with deeper GBP liquidity absorb orders with less price impact. Thin liquidity on a GBP pair means that even moderate buy or sell pressure can move the quoted price significantly.
Most global cryptocurrency data is reported in USD. When a price is shown in GBP on the Noctis 69 dashboard, it is drawn directly from GBP-denominated order books on Coinbase and Kraken — not converted from a USD price using a forex rate. This distinction is meaningful.
GBP order books are generally thinner than their USD equivalents. This means that the GBP price of an asset can deviate from the implied GBP equivalent of the USD price, particularly during periods of low trading activity or when market-moving events occur outside UK trading hours. The spread between the Coinbase GBP price and the Kraken GBP price for the same asset is one of the clearest indicators of how liquid that particular market is at any given moment.
A tight spread — less than 0.2% between the two exchanges — suggests both order books are reasonably active and market makers are keeping prices aligned. A wider spread suggests one exchange has less GBP depth at that moment, and prices between the two have temporarily diverged. The Spread Monitor and Spread Volume views in the dashboard are specifically designed to make this visible in real time.
The GBP/USD sparkline shown in the dashboard header provides additional context. If sterling is weakening against the dollar while GBP crypto prices are rising, some of that apparent rise may be a currency effect rather than genuine crypto demand. The dashboard surfaces this relationship without making judgements about it.
The Market Pulse shown across all views is a composite score derived from the top ten tracked GBP assets by volume. It factors in the proportion of assets rising, the average rate of change, and the directional consistency of moves. The labels — Fear, Caution, Neutral, Confident, Greed — describe the aggregate short-term character of the monitored GBP market. They are observational labels, not forecasts or signals.