About SignalStreet
A free, editorial market dashboard: the earnings, dividends, macro releases, and corporate events coming up for the stocks you hold — and what the market has usually done when they hit.
What it does
Most market calendars show you everything. SignalStreet is built the other way around: you add the tickers you actually hold or follow, and the dashboard organizes the market around them — a morning brief of your week ahead, today’s events, a combined earnings/macro/dividend calendar, insider (Form 4) activity for your names, and sector dashboards that connect the macro picture to the groups your stocks live in. Everything is clickable through to detail views with historical context, like a company’s track record of beating estimates or how the S&P has reacted to similar inflation prints.
Where the data comes from
- Quotes, earnings calendar & surprise history — Finnhub, covering U.S.-listed companies (including the large Canadian names that are cross-listed in the U.S.).
- Macro & economic series — FRED, the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis’s public data service; central-bank meeting dates come from the Federal Reserve’s and Bank of Canada’s published schedules.
- Insider transactions — Form 4 filings sourced primarily from SEC EDGAR, the U.S. regulator’s own database.
- Earnings-date cross-checking — reporting dates are compared against a second independent feed; dates confirmed by both sources carry a verified badge, and projected dates are labeled “Est.” rather than presented as confirmed.
- Dividends — a U.S. ex-dividend calendar for widely-held large caps.
The data-honesty policy
The site’s one hard rule: never show a fabricated number. In practice that means:
- If a live figure hasn’t loaded yet, you see an honest loading or empty state — never placeholder data dressed up as real.
- If a data provider doesn’t report a figure (a dividend amount, an analyst estimate), it shows as “n/a” with an explanation — not a guess.
- Delayed quotes are visibly marked, periodic snapshots are labeled as such, and on weekends and market holidays prices are labeled with the session they actually come from (“as of Thursday’s close”) instead of pretending to be today’s.
- Where coverage has limits — for example, insider filings only exist for U.S.-listed companies, and there is no free source for live TSX quotes — the interface says so plainly.
Guides
- U.S. & Canada economic calendar — the macro releases and central-bank decisions (Federal Reserve and Bank of Canada) the dashboard tracks.