← All guides

Learn · Scanner

Market Discrepancy Scanner

The Market Discrepancy Scanner surfaces pricing divergence across sources, ranked by source coverage, freshness, and movement context. It is not a recommendation engine — it is a monitor.

What the scanner shows

Each scanner row describes one outcome where the available market pricing across sources is meaningfully different. The scanner reshapes the most recent normalized snapshot — it does not invent missing sources or freshness.

Rows are ranked by an implied-probability spread, with a freshness penalty so stale rows sink and a coverage bonus so multi-source rows surface higher than thin single-source rows.

How to read a scanner row

  • Why inspect this? — a one-line reason for the row, in plain language.
  • Source disagreement — the size of the pricing divergence as an implied-probability spread.
  • Coverage — how many distinct sources back the row. Multi-source rows carry more weight than thin or single-source rows.
  • Freshness — current / mixed / stale, applied per row.
  • Trust labels — Fresh, Multi-source, Outlier, Needs review, etc. so the row's weight is scannable at a glance.

What the scanner is not

The scanner is not a recommendation engine. It does not predict outcomes, claim certainty, or tell you what to do with a market signal.

Stale data, thin coverage, and single-source rows are all surfaced with explicit caution labels — inspect them with care, or skip them.

How to use it

Filter to the sport / market type / minimum source count / minimum spread you care about, sort by the dimension that matters (top inspectable, discrepancy size, freshness, source count, recently updated), and inspect the top few rows. Treat the scanner as a starting point for deeper review.

Related guides

Important

Informational analytics only. We do not accept wagers, hold balances, or operate a sportsbook. Coverage and timing may vary.