Why does the platform show different charts for the same instrument?
Chart prices may vary slightly depending on data aggregation settings or chart provider feeds. This is a common occurrence across trading platforms and does not indicate an error or inconsistency in the actual execution prices used for trading. The differences arise from technical factors in how price data is collected, processed, and displayed. Understanding these factors helps traders interpret chart information with greater accuracy.
One of the primary reasons for visual discrepancies is the chart timeframe and data aggregation method. The same instrument viewed on a one-minute chart versus a five-minute or hourly chart will naturally display different candle formations, as each timeframe groups price data into different intervals. Additionally, the way the platform calculates and displays bid versus ask prices can affect the chart's appearance. Some charts may default to showing bid prices, while others display the midpoint or ask price, which creates a slight visual difference even though both represent valid market data for the same instrument.
Data feed sources can also contribute to minor variations. Some platforms aggregate price data from multiple liquidity providers to generate their charts, while others may rely on a single primary feed. The timing of data snapshots, the frequency of price updates, and the way gaps or periods of low activity are handled can all produce subtle differences in how the chart appears. These variations are a normal feature of how digital price data is processed and displayed, and they do not affect the actual prices at which trades are executed. Traders should focus on the overall trends and patterns visible on their charts rather than on minor price-level differences, and should always refer to the live order execution price, rather than the chart display, as the definitive reference when placing trades.