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Watchlists

Watchlists on the Elite dashboard track your theses, not just prices — entry targets, near-target states, target alerts, and an agent that helps curate them.

The Watchlists page at blockmind.app/elite/watchlists is where assets you don't hold yet — or ideas you're still forming — live. On the Elite dashboard, a watchlist is more than a price list: it's a thesis tool, with entry targets, target states, and strategy settings per list.

Entry targets and "Near target"

For each asset on a watchlist you can set an entry target — the price at which the idea becomes interesting to you. From then on:

  • The watchlist shows how each asset sits relative to its target, and flags assets in a "Near target" state when price approaches the level you set.
  • When a target is hit, you get a target alert in your Inbox — so a level you set weeks ago doesn't slip past unnoticed.

Alerts are evaluated during your agent's monitoring passes, so expect them within hours rather than tick-by-tick. More on timing and delivery in Monitoring & alerts.

Strategy settings per watchlist

Each watchlist has its own strategy settings, so different lists can mean different things. A "long-term accumulation" list and a "short-term momentum" list don't have to be judged the same way — set the strategy per list and both the page and your agent read your assets in that context.

Your agent reads — and writes — your watchlists

Watchlists are one of the places where your agent works alongside you, not just for you. It can read them for context, and it can edit them when you ask. Try:

  • "Add the top three names from that research to my DeFi watchlist" — promote candidates straight from a research session.
  • "Go through my watchlists and suggest what to prune" — clear out stale ideas whose thesis has expired.
  • "Why is SOL showing near target?" — get the context behind a target state: what moved, and whether your original thesis still holds.
  • "Set an entry target on this at the level you'd consider reasonable, and explain why" — the agent proposes, you decide.

Because your agent sees your watchlists during its monitoring passes and when writing your Morning Brief, a well-kept watchlist directly improves what it surfaces for you.

Organizing ideas

There's no single right structure, but these patterns work well:

  • Research queue — things you've seen mentioned but haven't looked into yet. Ask the agent to work through it.
  • Next buys — vetted ideas with entry targets set, waiting for price.
  • Competitors — peers of something you hold, so you notice when the relative picture shifts.

Deeper work on an idea belongs in your Notebook — Explore and Analyze save ideas and analyses there with stable NB-numbers, while the watchlist stays the lightweight price-and-target layer on top.

Limits on the free plan

On the free plan, watchlists and portfolios share a combined limit of 5 collections. See Limits for the full table.

A note on targets

An entry target is your line, not a recommendation. Your agent helps you research and watch levels — it does research, not financial advice, and it will never tell you what to buy or sell.

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