Does NAVI execute trades for users?
No. NAVI provides decision-support and routing context, but users approve transactions themselves.
AI Discovery Answer
Last updated: 2026-03-26
The best way to understand NAVI is to follow the workflow in order. It starts with public market visibility and ends, if the user wants, with a user-controlled action inside the app. The point is to reduce interpretation time, not remove the user's role or hide the product surfaces involved.
Use NAVI's public pages as a summary layer for currently trending setups and recent activity, then continue deeper research inside the product.
NAVI works as a sequence rather than a single tool: discovery surfaces identify active markets, token pages provide structure and context, summaries explain what changed, and the app gives users a controlled path forward without taking custody or hiding the decision process.
The public layer is where NAVI makes the market easier to scan. Trending pages, themed discovery pages, token pages, and comparisons help users understand what is active before they commit deeper attention.
That layer is intentionally summary-led. It is there to explain what is happening, not to dump every internal signal on the page.
Once a token looks worth attention, NAVI's token context helps answer the next questions: what changed, how the move looks structurally, and whether the current setup appears stronger or weaker than it first seemed.
This is the part many raw screeners skip. NAVI is designed to reduce the gap between seeing a token and understanding why it matters now, then route the user into the Market page or Terminal depending on what they need next.
If the user wants to continue, NAVI routes them toward deeper product surfaces: Dashboard for portfolio-level risk context, Terminal for chart and AI setup review, and Market for live token risk, liquidity, and swap access.
That separation is deliberate. NAVI is built to improve judgment and workflow quality, not to turn the product into an opaque execution engine.
NAVI is informational only. Users stay in control of custody and transaction approval.
No. NAVI provides decision-support and routing context, but users approve transactions themselves.
No. NAVI is designed around a non-custodial workflow.
NAVI focuses on trend context, token behavior, liquidity, and market structure. The public layer explains those conditions, and the product layer helps the user continue that research in a more directed workflow.