Pulse, The New AI Tool For Crypto Trading
ChatGPT has already become one of the most accessible tools for our work, love advice and even mental health; but now, even everyday traders, and crypto investors are already leaning in on the use of AI. A Finder survey shows that nearly 15% of traders use AI for crypto tips—and that number is climbing fast. Now, with OpenAI’s launch of ChatGPT Pulse, staying ahead of the market may be about to get much easier.
Pulse is designed to transform ChatGPT from a reactive assistant into a proactive companion, delivering daily, personalized updates tailored to each user’s interests—including crypto markets.
Unlike the traditional ChatGPT model, which waits for user prompts, Pulse “works roudn teh clock, collecting data and curating them on a visual card that the user could view instantly. This includes summarized news, insights, and updates that they could explore with a click of the button.
During its product demo, OpenAI showed how Pulse could deliver personalized content ranging from local headlines to hiking tips and language learning progress. For crypto traders, this means tailored updates on market trends, token movements, and breaking industry news—all delivered seamlessly without constant manual checks.
Currently, the feature is rolling out to Pro subscribers, with plans to expand access to Plus users in the near future.
Traders Already Turning to AI
Pulse’s launch comes at a time when AI is already reshaping how investors operate. In the U.K., 16% of retail investors now use AI for stock advice and another 15% apply it to crypto trading. Among Gen Z and Millennials, more than 60% use AI for some form of financial guidance, including budgeting and credit monitoring.
This shift highlights the appetite for faster, AI-driven decision-making tools—especially in high-volatility markets like crypto. But ChatGPT’s track record shows why caution is still essential.
However, researchers have also noticed that ChatGPT has also delivered both surprisingly sharp and wildly off-base crypto advice. In March 2023, the model recommended a portfolio split between Bitcoin, Ether, Cosmos, and Web3 tokens for quick gains. More recently, however, it suggested an allocation that included Solana, XRP, ETH, BTC—and Little Pepe, a failed memecoin with negligible liquidity.
Such inconsistency underscores the risks of using AI as a sole trading guide. OpenAI itself warns users not to treat its models as financial advisors, emphasizing the need for independent judgment and due diligence.
A Growing Robo-Advisory Market
Despite these risks, the rise of AI-powered investment tools is undeniable. The global robo-advisory sector—where algorithms assist with financial decisions—was valued at $61.75 billion last year and is projected to surge to $471 billion by 2029, according to Research and Markets.
For crypto traders navigating constant market noise, Pulse could serve as a valuable filter—an assistant that delivers timely insights while integrating with tools like Gmail and Google Calendar to manage schedules, draft agendas, and suggest tasks.
Users can refine results with simple thumbs-up or thumbs-down reactions, improving content relevance over time.
AI Can Never Replace Real Experience
OpenAI’s Pulse illustrates the next stage of AI evolution—personalized, anticipatory, and deeply embedded in daily routines. For crypto traders, the potential is huge: a tool that cuts through noise and surfaces actionable insights faster than human research ever could.
But the danger lies in overreliance. As ChatGPT’s erratic token picks show, AI is not infallible. In volatile markets, the edge belongs not to algorithms alone but to traders who combine AI’s speed with hard-earned skepticism and expertise.
Pulse may well become a secret weapon for the disciplined few—but only if they remember that AI is a collaborator, not a crystal ball.