★ BEST INVESTING TOOLS COMPARISON ★
VOL. XCIV, NO. 247
Tool comparison edition
Tool Comparison
Federal Reserve Board (FRB.gov) vs TradingView
Pick Federal Reserve Board (FRB.gov) instead if
Federal Reserve Board (FRB.gov)
Best for APIs & data feeds and official sources
Free · Web · API · 100% positive (1 vote)
- You want an API so you can script or automate things
- You care about APIs & data feeds and official sources, things TradingView doesn't offer
Start here
TradingView
Best for data visualizations and quant
Free • From $12.95/mo · Web · Mobile · Desktop · 70% positive (23 votes)
- You do a lot of your research from your phone
- Delayed quotes won't cut it; you need real-time data
- You care about data visualizations, quant, and screeners, things Federal Reserve Board (FRB.gov) doesn't offer
Skip both if: Neither one clicks with how you research; there are strong third options.
See alternativesOutbound links may include affiliate or sponsor codes.
The verdict
The bottom line
Federal Reserve Board (FRB.gov) and TradingView cover a lot of the same ground (4 shared categories, including calendar, news, and macro data), so for the basics you won't go far wrong with either. TradingView simply does more: 27 categories to Federal Reserve Board (FRB.gov)'s 6, including data visualizations, quant, and screeners, plus a mobile app. Federal Reserve Board (FRB.gov) counters by being completely free.
Key differences at a glance
- Mobile app
- TradingView
- Free trial
- TradingView30 days
- Broader coverage
- TradingView27 vs 6 categories
- Desktop app
- TradingView
- API access
- Federal Reserve Board (FRB.gov)
- Real-time data
- TradingView
Comparison snapshot
| Attribute | ||
|---|---|---|
| Pricing & plans | ||
Starting price | Free | Free • From $12.95/mo |
Free tier | Yes | Yes |
Free trial | — | 30 days |
Plan limits | — | 52 limits: Basic: charts per tab: 1, Basic: indicators per chart: 2 +50 more |
| Platforms & access | ||
Web app | Yes | Yes |
Desktop app | No | Yes |
Mobile app | No | Yes |
API access | Yes | No |
Broker sync | No | No |
Integrations | FRED (St. Louis Fed) | Trading panel brokers (100+ partners), Pine Script +1 more |
| Audience & fit | ||
Experience level | Beginner, Intermediate, Advanced | Beginner, Intermediate, Advanced |
Best for | — | Retail Traders, Pro Retail +4 more |
Categories covered | 6 | 27 |
Regions | North America, Europe, APAC, LatAm, Middle East, Africa | — |
| Data & capabilities | ||
Data quality | 3 signals: Latency: End of Day, Granularity: EOD +1 more | 3 signals: Latency: Streaming, Real-time, 15-min Delayed, and End of Day, Granularity: Tick, Second, Minute, and EOD +1 more |
Data partners | — | 3 partners: ICE Data Services, FactSet +1 more |
Capabilities | Yield curves | 8 signals: Custom formulas, Universe builder +6 more |
Security | — | Status page |
| Try it | Visit Federal Reserve Board (FRB.gov) | Visit TradingView |
Standout features
What Federal Reserve Board (FRB.gov) does best
- Download Federal Reserve statistical releases through the Data Download Program in Excel, CSV, or XML formats.
- Use H.15 Selected Interest Rates for daily Treasury constant-maturity yields and other rate series.
- Track the Fed balance sheet through H.4.1 Factors Affecting Reserve Balances, updated weekly.
- Use H.8 commercial bank asset and liability data for weekly banking-system research.
- Download foreign exchange reference rates through H.10 weekly and G.5 monthly releases.
What TradingView does best
- Build multi-asset charts for stocks, ETFs, crypto, FX, futures, bonds, commodities, options, and indices from one charting workspace.
- Use Supercharts with multi-chart layouts, custom intervals, drawing tools, chart templates, Volume Profile, auto chart patterns, and other technical-analysis overlays.
- Screen markets with stock, ETF, bond, crypto, CEX/DEX, and Pine screeners using hundreds of technical and fundamental fields.
- Create and test indicators, alerts, and strategies with Pine Script, TradingView’s cloud IDE, strategy tester, Deep Backtesting, Bar Magnifier, and exportable strategy data.
- Set cloud alerts on prices, drawings, indicators, and Pine scripts, with delivery through browser, email, mobile apps, and webhooks on eligible plans.
Data & access details
| Attribute | ||
|---|---|---|
| Coverage & fit | ||
Asset types | BondsCurrenciesOther | StocksETFsCryptosBondsCommoditiesCurrenciesFuturesOptions |
Experience | BeginnerIntermediateAdvanced | BeginnerIntermediateAdvanced |
Target audience | Not specified | Retail TradersPro RetailDay TradersSwing TradersAlgo TradersQuants/Developers |
Regions | North AmericaEuropeAPACLatAmMiddle EastAfrica | Not specified |
Coverage details | Not specified | Identifiers: Ticker |
| Data | ||
Data freshness | End of Day | StreamingReal-time15-min DelayedEnd of Day |
Data granularity | EOD | TickSecondMinuteEOD |
Data partners | Not specified | ICE Data ServicesFactSetQuartr |
| Access & integrations | ||
API protocols | REST | Not specified |
API auth & delivery | Auth: None | Not specified |
Integrations | FRED (St. Louis Fed) | Trading panel brokers (100+ partners)Pine ScriptWebhook alerts |
Export formats | CSVExcelXML | CSVImage |
| Plans & trust | ||
Security & compliance | Not specified | Status page |
Capability signals | Yield curves | Custom formulasUniverse builderMulti-leg optionsGreeksIV surfacePortfolio attributionCorrelationYield curves |
Vendor & support | Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve SystemCountry: United StatesFounded 1913 | TradingView, Inc. |
Curation ratings | Methodology 5/5Reliability 5/5UX 4/5 | Not specified |
Green tags are exclusive to that tool in this comparison.
Pricing breakdown
Free
Lower starting price
Plans & pricing
$12.95/mo
Starting price
Plans & pricing
- charts per tab: 1
- indicators per chart: 2
- +7 more
- charts per tab: 2
- indicators per chart: 5
- +8 more
- charts per tab: 4
- indicators per chart: 10
- +8 more
- charts per tab: 8
- indicators per chart: 25
- +9 more
- charts per tab: 16
- indicators per chart: 50
- +10 more
Coverage overlap
Shared categories
4Where the two tools cover the same ground.
Federal Reserve Board (FRB.gov) strengths
2What you only get with Federal Reserve Board (FRB.gov).
TradingView strengths
23Community category leaders
Vote sentiment comparison
Loading sentiment chart...
Frequently Asked Questions
What's the difference between Federal Reserve Board (FRB.gov) and TradingView?
Federal Reserve Board (FRB.gov) leans toward APIs & data feeds, calendar, and news, while TradingView puts more weight on data visualizations, quant, and screeners. They overlap in 4 categories, so for most people it comes down to workflow preference and price.
How much do Federal Reserve Board (FRB.gov) and TradingView cost?
Good news: both Federal Reserve Board (FRB.gov) and TradingView have free plans, so you can run them side by side and only pay if you hit a wall.
Can I use Federal Reserve Board (FRB.gov) or TradingView on my phone?
TradingView lists a dedicated mobile app, so it travels better. Federal Reserve Board (FRB.gov) doesn't list a dedicated mobile app; its documented access is web and API.
Does Federal Reserve Board (FRB.gov) or TradingView have an API?
Federal Reserve Board (FRB.gov) has an API for programmatic access and custom integrations. TradingView doesn't, so you're working through its interface.
Should I choose Federal Reserve Board (FRB.gov) or TradingView?
It depends on what you're after. Pick Federal Reserve Board (FRB.gov) if APIs & data feeds and official sources matter to you; go with TradingView if you'd rather have data visualizations and quant. And if you only need the basics both share, let price decide.
What asset classes do Federal Reserve Board (FRB.gov) and TradingView cover?
Both cover bonds and currencies. Federal Reserve Board (FRB.gov) also handles other. TradingView adds stocks, ETFs, and cryptos on top.
Does Federal Reserve Board (FRB.gov) or TradingView have real-time data?
TradingView offers real-time data, which matters if you trade actively. Federal Reserve Board (FRB.gov) runs on delayed or end-of-day data, which is perfectly fine for longer-term investors who don't live and die by the tick.
Can I export data from Federal Reserve Board (FRB.gov) and TradingView?
Yes, both export to spreadsheets (CSV), which is handy if you like running your own numbers.
Is Federal Reserve Board (FRB.gov) or TradingView better for day trading?
TradingView is the one positioned more for active traders. Federal Reserve Board (FRB.gov) is the better fit if you care less about fast trading workflows and more about a calmer research process.
Which has a better stock screener: Federal Reserve Board (FRB.gov) or TradingView?
TradingView has a stock screener for surfacing ideas; Federal Reserve Board (FRB.gov) doesn't, and focuses its energy elsewhere.
Can I track my portfolio with Federal Reserve Board (FRB.gov) or TradingView?
TradingView handles portfolio tracking. Federal Reserve Board (FRB.gov) is really a research tool; you'd track your portfolio elsewhere.
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Curation & Accuracy
This directory blends AI‑assisted discovery with human curation. Entries are reviewed, edited, and organized with the goal of expanding coverage and sharpening quality over time. Your feedback helps steer improvements (because no single human can capture everything all at once).
Details change. Pricing, features, and availability may be incomplete or out of date. Treat listings as a starting point and verify on the provider’s site before making decisions. If you spot an error or a gap, send a quick note and I’ll adjust.