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PERFORMANCE · LAST 30 DAYS
Every signal is logged at issuance with its entry, stop, and target. Outcomes are measured against those exact levels — no after-the-fact retouching. Past performance does not guarantee future results.
Total signals
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Win rate
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Avg R
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Trap rate
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The engine emits signals continuously, but a track record only counts after each setup reaches its take-profit or stop level. Until that first window closes, this page is intentionally empty — no synthetic numbers, no pre-launch curation.
Each emitted signal stamped with entry, stop, target — locked at the moment of issuance, never retro-edited.
Wins, losses, and trap-cancels measured against the exact levels we publish. R-multiple computed from the original stop.
Win rate, average R, trap rate per day + per session (Asia · London · NY). Plus monthly aggregate.
No performance data yet
The dashboard above will populate automatically as the engine logs closed signals — no manual curation.
METHODOLOGY
Every signal is recorded at the moment of issuance with its exact entry price, stop-loss level, and target level. These values are immutable once published — there is no after-the-fact editing. Outcome classification (win, loss, or trap-cancel) is determined automatically when price hits the stop or target, or when the signal's timing window expires.
The R-multiple for each signal is calculated as the distance price traveled in the signal's direction divided by the distance from entry to stop. A win that reaches the full target might yield 2R or 3R depending on the setup; a loss that hits the stop is always -1R. Average R across all signals gives a risk-adjusted view of engine quality.
All price data is sourced from the XAUUSD mid-rate feed. Timestamps are recorded in UTC. The daily rollup groups signals by calendar day (UTC midnight boundaries) and further breaks them down by trading session: Asia (00:00 – 07:00 + 21:00 – 23:59 UTC), London (07:00 – 12:00 UTC), and New York (12:00 – 21:00 UTC).
Trap rate measures the percentage of signals that were cancelled before reaching either stop or target because the engine detected a reversal pattern (a "trap"). A high trap rate is not necessarily bad — it means the engine identified and withdrew from unfavorable setups early, protecting subscribers from holding losing positions.