How to Read Our Signal Results

This page exists so you never have to guess what a row in our performance table actually means. Every line is a closed trade that already moved through the full lifecycle: the scanner detected a confluent setup, the signal was scored, it was published to subscribers, and the market either rewarded or punished the thesis until the position met a defined exit rule. Nothing here is cherry-picked by hand; the same JSON feed that powers the homepage ticker is what your browser requests below.

Read the columns from left to right as a story in data. Date is the closure timestamp in your local browser timezone formatting, so you can line it up with your own execution log or chart screenshots. Pair tells you which instrument the engine evaluated — today that is strictly BTC/USDT perpetual-style context on the crypto side and XAU/USD for gold — so you immediately know which volatility and tick-size rules applied.

Direction is either a buy or a sell bias as the model understood it at broadcast time, not a retroactive label after price wandered. Entry references the primary entry zone midpoint or anchor price we recorded when the signal closed; TP1 is the first take-profit rung we tracked for partial or full target logic. Together they give you a sense of how tight or extended the opportunity was before outcome data prints.

Score is the integer output of our AI confidence layer on a 0–100 scale (more detail in the next section). Result compresses the exit state into WIN, LOSS, or PARTIAL when applicable, so you can scan visually without parsing exchange-specific fill messages. PnL expresses the percentage move attributed to the signal path we measured at close — green for constructive, red for adverse — and Duration summarizes how long the idea remained live from open to close, because time-in-trade matters as much as direction for discretionary followers.

Closed signals (live feed)

API
Date Pair Direction Entry TP1 Score Result PnL Duration
Loading signals...

Signal Scoring Explained

The score column is not a popularity poll or a Twitter sentiment gauge. It is a composite index produced after the confluence engine has already checked structural items such as multi-timeframe alignment, volatility regime, distance to invalidation, and reward-to-risk geometry. Values cluster toward the middle when the market is messy; high scores represent rare moments when many independent sub-models agree that the edge is unusually clean.

Internally we treat the scale as bounded: 0 means “no coherent edge detected,” while 100 would be a theoretical perfect stack of confirmations — something reality never quite hands us, which is why you should expect top-tier prints in the high seventies and eighties rather than flat hundreds. Signals that do not clear our minimum quality gate never reach Telegram at all, so the table you see is already filtered for setups the system was willing to stake its reputation on.

Use the score as a relative ordering tool inside your own journaling workflow. A 78 and an 82 are both “strong,” but the 82 may have enjoyed cleaner trend sponsorship or a tighter pivot confluence. Pair the number with Duration and PnL to learn whether your personal style favors snappy scalps or slower mean-reversion plays that still grade well.

Performance Disclaimer

Past performance is not indicative of future results. Markets are non-stationary; liquidity events, macro shocks, and regime shifts can invalidate patterns that worked for quarters. The percentages shown here describe what happened under our measurement rules after the fact; they do not promise that the next week will rhyme.

Trading involves substantial risk of loss. Leverage magnifies both gains and drawdowns. Only risk capital you can afford to lose entirely, and always combine third-party alerts with your own plan, including position sizing, exchange fees, and geographical regulations that apply to you.

CryptoAlertSignals materials, including this results log, are informational and educational in nature. They are not individualized investment advice, not a solicitation to buy or sell any instrument, and not an endorsement of any broker or venue. By viewing this data you acknowledge that you alone are responsible for orders you place in your accounts.

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