
How We Track Every Call
No cherry picking. No deleted history. No "almost hit". We built a strict call tracking system designed to evaluate trading calls exactly as they were published.
What Qualifies as a Call
Every post must contain all four fields. Missing even one disqualifies it.
1. Specific Asset
Bitcoin, ETH/USD, AAPL, GBP/JPY. The instrument must be clearly identifiable. Generic references like "crypto" or "tech stocks" are excluded.
2. Direction
Buy or sell. Long or short. Clear directional bias. Ambiguous sentiment or vague bias does not qualify.
3. Entry Price
A specific price level where the trade begins. Phrases like "around here" or "current price" without a number are rejected.
4. Target & Stop Loss
At least one take profit target and a stop loss must be defined. A trade without a stop loss is incomplete.
Example of a valid call: "LONG BTC/USD at $67,450, target $72,000, stop loss $65,200, timeframe 1 week."
This call includes all four required fields: asset (BTC/USD), direction (LONG), entry ($67,450), target ($72,000) and stop loss ($65,200).
What We Exclude
Most posts that appear to be trading content do not meet our requirements. Here's what gets filtered out:
Educational Content — Tutorials or explainers without a defined trade structure.
Bragging Posts — Claims of past wins or completed trades. Backward-looking and unverifiable.
Market Commentary — Opinions, macro views, or news reactions without a trade setup.
Scams & Promotions — Pump groups, paid signals, or "DM for signals" posts.
Vague Alerts — "Watch BTC for breakout" without entry, stop, and target.
Duplicate Calls — Same asset & direction within 24h. Only the first is recorded.
Examples of rejected posts:
"BTC looking bullish here, might pump soon" — Missing entry, target, and stop loss.
"Bought ETH at 3200, up 15% already!" — Backward-looking brag post.
"Watch AAPL for a breakout above resistance" — No specific entry or stop loss defined.
Timeframes
Every call must include a timeframe. No timeframe means the call cannot be verified.
We track calls across 7 standard timeframe buckets: 15 minutes, 1 hour, 4 hours, 1 day, 1 week, 1 month, and 1 year.
The Expiry Rule
If neither the target nor the stop loss is reached within the timeframe, the call expires. The market price at expiry becomes the exit price.
No extensions are allowed.
How ROI Is Calculated
Once an outcome is determined, the ROI is locked and cannot be revised.
Buy / Long Call
ROI = (Exit Price - Entry Price) / Entry Price x 100
Profit occurs when price rises above entry. Loss occurs if price hits the stop loss below entry.
Sell / Short Call
ROI = (Entry Price - Exit Price) / Entry Price x 100
Profit occurs when price falls below entry. Loss occurs if price hits the stop loss above entry.
Exit Price Determination
Exit price is determined by whichever event occurs first:
If target is reached within timeframe, exit at target price.
If stop loss is triggered within timeframe, exit at stop loss price.
If timeframe expires without hitting target or stop, exit at market price.
The Deletion Rule
Once recorded, a call cannot be removed. Period.
Why This Matters
Some influencers delete losing calls from their Twitter or Telegram history. This creates the illusion of consistent success. The platform records calls independently of whether the original post remains online.
Once a Call Enters the Database
The call remains permanently recorded.
It contributes to all statistics including accuracy and average ROI.
If the call reached a target or stop before deletion, the result remains valid.
There is no deletion flag, appeal process, or removal mechanism.
"An influencer may delete every post from their social media feed and present a clean public record. On this platform, the full call history remains visible exactly as it was recorded."