Track record
Crypto Signals Track Record: Every Outcome, Nothing Deleted
A public crypto signals track record that logs every TP hit, SL hit, and expired signal. No cherry-picking. No deleted losses. Updated in real time.
What a crypto signals track record should show
A crypto signals track record should show every published signal — not only wins. It must include the asset, direction, entry zone, stop loss, take-profit targets, and the final outcome: TP hit, SL hit, or expired. If a provider only shows screenshots of winning trades, that is not a track record. It is a marketing feed.
MoneyBotOS logs every outcome publicly. Wins, stops, and expired setups are all visible at moneybotos.com/performance. The record is updated automatically as signals close via Binance API price detection. No manual curation. No cherry-picking.
Screenshots vs public track record
Screenshots can be selected after the fact, edited, or fabricated. A public track record is different: every signal is logged at publication time, and every outcome remains visible. The key difference is auditability. With a public URL, anyone can verify the results independently. With screenshots, you are trusting the provider to show you the full picture.
Common manipulation patterns: posting only winning screenshots, editing entry prices after the move, excluding expired signals from win rate, and claiming a high win rate without disclosing how losses are counted. A real track record makes all of this impossible to hide.
Why win rate alone is misleading
A 70% win rate sounds impressive. But if the average loss is 3 times the average win, the strategy loses money over time. The metrics that matter are Expectancy and Profit Factor. Expectancy is the average gain or loss per closed signal. Profit Factor is gross wins divided by gross losses. A value above 1.0 means the system is profitable.
MoneyBotOS reports all three metrics on the public performance page. The calibration phase banner is shown when the sample is below 40 decided signals, because a small sample can produce misleading statistics in either direction.
How MoneyBotOS logs signal outcomes
Every signal published to the Telegram Free channel is logged at the moment of publication. The outcome is detected automatically using Binance API OHLC price data. TP hit, SL hit, and expired outcomes all count. Open positions do not inflate numbers. Ambiguous outcomes — where both TP and SL are touched — are separated from the win rate calculation to avoid biasing the stats.
Dry-run signals are excluded from the public record. Only live published signals appear. Historical data is preserved even if signal strategies are updated or retired. The record is not reset when a new strategy is deployed.
Signal fields explained
A complete signal should include: the asset symbol, direction (BUY or SELL), Oracle score, entry zone, stop loss, and take-profit targets. The stop loss is the most important field. Without a defined invalidation level, a signal is not a trading plan. MoneyBotOS calculates stop losses using ATR — Average True Range — which reflects the actual volatility of the asset at the time of publication.
TP1 and TP2 are included in the Pro tier. TP3 is exclusive to Studio. The Oracle score is visible to all tiers. Entry, stop loss, and targets are gated behind Pro and Studio because those details make a signal actionable. Free tier shows direction and Oracle context — enough to verify quality before upgrading.
How to identify fake crypto signal groups
The most common red flags: only winning screenshots posted, entries edited after the move, no stop loss on signals, claimed win rate without methodology, pressure to use high leverage, no public performance page, and fake urgency tactics. A legitimate provider does not need to hide losses or manufacture credibility.
Before paying for any signal service, check: is there a public track record with a URL you can visit? Are losses visible? Is the win rate calculated as TP divided by TP plus SL, excluding expired? Does every signal include a stop loss? Is the methodology documented? Is there a free tier to verify quality before paying? Is there no guaranteed results language? Is pricing clear with no hidden fees? Can you cancel without lock-in? These ten questions separate legitimate providers from marketing operations.
Glossary of track record terms
TP (Take Profit): the price target where a signal is considered a win. MoneyBotOS uses TP1, TP2, and TP3 depending on tier. SL (Stop Loss): the invalidation level. If price reaches SL, the signal is a loss. Calculated using ATR to reflect actual volatility. Expired: a signal that closed without hitting TP or SL within the maximum hold time. Excluded from win rate.
Decided: signals with a confirmed TP or SL hit. The denominator for win rate calculation. Expectancy: average gain or loss per closed signal. The most honest single performance metric. Profit Factor: gross wins divided by gross losses. Above 1.0 means a profitable system. Dry-run: internal test signals not published to members. Excluded from the public record. Oracle Score: 0-100 macro confidence score from the Nexus Oracle. Higher means more factors aligned.
Free vs Pro vs Studio track record access
Free tier members can see signal direction, Oracle score, and the full public track record at moneybotos.com/performance. Entry, stop loss, and take-profit targets are visible only to Pro and Studio members because those details make a signal actionable. The track record itself is always public — no subscription required to audit the results.
Pro members receive entry zone, stop loss, and TP1 plus TP2. Studio members add TP3 and deeper Oracle intelligence context. All tiers share the same public track record. The performance page does not distinguish between tiers — every outcome is visible to everyone. The practical path is to watch the Free channel, study the performance page for two to four weeks, then decide whether the Pro or Studio execution detail is worth paying for. No public page should pressure users with fake urgency or guaranteed return language.
Frequently asked questions
What is a crypto signals track record?
A crypto signals track record is a public log of every published signal and its outcome. It should include wins, stops, and expired signals — not only winning trades. A real track record has a public URL that anyone can audit independently.
How does MoneyBotOS track signal outcomes?
MoneyBotOS uses Binance API OHLC price data to automatically detect when a signal's take-profit or stop-loss level is hit. No manual overrides. Dry-run signals are excluded. Every live published signal has a logged outcome.
Why is win rate not enough to evaluate a signal provider?
Win rate alone is misleading if the average loss is larger than the average win. A 70% win rate with 3x average loss still loses money. Expectancy and Profit Factor are more honest metrics. MoneyBotOS reports all three on the public performance page.
Related MoneyBotOS resources
- best crypto signals
- AI crypto signals
- Telegram crypto signals
- public track record
- pricing
- signal methodology
- data sources
- Nexus Oracle
- risk management
- how to evaluate a track record
- Telegram signals risks
Risk disclaimer: trading crypto involves significant risk. Past outcomes do not guarantee future results. MoneyBotOS publishes signal intelligence and does not manage user funds.
This page is also available in machine-readable format for AI assistants through the MoneyBotOS llms.txt and AI documentation files.