Most trading accounts on social media are a highlight reel. Every post is a win, every chart is green, and the losses — which every real strategy has — quietly disappear.
We don't do that. Every trade our automated systems close, win or lose, is eligible to be shown. When a stop-loss fires, that's not a failure to hide — it's the risk management working exactly as designed: a small, contained loss instead of an open-ended one.
A high win rate means very little on its own. A strategy that wins 90% of the time but loses ten times as much on the 10% can still be a net loser. What actually matters is expectancy — the average result per trade, across wins and losses together — and you can't judge that honestly if you only ever see the wins.
So when we share a trade, we share the reason it closed the way it did: a take-profit, a trailing stop, a time-based exit, or a stop-loss doing its job. That's the whole point of automation — the same rules fire every time, regardless of how the last trade went.
This isn't financial advice, and past results never guarantee future performance. But if you're going to trust an automated system with real capital, you should be able to see how it behaves when things don't go its way — not just when they do.