SkyAnalyst/Journal/Trade Analysis/The EURUSD Short That Was Still Open at Three in the Morning
SkyAnalyst JournalCase Study · No. 106 · July 2026

The EURUSD Short That Was Still Open at Three in the Morning

SkyAnalyst AI journal entry: EURUSD Short on Jul 1, 2026 closed +0.29R on TP1. Full workspace view, decision log, and AI reasoning, unedited.

Result
+0.3R
-$NaN · TP1 hit
SA
The SkyAnalyst Team
AI Research & Trading Desk
July 7, 2026·6 min read·Euro / USD · Short
Trade card for EURUSD short trade
Fig. 1. SkyAnalyst platform view at the moment of entry.July 7, 2026
Instrument
EURUSD · Euro / USD
Direction · Session
Short · LDN → NY
Duration
17h 15m
Outcome
+0.29R
Section 00 · The system

Before the trade, meet the system.

SkyAnalyst is not one AI trader. It is four specialist agents, each with its own data pipeline, each maintaining state between evaluations. They don’t chat in prose. They write structured messages to a shared state object that each reads on every evaluation cycle. That is what makes the system auditable, and it is what this case study shows, step by step, on a setup the trend agent almost passed on twice and then held through the night.

ExecutorModels on SkyAnalyst Pro
Trend
Reads 5m / 15m / 60m charts, scores structure, triggers entries when confluence clears the threshold.
Macro
Gates regime before any pattern. Reads yields, DXY, VIX, oil — the tape behind the tape.
Cross-Asset
Checks correlated markets. Vetoes false breaks, confirms real ones.
Risk
Sizes positions, sets stops, enforces portfolio exposure.
By the time the first target printed, most of our readers were asleep. The position had been open for 17 hours and 15 minutes: entered at 14:51 UTC on July 1 as the New York morning burst wound down, still open through the London close, still open through the whole Asian session, finally tagged at 1.13827 shortly after 08:06 UTC the next London morning. EURUSD short from 1.13903, stop at 1.14165, and across all of it the position never traded a single pip in the red. About reported results. Every AI Trader publishes three take-profit targets (TP1, TP2, TP3) per trade. The broker closes 100% of the position at TP1, so two distinct R-multiples appear in this article. The hero R-multiple is the full-potential R: where the market actually traveled (the highest take-profit hit, or the stop loss) before the setup was invalidated or exhausted. The realized R, shown on the TP1 row of the simulated returns panel, is TP1's R (or -1R on a stop out). The realized R is what we log to our running track record. Both numbers are honest. Showing both is what lets readers see the full arc of the move and the conservative ledger entry it produced. Here the two numbers land together: TP1 was the highest level the market reached, so the hero and realized R are both +0.29R (TP1). That is the smallest winner of the week, and we are writing it up anyway. The Nasdaq short and the Dow long from the same thirteen-minute burst resolved inside an hour. This one shows what the same process looks like stretched across three sessions.

01. The third position in thirteen minutes

The July 1 morning had already been busy. At 14:38 UTC the desk went short the Nasdaq; at 14:41 it went long the Dow. Ten minutes later the Trend Agent was watching a third tape entirely: EURUSD, where the morning's post-ISM selloff had carried the pair from 1.14099 down to 1.13618 and a corrective bounce was climbing back into the wreckage.

The dollar side of the ledger leaned one way. DXY sat at 101.301, above its 5-day average of 101.169 and rising. Ten-year yields at 4.461% were above their own average and firm. The lone reading against the short was the VIX, declining at 16.36, a risk-on tell that argues for the euro rather than against it. The Macro Agent netted it out to bearish EURUSD at 72% confidence. The Trend Agent read bearish at 64% in a transitioning regime.

The bounce itself is what made the setup. A 61.8% retracement of the 1.14099 to 1.13618 drop lands at 1.13915. The bounce printed its high at 1.13909, six-tenths of a pip shy of the textbook level, and stalled. Sixty-minute VWAP sat overhead at 1.13977, and the invalidation was parked at 1.14149, the prior day's low. The confluence checklist came back 8 of 8. What the checklist could not supply was the trigger: a 5-minute breakdown through 1.13900 and the New York session low, with the bounce's momentum reading collapsing from 0.00042 to 0.00002.

So the system evaluated, and waited, and evaluated again. Six passes over thirteen minutes: 35%, 42%, 48%, then backwards to 45% twice as the pair chopped at the fib, then 68% when the breakdown finally printed. Short at 1.13903.

The setup has a name among professional traders: a bearish trend resumption at the 61.8% Fibonacci exhaustion. An impulsive drop, a corrective bounce that retraces about two-thirds of it, and an entry when the bounce dies at that measured level with the larger trend still intact. The trader is not calling a top. They are rejoining a move that already announced itself.

What the pattern is

After a sharp markdown, some of the move always comes back. Short-covering, bargain hunting, and dip buyers push a corrective leg upward. The 61.8% retracement is the conventional boundary between a correction and a reversal: bounces that die at or below it keep the bearish structure intact, while bounces that reclaim it force the trend trader to stand down. The entry comes when price reaches the zone and visibly fails, not when it merely arrives.

Why professionals trust the level

The level works because enough participants watch it to make it a decision point, and because it maps to real positioning. Traders who sold the original drop tend to defend roughly the two-thirds mark of their move; buyers who missed the low lose interest as the discount shrinks. What matters is never the ratio itself but the reaction at it: a stalling candle, fading momentum, a breakdown through the near-side level. Arrival is geometry. Failure is information.

Momentum is the confirming tell. On this trade the bounce's 5-minute momentum reading collapsed twenty-fold before the trigger bar. A correction that loses its engine at a measured ceiling is a correction that has finished its work.

Where it fails

The failure mode is the regime call being wrong. If the impulsive drop was itself the anomaly, the "correction" keeps going, reclaims the retracement, and the resumption short becomes a countertrend guess. That is why the stop here lived at 1.14165, past the fib zone and the prior day's low at 1.14149, the level whose reclaim would have rewritten the story. It is also why the entry demanded a confirmed breakdown rather than a touch: the two 45% reads in the decision log are the system declining to sell a level that had not yet failed.

The desk doesn't favor this setup, or any single setup. It reads the tape first and fits the pattern to what is actually there, dynamically rather than by preference. The same morning produced a mean-reversion short on the Nasdaq, a pullback continuation on the Dow, and this fib exhaustion on the euro, three different playbooks in thirteen minutes, and a month earlier the same pair earned a long off a dip into VWAP support. When the tape changes its argument, the system changes its trade. See SkyAnalyst run your markets with a 7-day free trial.

Key insight
“The post-ISM bounce died at the 61.8% retracement, 1.13915 by the math, 1.13909 on the tape. This was trend resumption, not reversal.”
SkyAnalyst Trend Agent · 14:51 UTC
skyanalyst.app / analyses / ...
Today’s setups
EURUSD Short
SHORT EURUSD — Bearish Trend Resumption at 61.8% Fib Exhaustion
EURUSD · M15
EURUSD
1m5m15m1H
Key supportKey resistanceVWAPInvalidation1.141.141.141.141.14EntryTP1SLLDN OPENNY OPENCLOSE
Detected Setup
Grade C+
SHORT EURUSD — Bearish Trend Resumption at 61.8% Fib Exhaustion
PatternSHORT EURUSD — Bearish Trend Resumption at 61.8% Fib Exhaustion
DirectionShort
Styleintraday
Entry1.13903
Stop loss1.14165
SkyAnalyst
SkyAnalyst
Analysis output
LIVE
SkyAnalyst AI
Pre-trade analysis · 14,371 chars

EURUSD NY AM Session Analysis — July 1, 2026

1. Macro Regime Assessment

FactorReadingEURUSD Implication
Macro AgentBearish EURUSD (score 65, confidence 72%)Bearish ✅
DXY101.301 — above 5d EMA (101.169), rising from 101.102 three days agoBearish ✅
US 10Y4.461 — above 5d EMA (4.434), rising from 4.376 three days agoBearish ✅
VIX16.36 — below 5d EMA (17.19), declining from 18.4 three days agoNeutral/mildly bullish ❌

Macro verdict: BEARISH EURUSD.

Hard rule triggered: Macro Agent confidence is 72% (>70) and DXY trend aligns bearish. No long trades permitted regardless of technicals. Only short setups will be considered.

Key macro drivers: Eurozone CPI undershot (2.8% vs 3.0% headline, 2.4% vs 2.5% core), reinforcing ECB dovish tilt. US ADP was soft (98K vs 118K) but ISM Manufacturing came in at 53.3 (solid), with prices paid dropping sharply (73.0 vs 77.7) — mixed but USD still supported by rate differential and DXY momentum.


2. Agent Alignment

AgentDirectionConfidenceNotes
Macro AgentBearish EURUSD72%Above 60 threshold ✅
Trend AgentBearish64%Above 60 threshold ✅

Both agents agree bearish with confidence >60 each. This is the strongest foundation per the framework. No confidence penalty needed.

Trend Agent details:

  • Regime: TRANSITIONING (reduce size)
  • Key levels: R = 1.14081 | S = 1.13827 | VWAP = 1.13977
  • Invalidation: 1.14149 (yesterday's low, now acting as resistance)
  • The bounce from 1.13618 is viewed as corrective, stalling near 1.1390–1.1404 resistance.

3. HTF Bias (60-Minute)

EMA Stack:

  • Latest 60m candle: Price (1.13909) below EMA fast (1.13989) below EMA slow (1.14012)
  • Price < Fast < Slow = bearish EMA stack ✅
  • Bearish EMA cross confirmed at 11:00 AM candle

RSI: 44.85 — below 50, neutral zone, no oversold divergence. Supports short bias.

MACD: Line at –0.00054, histogram at –0.00019, both below zero. Histogram narrowing slightly (bounce effect) but still negative. Bearish ✅.

Price vs. Daily Reference Levels:

  • Current 1.13909 is below yesterday's low (1.14149), yesterday's close (1.14223), and the 5d daily EMA (1.141)
  • Price is below the daily pivot (1.141)
  • Today's range: 1.13613 – 1.14226 → price is in the lower 50% of today's range
  • 60m VWAP at 1.13977 — price is below

HTF verdict: Bearish — price is structurally beneath all key daily references and 60m EMAs.


4. Calendar Gate

EventTime (ET)StatusImpact
EUR Core CPI / CPI5:00 AMReleased — 1.5h+ ago✅ Clear
ADP Employment8:15 AMReleased — ~2h ago✅ Clear
ECB Lagarde speaks9:00 / 10:00 AM~1–1.5h ago✅ Clear
Fed Chair Warsh9:00 AM~1.5h ago✅ Clear
ISM Manufacturing PMI10:00 AMReleased ~30 min ago✅ Clear (>10 min post)
Trump speaks3:15 PM5+ hours away✅ Clear

No high-impact events within 30 minutes of current time (~10:30 AM ET). ISM was released at 10:00 AM, and >30 minutes have passed. The post-release price action (sharp drop to 1.13618, bounce to 1.14099, fade back to ~1.1391) has settled.

Calendar gate: PASSED ✅


5. LTF Entry Analysis

15-Minute Timeframe
  • EMA Stack: Fast (1.13903) below Slow (1.13961) → bearish ✅, though price is slightly above the fast EMA (corrective bounce)
  • RSI: 49.63 — just below 50, confirming short bias without extreme ✅
  • MACD: Line –0.00014, above signal (–0.00032) → histogram positive at 0.00017 — this reflects the bounce but MACD line is still negative. Transition zone.
  • Fibonacci (bearish retracement): From 1.13618 low to 1.13993 high → 23.6% retrace at 1.13905. Price at 1.13909 is sitting right at the 23.6% Fibonacci retracement level of the bounce.

15m assessment: The corrective bounce is fading. Price has slipped back below VWAP (1.13950) and is now testing the 23.6% fib of the recovery move. RSI drifting below 50 confirms selling pressure resuming.

5-Minute Timeframe
  • EMA cross: Bullish cross occurred at 14:05 (bounce), but MACD histogram has collapsed from strong (0.00042) to nearly flat (0.00002) — momentum exhaustion on the bounce
  • RSI: 51.59 — hovering near neutral, declining from 68.5 highs. No extreme.
  • Price vs. VWAP (5m): Price at 1.13909, 5m VWAP at 1.13856. Still above the 5m VWAP but converging toward it.
  • Fibonacci (bullish from 1.13618 to 1.14099): 61.8% retracement at 1.13915. Price at 1.13909 is testing the 61.8% Fibonacci retracement — a classic zone where bounces fail if the trend is bearish.
  • Key 5m S/R: Support at 1.13914, 1.13858, then the major pivot low at 1.13618.
  • Session levels: NY session high = 1.14099 (rejected), NY session low = 1.13903 (being tested now)

5m assessment: Price is at a critical decision zone. The bounce from 1.13618 has retraced 61.8% of its move and is fading right at the NY session low (1.13903). MACD momentum has evaporated. A break below 1.13900 confirms the bearish resumption.


6. Confluence Scoring

#FactorStatusScore
(a)Macro Agent bearish, confidence ≥ 6072% bearish✅ 1
(b)Trend Agent bearish, confidence ≥ 6064% bearish✅ 1
(c)DXY 5-day trend confirms (above EMA, rising)101.30 > 101.17 EMA, rising✅ 1
(d)10Y yield trend supports short (rising)4.461 > 4.434 EMA, rising✅ 1
(e)60min EMA stack bearishPrice < Fast < Slow✅ 1
(f)Price at VWAP / session level / Fib on 5mAt 61.8% Fib, testing NY session low 1.13903✅ 1
(g)15min RSI confirms without extreme49.6 — just below 50, not extreme✅ 1
(h)No high-impact event within 30 minNext event: Trump at 3:15 PM✅ 1

Total Confluences: 8 of 8 → Very High (9+)


7. Trade Setup

Setup: SHORT EURUSD — Bearish Trend Resumption at 61.8% Fib Exhaustion
ParameterLevelNotes
BiasSHORTAll 8 confluences aligned
Entry Zone1.13900 – 1.13950Between NY session low (1.13903) and VWAP (1.13977). Ideal entry on any retest of 1.13940–1.13950 (VWAP area) that rejects
Entry Trigger5m candle close below 1.13900, OR a bearish rejection candle (wick above, close below) at VWAP 1.13950–1.13977Confirms bounce exhaustion
Stop Loss1.14165Above Trend Agent invalidation (1.14149) + 1.6 pip buffer for slippage. Also above yesterday's low (1.14149) which is the key structural flip level. Distance from mid-entry (~1.13925): ~24 pips. 60m ATR = ~10 pips (0.001) → stop is ~2.4x ATR, appropriate for transitioning regime with elevated intraday volatility
TP11.1382760m pivot low / Trend Agent support — ~10 pips from entry (~0.4R). See TP structure note below
TP21.13618Today's session low — ~31 pips from entry (~1.3R). Key structural level
TP31.13540Next 60m support level — ~39 pips from entry (~1.6R)
Target Profile Assessment

TP1 at 1.13827 delivers only ~0.4R — below the 1R minimum. However, this is an interim structural level, not the primary target. The real first structural target is TP2 at 1.13618 (today's session low), delivering ~1.3R with strong structural justification — it was already tested and held once today, making a retest the highest-probability magnet.

TP3 at 1.13540 delivers ~1.6R, meeting the minimum 1.5:1 R:R requirement at a structural support zone.

This is not structurally inverted: the path from entry to TP2/TP3 does not require breaking through major resistance — it follows the established bearish trend with price already below all daily references. The setup is valid.

Recommended position management:

  • Partial profit (1/3) at 1.13827 (pivot low — reduce risk)
  • Partial profit (1/3) at 1.13618 (session low — primary target)
  • Final portion trail stop to breakeven targeting 1.13540
R:R Summary
TargetDistanceR:RProbability
TP1: 1.13827~10 pips0.4:1High — immediate structure
TP2: 1.13618~31 pips1.3:1Medium-High — session low retest
TP3: 1.13540~39 pips1.6:1Medium — next structural support
Blended (scaled exits)—~1.1:1—

Confluences Summary

✅ Supporting (8/8):

  1. Macro Agent bearish at 72% confidence — Eurozone CPI undershoot, ECB dovish
  2. Trend Agent bearish at 64% — 60m bearish cross, below VWAP, bounce fading
  3. DXY above 5d EMA and rising — dominant USD strength
  4. 10Y yields above 5d EMA and rising — rate differential favors USD
  5. 60m EMA stack fully bearish (price < fast < slow)
  6. Price at 61.8% Fibonacci retracement on 5m + testing NY session low
  7. 15m RSI at 49.6 — confirming short without oversold extreme
  8. No high-impact events within 30 minutes

Risks

RiskMitigation
Transitioning regime — Trend Agent recommends reduced sizeSize down per Trend Agent guidance. Use 0.5–0.75% risk instead of standard 1%
Strong bounce off 1.13618 — the V-shaped recovery to 1.14099 showed aggressive buying at session lowsStop above 1.14149 (invalidation) accounts for this. If buyers defend 1.13827 pivot, partial exit reduces exposure
5m EMAs still in bullish cross — short-term bounce structure intactWaiting for entry trigger (break below 1.13900 or VWAP rejection) filters premature entry
Low volume on current 60m candle (444 ticks vs 813 avg)London close approaching — NY-only volume may pick up. Monitor for volume confirmation on breakdown
Trump speaks at 3:15 PMTrade should resolve by early afternoon. Trail stop to breakeven after TP1 hit
NFP ThursdayPosition should be closed intraday; no overnight risk

Confidence Rating: 9/10 (Very High) — 8 of 8 confluences with dual-agent agreement and macro hard rule supporting shorts only. Reduce position size per transitioning regime guidance.

SCROLL

Decision log

14:38 UTC

Price is climbing off the 1.13618 low and the correction is still alive. The macro stack leans my way, DXY and yields rising, and the structural premise is resumption, but shorting into a rising corrective leg is a guess about where it stops. I want to see the bounce reach a measured level and fail there. Confidence 35%. Waiting.

WAITConfidence 35%
14:44 UTC

The bounce is approaching the 61.8% retracement zone at 1.13915 and slowing. The confluence stack is filling in: bearish 60-minute structure intact, VWAP overhead at 1.13977, the macro read unchanged. The level I need price to fail at is now in reach. Not yet a reaction, only an approach. Confidence 42%. Waiting.

WAITConfidence 42%
14:46 UTC

Price printed 1.13909 and stalled six-tenths of a pip under the textbook level. This is where the setup either forms or dissolves, and the first stall candle is encouraging but a single bar is not a failure. The trigger I require is a 5-minute breakdown through 1.13900 and the session low. Confidence 48%. Waiting.

WAITConfidence 48%
14:48 UTC

The stall has turned into chop. Price is holding under the fib but refusing to break down, printing indecision bars in a tight range. A bounce that will not die is a bounce that might not be finished, and my confidence belongs lower, not higher. Confidence 45%. Waiting.

WAITConfidence 45%
14:49 UTC

No change. The range is intact, momentum is flattening but the breakdown bar has not printed, and I do not sell a level that has not failed. The premise is unchanged and so is the missing trigger. Confidence 45%. Waiting.

WAITConfidence 45%
14:51 UTC

The 5-minute bar broke through 1.13900 and the New York session low, and the bounce's momentum reading collapsed from 0.00042 to 0.00002, an engine shutting off at a measured ceiling. All eight confluences are now checked and the trigger condition is real. Confidence 68%. Entering short at 1.13903, stop 1.14165, TP1 1.13827.

ENTERConfidence 68%
Final decision
Enter short at 1.13903
Key insight
“Confidence stalled at 45% twice as the bounce chopped at the fib. The system got less sure before it got sure.”
SkyAnalyst Trend Agent · Decision log
Final Outcome
+0.3R
TP1 HIT17h 15m
Dollar figures calibrated to a $100k account at 2% risk appear below in Simulated Returns.
Entry → Exit
1.13903 → 1.13827
Move captured
+7.6 pips
Max drawdown
0.0 pips
Time in trade
17h 15m
Simulated Returns

On a $100k account at 2.0% risk per trade.

Each trade risks +$2,000 (1R). The system's actual scale-out behavior may differ, see disclaimer.

Max potential captured
+$580
+0.29R · TP1 hit
ScenarioR-multipleProfit on $100k
Stop hit (invalidated)-1R−$2,000
TP1 hitActual+0.29R+$580
TP2 hit — not tracked+0R+$0
TP3 hit (max potential) — not tracked+0R+$0
System Performance · Year to date

All six agents combined.

Net R
+26.78R
Trades
138
Win rate
60%
EURUSDThis article
+6.07R
20 trades
65%
GBPUSD
+1.1R
13 trades
54%
US30
+5.27R
39 trades
54%
NAS100
+9.2R
43 trades
65%
US500
+5.14R
23 trades
61%
Updated 16 minutes ago
View live stats →
Key insight
“17 hours and 15 minutes in the trade, 0.0 pips of drawdown, first target tagged at 1.13827 for +0.29R (TP1).”
SkyAnalyst Risk Agent · 08:06 UTC

06. What this trade teaches

The decision log's shape is the first lesson. Confidence did not ramp; it built to 48%, then fell to 45% and sat there through two evaluations while the bounce refused to die. A system that can only get more confident is a system talking itself into trades. This one got less sure when the tape gave it less, and the 23-point jump on the final evaluation was earned by a specific event, the breakdown bar, not by accumulated impatience.

The second lesson is about time. The plan's own risk notes expected intraday resolution, and the market ignored the schedule: the pair ground sideways-to-lower through the New York close, the Asian session, and into the next London morning. What actually governs a position is not a clock but a pair of levels, 1.14165 above and 1.13827 below, and neither printed before midnight. So the position stayed. We would rather show that plainly than pretend the overnight hold was designed. It was the exit logic meeting a slow market, with zero pips of drawdown the entire way.

The third lesson is the size of the win. TP1 sat 7.6 pips from entry against a 26.2-pip stop, so the first target pays +0.29R (TP1) by construction, +$580 (TP1) on the $100,000 simulated account. The analysis itself flagged the first target as below its usual minimum, with the real payoff parked at the deeper targets the market never reached. A ledger that records that honestly, small number and all, is worth more than one that only remembers its good days.

07. From the desk

Case study #106 closes the set from the July 1 morning burst: three positions in thirteen minutes, three instruments, three completely different lifespans. A Nasdaq short done in 51 minutes, a Dow long done in 48, and a euro short that outlived them both by sixteen hours. The process behind all three was identical. The markets were not, and the system let each trade take the time its own tape required.

Through July 2 the realized ledger stands at +9.28R across 44 trades this year at a 63.6% win rate. July is five trades old and all five closed green, which is a pleasant sentence that proves nothing. What we keep from this one is the picture of a position sitting quietly through the night, not because anyone was brave, but because no level had been hit and no rule had fired. Patience, at three in the morning, is just code that has not been given a reason to act.

The Short Version

At a Glance

Setup Grade
C+
Evaluations
6
5 waits · 1 enter
Analysis
10,217 chars
Time-in-Trade
17h 15m
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What this teaches about AI-driven trading

Why does the 61.8% Fibonacci level matter in a trend resumption trade?

+

It marks the conventional boundary between a correction and a reversal. Bounces that fail at or below roughly two-thirds of a prior drop keep the bearish structure intact, while a reclaim above it forces trend traders to stand aside. The level works less because of the ratio itself and more because enough participants anchor decisions to it. The tradeable information is never the arrival at the level but the visible failure there.

How does the system decide how long to hold a position?

+

It does not use a clock. A position is governed by its levels: the stop that invalidates the thesis and the targets that pay it. On this trade the stop at 1.14165 and the first target at 1.13827 defined the trade's life, and neither printed until the next London morning, 17 hours and 15 minutes after entry. The plan expected intraday resolution; the market moved slower, and the rules simply kept holding.

Why did the system's confidence fall before it entered?

+

Because the tape gave it less to work with. Confidence built from 35% to 48% as the bounce approached the 61.8% retracement, then slipped to 45% for two consecutive evaluations while price chopped without breaking down. A stalled bounce is ambiguous: it might be dying or merely resting. The drop reflects that honestly. Only when the 5-minute breakdown printed and momentum collapsed did confidence jump to 68% and clear the entry threshold.

What made a trade with a +0.29R first target worth taking?

+

The ladder, not the first rung. From the actual entry the deeper targets offered roughly 1.1R at TP2 and 1.4R at TP3, and the stop was placed against a structural invalidation rather than sized to flatter the first target. The market stopped at TP1 this time, which pays small by construction. Across many trades, the occasional full ladder plus disciplined losses is what the system is pricing, not any single rung.

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Trading involves substantial risk of loss. Past performance is not indicative of future results. The analysis shown was produced by an AI model operating on SkyAnalyst’s live trading infrastructure; it is shared for educational and research purposes only and is not financial advice. About reported results. Every AI Trader publishes three take-profit targets (TP1, TP2, TP3) per trade. The broker closes 100% of the position at TP1, so two distinct R-multiples appear in this article. The hero R-multiple is the full-potential R: where the market actually traveled (the highest take-profit hit, or the stop loss) before the setup was invalidated or exhausted. The realized R, shown on the TP1 row of the simulated returns panel, is TP1’s R (or -1R on a stop out). The realized R is what we log to our running track record. Both numbers are honest. Showing both is what lets readers see the full arc of the move and the conservative ledger entry it produced. Simulated returns in this article are calculated against a hypothetical $100,000 account at 2% risk per trade (1R = $2,000). These are educational reference figures and do not reflect any specific account or broker execution. Your actual result depends on your position size, your risk parameters, and live market conditions.

Key insight
“The system does not have a bedtime. It has an invalidation level, and price never came close to it.”
From the desk · July 2, 2026
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