Four trades, zero winners, -4.00R net. Three SL hits across two sessions, a fourth on Friday, and a system that did not change posture once. The worst week on t
SkyAnalyst is not one AI trader. It is four specialist agents — each with its own data pipeline, each maintaining state between evaluations, and each required to agree before a position is sized. They don’t chat in prose. They write structured messages to a shared state object that each reads on every evaluation cycle.
Four trades, zero winners, -4.00R net on a TP1 baseline. That is the scorecard for the week of March 9 to March 15, 2026, the worst on the published record. Every entry stopped at -1.0R, no trade reached its first take-profit, and equity traveled $100,000 to $92,000 with no green segments to break the descent. The four losses were a Tuesday US30 short into VWAP supply, a Wednesday US500 long pullback, a Wednesday NAS100 long continuation twelve minutes later, and a Friday NAS100 long buy-the-dip into support. All four are SL hits with hTP at zero. The companion weekly drawdown report covers the gate-firing mechanics. The prior week's recap closed +0.80R net on the same architecture. Four losses, no winners, is the variance envelope of a 35% win rate system. The system did not change posture. It read tape, scored confluence, sized at the same risk per trade, and accepted four stops in the order they came. The February monthly recap shows the longer-window dispersion this week sits inside.
Tuesday March 10 at 14:25 UTC, the Trend Agent flagged a US30 short on a primary sell-rally into VWAP and overhead supply. The macro tape was mixed-equity with DXY firm. Confluence cleared, the position triggered, and the trade stopped at -1.0R as the index reclaimed the breakdown level. No second setup qualified.
Wednesday March 11 produced two trades inside twelve minutes. At 14:08 UTC, a US500 long pullback-and-go triggered on a B-grade setup as the macro gate cleared lean-bullish; the trade stopped at -1.0R. Twelve minutes later at 14:20 UTC, a NAS100 long continuation triggered on a separate confluence read and also stopped at -1.0R. Equity moved from $98,000 to $94,000.
Friday March 13 at 14:40 UTC, the Trend Agent flagged a NAS100 long buy-the-dip into a tested support zone after a midday flush. Confluence cleared at the same threshold used on Tuesday and Wednesday. The trade triggered and stopped at -1.0R as support failed. Equity closed at $92,000, an -8.0 percent traverse from the Tuesday open.
Related reading: companion drawdown report · prior week recap · February 2026 monthly recap.
| Date | Time | Instrument | Dir | Model | Setup | Grade | R | $ Sim | Result | Details |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mar 10 | 14:25 UTC | US30 | Short | unknown | Sell rally into VWAP/supply (Primary) | C+ | -1.0R | -$2,000 | Stop hit | - |
| Mar 11 | 14:08 UTC | US500 | Long | unknown | US500 Long (Pullback & Go) | B | -1.0R | -$2,000 | Stop hit | - |
| Mar 11 | 14:20 UTC | NAS100 | Long | unknown | NAS100 LONG (Continuation) | C+ | -1.0R | -$2,000 | Stop hit | - |
| Mar 13 | 14:40 UTC | NAS100 | Long | unknown | NAS100 LONG (buy-the-dip into support) | C+ | -1.0R | -$2,000 | Stop hit | - |
Dollar figures are simulated on a $100,000 account at 2% risk per trade. Actual subscriber P&L varies with account size. Past performance is not a guarantee of future results.
The week's recurring pattern was the regime-shift sensitivity of intraday continuation entries. Every loss shared the same shape: the macro gate cleared at the moment of trigger, the entry was taken, and the regime softened or repriced inside the trade lifecycle before the first take-profit could fill. The Tuesday US30 short triggered into a valid VWAP-supply read and the index reclaimed twenty minutes later. The Wednesday US500 long was a textbook pullback into rising support and the tape rolled within the hour. The Wednesday NAS100 long continued off the same regime read with the same outcome. The Friday NAS100 buy-the-dip went into tested support and the support broke.
The threshold was met at every entry. No trade was sized differently, used a wider stop, or used a tighter trigger to compensate for the prior loss. The pattern is the cost of a system that does not re-evaluate in-position trades dynamically; once the trigger fires, the only exit path is the stop. That is a known cost of the architecture.
The Wednesday decision to take a NAS100 long twelve minutes after the US500 long stopped out is the week's clearest discipline beat. A discretionary trader on a fresh -1.0R stop would have struggled to size a second setup in the same direction inside the same window. The system did not see the prior loss; the confluence math scored the NAS100 setup on its own merits and entered when it cleared. The second trade also stopped at -1.0R.
The Risk Agent did not loosen sizing or threshold for the Friday NAS100 setup. After three consecutive -1.0R losses, a discretionary playbook would have either stood aside or widened the stop. The Risk Agent did neither. The Friday trigger was sized identically to the Tuesday US30 short. The companion weekly drawdown report documents the gate behavior in detail.
The Friday NAS100 buy-the-dip is the week's hardest decision to read in retrospect. The setup cleared confluence on the structural read; the support zone had held three prior tests. The trade stopped at -1.0R when support failed inside the trade lifecycle. We do not classify this as a system error. The threshold was met at entry; the failure mode is regime-shift sensitivity, not a confluence misread.
SkyAnalyst runs multiple foundation models in parallel across its four-agent system. When two models trade the same instrument in the same week, the results are directly comparable. This is that comparison.
Same signals, same risk framework, different foundation model.
EURUSD was inactive. No setup cleared confluence; the pair held a tight range on a neutral DXY tape.
All EURUSD this week →XAUUSD was inactive. Gold consolidated with no patterns scoring above the confluence floor.
All XAUUSD this week →US30 took one trade for a 0 percent win rate and -1.0R net. Tuesday's primary sell-rally into VWAP supply stopped as the index reclaimed the breakdown level.
All US30 this week →NAS100 took two trades for a 0 percent win rate and -2.0R net. Wednesday's continuation long stopped at -1.0R; Friday's buy-the-dip into support stopped when the zone failed.
All NAS100 this week →USDJPY was inactive. The pair held an overnight range every session; the dollar's mixed tape kept the cross dormant.
All USDJPY this week →US500 took one trade for a 0 percent win rate and -1.0R net. Wednesday's B-grade pullback long stopped as the broader tape rolled lower.
All US500 this week →The highest-grade loss of the week is the B-grade Wednesday March 11 US500 long at 14:08 UTC. We pull this trade because it is the cleanest read of the four and the best illustration of what a lean-bull setup looks like the moment before the regime softens against it.
The macro gate had cleared lean-bullish at the open. DXY was soft on the 5-minute, US 10-year yields were firm but not climbing, and the US500 had pulled back into a tested support zone above rising session VWAP with the 60-minute trend intact. The Trend Agent scored the setup at B grade, six-factor confluence cleared, and the Risk Agent sized at standard 1R.
Nothing in the entry itself. The B-grade read was correct on the data the system had at 14:08 UTC. The regime softened inside the trade lifecycle: DXY firmed within twenty minutes, the 60-minute trend stalled, and the pullback that had been supporting the long became the pullback that broke. The stop filled at -1.0R on a clean structural break. The trade had an exit-logic limit, not a confluence or sizing error.
Each trade risks +$2,000 (1R). The system's actual scale-out behavior may differ, see disclaimer.
| Scenario | R-multiple | Profit on $100k |
|---|---|---|
| Window netActual | -4R | −$8,000 |
The honest reading is that the system did everything it always does and lost on every trade. To a subscriber watching equity descend from $100,000 to $92,000 with no green prints, the week looks like a regime mismatch or a tuning failure. It is neither.
A 35 percent win rate system produces weeks like this. The variance envelope of that hit rate includes runs of four straight losses about as often as back-to-back winning weeks. The architecture did not change, the thresholds did not change, the sizing did not change.
What we want subscribers to read is the absence of a story. The Trend Agent did not get tilted by Tuesday's stop. The Risk Agent did not widen sizing on Friday. The Macro Agent did not flip the regime read mid-week to chase. Each evaluation cycle re-read the regime, re-scored the structure, and let the confluence math decide which playbook applied.
The product is the dynamism, and the dynamism includes weeks where the math points to setups that lose. We publish those weeks the same way we publish the winning ones.
The SkyAnalyst Team
Nothing. The four-loss cluster sits inside the variance envelope of a 35 percent win rate system, and every setup was traded at the threshold used across the published record. There is no tuning signal in the four losses individually or in the cluster. The companion drawdown report covers the equity-curve mechanics; the rolling record absorbs single-week clusters naturally.
Variance. At a 35 percent hit rate, four consecutive losses sit well inside the expected envelope and appear regularly across a long enough sample. A week with four entries and zero winners is not an outlier and not a tuning signal. The rolling 100-trade scorecard is the right view for dispersion.
The drawdown gate prevents loosening of confluence threshold and sizing; it does not stop trading. After three -1.0R losses the gate held the threshold at the level used on Tuesday morning. Stopping entirely after a loss cluster would mean the system never trades through variance, and variance is structural at this win rate.
hTP is the highest take-profit level a trade reached before the stop filled. An hTP of zero means the trade did not touch its first take-profit at any point. All four losses this week have hTP zero, which is why the TP1 baseline and the full case-study ladder both produce -1.0R per trade.
As a single sample inside a longer distribution. The prior week closed +0.80R net on the same architecture; the February monthly recap documents the full month's dispersion. The right windows for evaluating are the monthly recap and the rolling 100-trade record.
Subscribers receive the same pre-trade AI analysis three minutes before entry.
We project the recap totals using a TP1 exit on every winning trade. This is the simplest baseline for comparing across periods. Traders running their own scale-out, trail, or TP2/TP3 hold strategies will see different totals. Dollar figures are simulated on a $100,000 account at 2% risk per trade. Actual subscriber P&L varies with account size and execution. Past performance is not a guarantee of future results.
Four US500 losses, -4.00R given back, a 2-trade losing streak Thu into Fri. Three winners in the same five sessions covered most of the draw. The companion recap nets -0.62R.

March opens with a sell-the-rally on the Dow. Twelve evaluations across fourteen minutes, eleven of them wait. The twelfth fired short at 48842 and banked TP1 at 48700.

A breakout continuation on the Nasdaq 100 cleared TP1 inside the New York session, then the runner reversed and tagged the original stop. Reported result reflects the TP1-baseline R.