connectxsignals

$ help / copiers / getting started

How to choose a signal

Every statistic on a signal page is computed by the platform from the raw trade history of the trader’s connected live account. Nothing is self-reported. That makes the numbers trustworthy — but you still have to read them correctly.

What the tiers mean

NEW
listed after manual review · ≥ 2 weeks history · ≥ 20 closed trades
VERIFIED
≥ 6 weeks · ≥ 50 trades · max drawdown ≤ 50% · promotion automatic
PRO
≥ 16 weeks · ≥ 150 trades · max DD ≤ 50% · manual review, 3-business-day SLA

A tier is a floor, not an endorsement. VERIFIED means the signal survived six weeks and fifty trades without exceeding 50% drawdown — it does not mean it will be profitable next month.

History beats return

A 40% return over three weeks is statistically meaningless; a 15% return over six months with shallow drawdowns is information. Short histories can be luck, leverage, or both. Prefer signals with longer history and more closed trades, even when the headline return is smaller.

Check before you subscribe

  • · Max drawdown — the deepest peak-to-trough fall. This decides survival, not the return.
  • · Guard events on the public tape — follower guard trips appear there, anonymized. Integrity flags are detected continuously and can put a signal under review.
  • · Martingale or grid flags — the platform detects position-stacking patterns that look profitable until they aren’t.
  • · The autopsies page — read how signals have failed on this platform before trusting any tier.

Finally: the loss cap you set is a percentage of your account equity — make sure that dollar amount is one you can actually afford to lose. The cap is your real risk number, not the signal’s track record.