SkyAnalyst AI journal entry: US30 Long on Feb 11, 2026 closed +2.64R on TP1. Full workspace view, decision log, and AI reasoning, unedited. SkyAnalyst AI journa

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. That’s what makes the system auditable — and it’s what this case study will show, step by step, on a specific setup the trend agent almost passed on.
The macro frame for February 11 was set by the prior session's data print. Retail sales had missed expectations, anchoring a Fed-easing narrative that pulled the dollar lower and compressed real yields. Today's payrolls and wages came in firm, which tempered the move but did not reverse it. The net read was dollar weakness with supportive risk tone, the kind of regime the Macro Agent flags as constructive for index longs. DXY printed near session lows. VIX held around eighteen, contained, no panic premium being bid. That combination, dollar soft and vol contained, is the macro condition under which intraday pullbacks tend to be bought rather than sold.
The headline risk was Friday CPI, two days out. The Macro Agent's note in the pre-trade plan was explicit: avoid trades within fifteen minutes of new data, expect choppy follow-through ahead of the print, focus on quality over quantity. That posture mattered because it gated what kinds of setups the system would even score. A continuation breakout into resistance with a CPI print pending was not the trade. A responsive long off pre-mapped support inside a confirmed uptrend, with a structural stop and a defined invalidation, was.
Against that backdrop the Dow's intraday picture was a textbook pullback inside an uptrend. The 60-minute structure remained above the slow EMA, the longer-term bias intact. But the 5 to 15 minute momentum had washed out below VWAP with RSI oversold and MACD negative. Price had drifted into the 49,940 to 50,060 zone, the prior NY low cluster the Macro Agent had pre-mapped that morning as the high-quality buy region. The pre-trade plan had named the trigger, the stop, the targets, and the invalidation rule before the session opened. By 16:02 UTC the conditions were either satisfied or they were not. The Trend Agent's job was to score them.
The setup the Trend Agent flagged was a Responsive Long at Intraday Support with VWAP Reclaim. It is the inverse of the cluster fade pattern the system runs at resistance, applied to a confirmed daily uptrend pulling back into pre-mapped intraday support. Walking through the mechanics explains why the entry took only one evaluation, why the grade stayed at C+ rather than B, and why TP1 at 50,200 was the structurally correct first target rather than the C+ ceiling the grade implied.
Price has been advancing on the 60-minute timeframe: structure trading above the slow EMA, the higher-timeframe bias intact. From that posture, the trader watches for an intraday pullback into a pre-mapped support zone, typically the prior session's low cluster, the rising VWAP, or the breakout shelf of the most recent advance. The setup is not the touch of the zone. The setup is the 5-minute response inside the zone: a rejection candle with body in the upper half, RSI lifting back from oversold, MACD histogram turning constructive, and ideally a 5-minute close back above the breached level. Only then is the level proven to absorb supply.
This is the staple of pullback continuation trading. Institutional desks and seasoned discretionary traders favor it because the math favors a confirmed re-entry far more than chasing the breakout itself. Buying 50,400 after the breakout has already extended exposes the position to the next mean-reversion bar at the high. Buying 49,953 inside the pre-mapped support zone after the rejection prints, with a stop just below structural invalidation, places the entry near the bottom of the next leg. The R per unit of risk on the responsive entry is far better than the R per unit of risk on chasing the high.
The tell on a responsive long is what the bounce does at the level. A test that arrives with deteriorating volume and prints a doji body inside the zone is a level holding by accident. A test that prints a rejection candle on meaningful volume with a 5-minute close back above the breached pivot is a level holding by structure. Without the rejection candle, the pattern is noise. With it, the pattern is signal.
Intraday support zones exist because of resting demand from the prior advance. The first revisit tests whether that demand is still being defended. A confirmed rejection with volume tells you the bids are present, the algos and market makers are stepping in, and the next leg higher is more probable than the prior pullback was at extension. The 49,940 to 50,060 zone on February 11 carried two structural references that sized desks defend: the prior NY session low cluster, and the sub-VWAP region the morning's pullback had washed into. That is a real floor.
It fails in the wrong regime, like every responsive entry. A Responsive Long inside a confirmed strong-bear regime, or against a macro tape that has just flipped risk-off on a hawkish surprise, will see the bounce reverse and price break through structure. The Macro Agent's regime read gates the pattern. On February 11 the macro was lean-bull at sixty-eight percent confidence, the Trend Agent's regime classification was TRANSITIONING, and the macro alignment was flagged as HEADWIND only because of the pending CPI risk two days out. The grade cleared at C+ rather than B because the alignment was conditionally constructive rather than decisively bullish, but the structural math was strong enough to score the entry once the rejection finally printed.
SkyAnalyst does not favor the Responsive Long as a strategy. The same morning the Trend Agent was scoring this US30 pullback, the same agent was monitoring potential continuation breakouts on the Nasdaq, fade-the-rip setups on EURUSD inside a soft-dollar tape, and rejection structures on XAUUSD where the macro was conflicted. Each of those is a different playbook with a different trigger arithmetic and a different risk profile.
The system reads the tape first and fits the pattern to what is actually there on each instrument independently. It does not show up to the chart with a directional bias and look for opportunities to express it. The four agents running in parallel, trend, macro, cross-asset, risk, each contribute a different lens on what kind of market each instrument is in right now. On February 11 the read on US30 was a confirmed uptrend pulling back into pre-mapped support inside a Fed-easing tape, with the rejection candle and VWAP reclaim already on the bar. The Trend Agent took the trade because the math cleared, not because the pattern was preferred. On a different morning the same instrument inside a different macro context would have produced a fade or a skip rather than a buy. That is why the system trades each instrument on its own confluence math rather than a unified directional thesis.

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Avoid trades within ±15m of new data.\n- Technical frame (US30): H1 above slow EMA; intraday pullback under VWAP; 15–5m RSI oversold with MACD negative but stabilizing; key pivot: 50,260–50,330." } }, { "component": "MiniCardBlock", "props": { "children": [ { "component": "MiniCard", "props": { "lhs": { "component": "ProfileTile", "props": { "title": "Directional Bias", "label": "US30 intraday", "child": { "component": "Icon", "props": { "name": "trending-up" } } } }, "rhs": { "component": "Stats", "props": { "number": "Bullish", "label": "with pullback buy zones" } } } }, { "component": "MiniCard", "props": { "lhs": { "component": "ProfileTile", "props": { "title": "Volatility Meter", "label": "ATR & VIX", "child": { "component": "Icon", "props": { "name": "activity" } } } }, "rhs": { "component": "Stats", "props": { "number": "High", "label": "tight timing, scale size" } } } } ] } }, { "component": "Layout", "props": { "children": { "variant": "M-M", "rows": [ { "headerLeft": { "component": "InlineHeader", "props": { "heading": "Setup #1 · US30 LONG", "description": "Responsive buy at intraday support with confirmation" } }, "mediumLeft": [ { "component": "TextContent", "props": { "textMarkdown": "Entry Zone: 49,940–50,060 (prior NY low cluster, 5–15m oversold, below VWAP)\nEntry Trigger (pick one):\n- Bullish engulfing/hammer on 5–15m closing back above 50,000; or\n- Reclaim VWAP on 5m with rising volume; or\n- RSI(5m) crosses up from ≤25 with higher low in price.\nStop Zone (logical): 49,860–49,900 (beneath structure sweep and 1–1.5× 5–15m ATR)\nInvalidation: 5m closes below 49,860 and cannot reclaim in next 2 candles.\nNotes: Align with H1 up-bias above slow EMA; avoid chase if price gaps through VWAP without retest." } } ], "headerRight": { "component": "InlineHeader", "props": { "heading": "Quality & Targets", "description": "Reward mapping and conviction" } }, "mediumRight": [ { "component": "TextContent", "props": { "textMarkdown": "Targets:\n- TP1: 50,200 (VWAP/5m supply) \n- TP2: 50,330 (H1 pivot/100% fib) \n- TP3: 50,500 (H1 extension/round)\n\nR-Multiples (approx vs 49,890 stop): \n- TP1 ≈ 1.0R · TP2 ≈ 2.2R · TP3 ≈ 3.5R\n\nQuality Score: 8.5/10 \nConfidence: High — Multi-timeframe confluence (H1 trend up, intraday pullback, oversold signals)." } }, { "component": "SingleStackedBarChart", "props": { "chartData": { "data": [ { "category": "TP1", "value": 1.0 }, { "category": "TP2", "value": 2.2 }, { "category": "TP3", "value": 3.5 } ] } } } ] }, { "headerLeft": { "component": "InlineHeader", "props": { "heading": "Setup #2 · US30 SHORT (fade)", "description": "Only at defined resistance with reversal trigger" } }, "mediumLeft": [ { "component": "TextContent", "props": { "textMarkdown": "Entry Zone: 50,420–50,520 (H1 resistance/extension; prior London high area)\nEntry Trigger:\n- 5–15m rejection wick + close back below 50,480; or\n- Bearish engulfing at zone with MACD histogram roll-down; or\n- Failure to hold above VWAP after spike (VWAP reject).\nStop Zone (logical): 50,560–50,620 (above wick highs/structure)\nInvalidation: Strong 5–15m close >50,620 or acceptance above zone for 2 bars.\nNotes: Counter-trend vs H1; size smaller and take profits faster." } } ], "headerRight": { "component": "InlineHeader", "props": { "heading": "Quality & Targets", "description": "Reward mapping and conviction" } }, "mediumRight": [ { "component": "TextContent", "props": { "textMarkdown": "Targets:\n- TP1: 50,300 (local shelf) \n- TP2: 50,200 (VWAP/5m demand) \n- TP3: 50,060 (pullback floor)\n\nR-Multiples (approx vs 50,600 stop): \n- TP1 ≈ 1.0R · TP2 ≈ 1.9R · TP3 ≈ 3.0R\n\nQuality Score: 7.2/10 \nConfidence: Medium — Works only on clean rejection; drop if momentum persists." } }, { "component": "SingleStackedBarChart", "props": { "chartData": { "data": [ { "category": "TP1", "value": 1.0 }, { "category": "TP2", "value": 1.9 }, { "category": "TP3", "value": 3.0 } ] } } } ] } ] } } }, { "component": "SectionBlock", "props": { "isFoldable": false, "sections": [ { "value": "section1", "trigger": "Execution Checklist", "content": [ { "component": "List", "props": { "variant": "icon", "heading": "Before you click:", "items": [ { "title": "Avoid entries ±15m around high-impact US data today", "iconName": "alarm-clock" }, { "title": "Trade during London→NY overlap or NY power hour", "iconName": "clock-9" }, { "title": "Wait for trigger candle close, don’t pre-empt", "iconName": "check-circle-2" }, { "title": "Risk 0.5–1.0% per trade; reduce on counter-trend shorts", "iconName": "shield-check" }, { "title": "Move stop to breakeven after TP1; scale out into TP2/TP3", "iconName": "move-horizontal" } ] } } ] }, { "value": "section2", "trigger": "Key Levels & Context", "content": [ { "component": "Table", "props": { "tableHeader": { "rows": [ { "children": "Level", "type": "string" }, { "children": "Role", "type": "string" }, { "children": "Notes", "type": "string" } ] }, "tableBody": { "rows": [ { "children": ["49,860–49,900", "Stop buffer", "Below structure sweep/ATR"] }, { "children": ["49,940–50,060", "Buy zone", "Oversold 5–15m; reclaim needed"] }, { "children": ["50,200", "TP1 / pivot", "VWAP/5m supply"] }, { "children": ["50,330", "TP2", "H1 pivot/Fib 100%"] }, { "children": ["50,420–50,520", "Short zone", "Defined resistance; reversal only"] }, { "children": ["50,560–50,620", "Short stop", "Above wick highs/invalidates"] }, { "children": ["50,500", "TP3 long", "H1 extension/round"] } ] } } }, { "component": "TextContent", "props": { "textMarkdown": "Risk Note: High intraday volatility—size by stop distance (R). Cap daily loss to 2R; stop trading after 3 consecutive losses." } } ] } ] } } ] } }, "error": null }</content>
<content thesys="true">{ "component": { "component": "Card", "props": { "children": [ { "component": "Header", "props": { "title": "TP1 Distance Check — US30 Long", "subtitle": "Does TP1 placement still make sense given current volatility and structure?" } }, { "component": "TextContent", "props": { "textMarkdown": "Short answer: TP1 at 50,200 is still defensible if the long is from ~49,940–50,060 with a 49,860–49,900 structural stop. Current 5–15m ATR suggests TP1 ≈ 2× recent swing range, which can feel far when momentum is rebuilding below VWAP. If price cannot reclaim and hold above 50,060–50,100 within 2–3 candles, consider an adaptive nearer TP1 without degrading R too much." } }, { "component": "MiniCardBlock", "props": { "children": [ { "component": "MiniCard", "props": { "lhs": { "component": "ProfileTile", "props": { "title": "Current Price Context", "label": "5–15m", "child": { "component": "Icon", "props": { "name": "crosshair" } } } }, "rhs": { "component": "Stats", "props": { "number": "Below VWAP", "label": "Reclaim needed" } } } }, { "component": "MiniCard", "props": { "lhs": { "component": "ProfileTile", "props": { "title": "Volatility", "label": "5–15m ATR", "child": { "component": "Icon", "props": { "name": "activity" } } } }, "rhs": { "component": "Stats", "props": { "number": "High", "label": "Scale size, manage R" } } } } ] } }, { "component": "SectionBlock", "props": { "isFoldable": false, "sections": [ { "value": "section1", "trigger": "What the data implies", "content": [ { "component": "List", "props": { "variant": "icon", "items": [ { "title": "H1 trend still above slow EMA; pullback bought from structure is valid.", "iconName": "trending-up" }, { "title": "5–15m RSI just out of oversold; MACD still sub-zero — momentum rebuild takes time.", "iconName": "timer" }, { "title": "VWAP overhead: initial friction likely near 50,100–50,200 pivot band.", "iconName": "arrow-up-circle" } ] } }, { "component": "TextContent", "props": { "textMarkdown": "Bottom line: TP1 at 50,200 aligns with pivot/VWAP supply and offers ~1R+ from a ~49,890 stop. It is not too far if trend resumes; if VWAP rejects, expect chop before continuation." } } ] }, { "value": "section2", "trigger": "Adaptive TP plan (retain edge)", "content": [ { "component": "Table", "props": { "tableHeader": { "rows": [ { "children": "Option", "type": "string" }, { "children": "New TP1", "type": "string" }, { "children": "Rationale", "type": "string" } ] }, "tableBody": { "rows": [ { "children": ["Conservative", "50,120–50,150", "First supply shelf under VWAP; pays ~0.7–0.9R, increases win rate"] }, { "children": ["Baseline", "50,200", "VWAP/pivot confluence; original plan, ~1.0–1.2R"] }, { "children": ["Stretch", "50,330", "H1 pivot/Fib 100%; hold runner only if acceptance above VWAP"] } ] } } }, { "component": "List", "props": { "variant": "icon", "heading": "Trigger-based management", "items": [ { "title": "If 5m closes above 50,060 and holds 2 bars → keep TP1 = 50,200.", "iconName": "check-circle-2" }, { "title": "If repeated rejections at 50,080–50,120 → shift TP1 to 50,120–50,150.", "iconName": "move-horizontal" }, { "title": "If VWAP reclaimed and holds (pullback holds > VWAP) → partials at 50,200, run remainder to 50,330.", "iconName": "navigation-2" } ] } } ] }, { "value": "section3", "trigger": "Risk & invalidation", "content": [ { "component": "List", "props": { "variant": "icon", "items": [ { "title": "Logical stop: 49,860–49,900 (beneath structure/1–1.5× ATR).", "iconName": "shield" }, { "title": "Hard invalidation: 5m close < 49,860 and no reclaim next 2 candles.", "iconName": "ban" }, { "title": "Sizing: risk 0.5–1.0% per trade; cap day at 2R max loss; reduce risk if counter-trend signals persist.", "iconName": "scale" } ] } }, { "component": "TextContent", "props": { "textMarkdown": "Scale out: take 30–50% at TP1, move stop to breakeven on remainder, then target 50,330 only if acceptance above VWAP." } } ] } ] } } ] } }, "error": null }</content>
16:02 UTC, 62% confidence. Price has wedged into the 49,940 to 50,060 zone the morning's pre-trade plan named as the responsive long region. The 5-minute bar that just closed printed a bullish rejection body with the lower wick reaching 49,890 and a close back above 50,000. Volume on the rejection was meaningfully above the 60-period average. RSI on 5-minute lifted from oversold; the MACD histogram is still negative but stabilizing rather than extending. The 60-minute structure remains above the slow EMA, the daily bias is unchanged from yesterday's close, and the macro regime is lean-bull at sixty-eight percent on a Fed-easing narrative. Cross-asset is constructive: DXY near session lows, VIX contained around eighteen. The trigger I require is a 5-minute bullish rejection inside the zone with a close back above the breached pivot on confirming volume. All three components printed inside the same bar. Confluence math returned sixty-two percent on a C+ grade, above the entry floor. The macro alignment is flagged HEADWIND only because of pending CPI two days out, which the Risk Agent will translate into standard sizing rather than reduced sizing because the data risk is not within the same session window. There is no reason to wait for a second confirming bar when the first bar already cleared every required component. Entering long at 49,953.5, stop 49,860, TP1 50,200.
Each trade risks +$2,000 (1R). The system's actual scale-out behavior may differ, see disclaimer.
| Scenario | R-multiple | Profit on $100k |
|---|---|---|
| Stop hit (invalidated) | -1R | −$2,000 |
| TP1 hitActual | +2.64R | +$5,280 |
| TP2 hit — not tracked | +0R | +$0 |
| TP3 hit (max potential) — not tracked | +0R | +$0 |
The instructive part of this trade is what did not happen. The Trend Agent did not run multiple wait cycles before sizing in. The macro read did not flip mid-cycle. The pre-trade plan written six hours before the trigger did not need revision when the bar finally printed. The system did the simplest thing it can do: it scored the setup against the same threshold it scores every setup, the math cleared on the first evaluation, and the position triggered at the price the plan had named.
Single-evaluation entries are statistically the rarest of the system's behaviors. Most setups score below threshold for several minutes before clearing, with the Trend Agent declining and re-scoring as the structural picture builds bar by bar. The single-cycle entry only happens when the structural confirmation has already printed by the time the agents look, the macro gate has been stable for hours, and the cross-asset reads are aligned. On February 11 all three conditions were satisfied. The 5-minute rejection candle had completed before 16:02 UTC. The Macro Agent's lean-bull regime had been written into shared state at the prior session close and had not been updated against. The Cross-Asset agent's reads on DXY and VIX were constructive and stable. There was nothing to wait for that the wait would have priced in better. The structural premise was complete by the time the cycle started.
A pre-trade plan that maps the buy zone, the trigger, the stop, and the targets in advance is what makes single-evaluation entries safe. The system was not improvising in the moment. It was executing a plan that had been written before the bell. - From the desk - February 12, 2026
The R-multiple at +2.64R (TP1) is structurally typical for a Responsive Long executed cleanly into pre-mapped support inside a confirmed uptrend. The TP1 distance from entry was 246.5 points against a stop distance of 93.5 points. That is a 2.6 to 1 reward-to-risk on TP1 alone, with TP2 at 50,330 and TP3 at 50,500 stretching the asymmetry further if the trade had been allowed to run. The position closed at TP1 for +2.64R and +$5,280 (TP1) on the hypothetical $100,000 account at 2% risk per trade. The same arithmetic applied across the rest of February: the February 19 US30 short that broke the losing streak ran the same single-evaluation discipline on a counter-trend rejection, and the February 20 US30 short pullback to supply followed the day after on a continuation fade. Three US30 trades in nine sessions, each scored on its own confluence math, none influenced by the prior trade's outcome.
The February month-to-date tally entering this trade was -0.55R across 11 trades at a 27.3% win rate. February had been a difficult month up to this point, dominated by chop weeks where pattern systems get hurt the most. Adding the +2.64R (TP1) here lifted the rolling tally meaningfully and was the first decisive winner of the month. The full February context is documented in the February monthly recap, and the prior month's arc is in the January monthly recap. The week's drawdown analysis is in the February 9 drawdown report.
The interesting thing about this trade is the discipline of writing the plan in advance. Before the session opened on February 11, the Macro Agent had written the buy zone (49,940 to 50,060), the trigger conditions (bullish engulfing or hammer above 50,000, or VWAP reclaim with rising volume, or RSI cross from oversold with higher low), the stop region (49,860 to 49,900), and the take-profit targets (50,200, 50,330, 50,500) into the shared state object. The Trend Agent's evaluation at 16:02 UTC did not invent any of those numbers. It read the plan, scored the structural picture against the trigger conditions, and confirmed that the rejection candle plus the VWAP reclaim plus the volume confirmation had all printed inside the same 5-minute bar. The entry at 49,953.5 was inside the pre-mapped buy zone. The stop at 49,860 was at the floor of the pre-mapped stop region. The TP1 at 50,200 was the pre-mapped first target.
A discretionary trader running this same setup would have been pulled hard toward improvisation. Watching the 5-minute candle close above 50,000 in real-time, the instinct is to chase the bounce up to 50,050 or 50,080 to "get in before the move." That instinct costs R. The pre-trade plan disciplines the entry to the price that gives the position structural buffer above the stop, which is the price the plan named, not the price the bar happens to be printing when the trader notices the setup. The system's entry at 49,953.5 was inside the pre-mapped zone. A discretionary entry chasing the close at 50,015 would have given up six points of buffer and pushed the R per unit of risk lower for no structural gain.
A reasonable question by now is whether a retail trader with ChatGPT and a chart could reproduce this. They cannot, and not because of model quality. On February 11 the Macro Agent had written the buy zone and trigger conditions into shared state hours before the session opened, and had not updated them since. The Trend Agent's evaluation at 16:02 UTC read that exact state object, used it to gate which structural conditions to scan for, and used the same state to flag macro alignment as HEADWIND only because of pending CPI two days out. If the Macro Agent had been chatting in prose about a Fed-easing tape with mixed signals, the Trend Agent would have had to interpret the tone, infer the buy zone from the prose, and improvise the trigger conditions on the fly. It does not, so it did not. The coordination between the four agents through structured shared state is the product. That is what a chat interface cannot simulate, and it is what this case study shows in practice on a single-evaluation entry that executed a plan written hours before the bar.
The next case study returns to the broader February month-to-date arc. We will continue working through the year the same way.
From the SkyAnalyst Team.
The Trend Agent runs the same confluence math on every cycle regardless of how many cycles have happened. A single-evaluation entry only occurs when the structural confirmation has already printed before the agents start scoring, the macro gate has been stable, and the cross-asset reads are aligned. On February 11 the 5-minute rejection candle, the VWAP reclaim, and the volume confirmation had all completed inside the bar that closed just before 16:02 UTC. There was nothing left to wait for that the wait would have priced in better. Single-evaluation entries account for roughly twelve percent of the system's published trades.
The setup grade scores the structural picture before the trade runs, not the outcome after. On February 11 the structural read was clean, but the macro alignment was flagged HEADWIND because of pending CPI two days out, and the regime classification was TRANSITIONING rather than decisively bullish. Those flags lower the grade by mechanical rule. The trade still cleared the entry threshold because confluence math returned sixty-two percent. A C+ grade with confluence math above threshold is a tradable setup with a structural caveat, not a marginal one. The outcome at +2.64R (TP1) does not retroactively raise the grade.
A 5-minute close below 49,860 without reclaim in the next two candles would have invalidated the structural premise. The pre-trade plan named that level explicitly. A Macro Agent re-rating to bearish-equity on an unexpected hawkish print would have closed the macro gate. A Cross-Asset reading of stronger dollar plus rising VIX would have removed the inter-market confirmation. Any of those three would have moved the Trend Agent's score below the entry threshold. The stop at 49,860 sat 93.5 points below entry, tight enough to respect the structural invalidation level, loose enough to survive a one to one and a half ATR sweep on the first touch.
A discretionary trader's morning prep is typically a directional thesis and a watch list. The system's pre-trade plan is a structured state object containing the buy zone, the stop region, the take-profit targets, the trigger conditions, the invalidation rule, and the macro regime read. Each field is written by the agent responsible for it, in machine-readable form, before the session opens. When the trigger evaluation runs, it reads the plan rather than re-deriving it from current price action. The discipline of writing the plan in advance and trading it without revision is what makes single-evaluation entries safe rather than reckless. Improvisation in the moment costs R; execution of a written plan does not.
The pattern fails when the support zone does not hold. On February 11 the stop was 49,860, ninety-three and a half points below entry. A 5-minute close below 49,860 without reclaim would have invalidated the structural premise and closed the position at -1R for -$2,000 on the hypothetical $100,000 account at 2% risk. The system does not adjust the stop based on developing information once the position is open. The stop is the line at which the structural premise is invalid, and the trade closes mechanically at that line. The same arithmetic would apply to every Responsive Long the system trades, in every market, regardless of the macro context the entry was taken in.
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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. Each model outputs three take-profit targets (TP1, TP2, TP3) per trade. In live execution, models typically scale out at TP1 for risk management — the broker position records this as a TP1 exit. The R-multiples and dollar returns shown in this article reflect the full potential of the trade: where the market actually traveled to (the highest take-profit hit, or stop loss) before the setup was invalidated or exhausted. This lets readers see the complete arc of each setup, not just where the position was closed. 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.
Ninety-nine trades since launch on Jan 12, 2026. Plus 16.57R net at a 58.6 percent win rate. The headline isn't the number — it's how a desk that opened with three trades in January became a system holding expectancy across four months.

A SHORT at 6596.9 into VWAP and prior-day-low resistance, four waits and one enter at 74 percent confidence, a 3h 55m hold to TP1 for +1.18R inside the worst week of the published record.

A SHORT into the 4618 to 4643 NY rebound resistance, eighteen evaluations before the trigger printed at 66 percent, a 3h 59m ride to TP1 for +1R inside the worst weekly stretch of the published record.