Track Record shows how published Low Float alert prices moved from first public alert price to latest recorded alert price. It is a transparency record, not trade results or returns.
First public alert price → latest recorded alert price. The primary stat — half of alerts moved at least this much.
Shown for completeness, but outlier-skewed — a few large moves pull it well above the median.
Because alerts only re-fire at strictly higher prices, this movement cannot show a loss — these are the share of alerts whose recorded move reached each threshold, not a win rate.
Recorded alerted-price movement per ticker (first public alert price → latest recorded alert price). Not trades, returns, or wins — and not what any individual captured.
This page reflects historical Low Float alerts only — the same public alerts shown on the site. “Recorded move” is measured from each alert’s first public alert price to its latest recorded alert price. Because alerts only re-fire at strictly higher prices, the latest recorded price is the highest alerted price — an alerted-price movement floor, not the day’s intraday high or peak, and it cannot show a loss. These figures are not profit, returns, P&L, or trade results, and they do not account for entry timing, exit timing, slippage, or fees — a real outcome depends entirely on when someone bought and sold and would often differ greatly. Sample sizes are shown on every figure; small samples are not predictive. Median is shown before average, since averages are skewed by a few large outliers. Hit-rates are the share of alerts whose recorded floor move reached a threshold — not a win rate. For research and transparency only; not financial advice. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
Past performance is not indicative of future results.