Evidence
Killed strategies
When you’re evaluating any alert service — this one included — ask one question: show me the strategies you killed. A service that has never killed anything is not showing you research; it is showing you survivors. This page is the permanent record. Nothing here is deleted, softened, or retired quietly.
Wall Break
- Killed
- Killed at its pre-build study — before a single alert shipped
- Cost to subscribers
- $0
- What happened
- The pre-build study failed its own criteria, so the strategy was scrubbed before launch and post-mortemed in public. The system worked exactly as designed: the gate did its job before anyone paid a dollar or took a signal.
- Lessons carried forward
- The cheapest place to kill a strategy is before it exists: the study ran first, the study failed, and no subscriber ever paid for or traded a signal from it. Pre-registered criteria only mean something when they are honored on a no — this was the first no, and the gate held. Every lane that followed inherits that ordering: study first, criteria published, then launch.
The first-generation engine
Our first-generation engine was retired after its evaluation window finished under breakeven once costs were counted. That retirement is why the kill and graduate gates above are now written down before any lane goes live.
That engine was history before this site existed. Nothing from it runs today, and nothing from it is counted in any current lane’s evidence.
Every alert is an impersonal publication delivered to all subscribers identically and simultaneously — not advice, not tailored to anyone.
Pre-registered evaluation criteria — not a performance claim, projection, or promise of results. Risk Disclosure.