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Philosophy2026-03-206 min

Why a Public Track Record Changes Everything

Most newsletters hide their misses. We track everything publicly, the good and the bad. Here is why that matters for you.

The trust problem

Think about the last investment newsletter you read. Did they mention their misses? Probably not. Most financial content creators cherry-pick their wins and conveniently forget the losses. You have no way to evaluate whether their analysis is actually worth following.

That is broken. And it is exactly what we set out to fix.

How our public scorecard works

Every single pick we make is recorded with:

  • Entry price and date (when we spotted the opportunity)
  • Target price (where we think it is going)
  • Daily price tracking (updated automatically every morning)
  • Final outcome (win, loss, or expired, with the exact return)
  • You can see all of this on our scorecard page. Nothing is hidden. If we had a terrible month, you will know about it.

    Why this matters for your decisions

    When you can see someone's full track record, you can make an informed choice about whether to follow their analysis. A 60% win rate with an average return of 8% tells you something concrete. Trust me, I am an expert tells you nothing.

    The accountability effect

    Here is something interesting: knowing the track record is public actually makes the analysis better. When you know every call will be judged, you think twice before making speculative picks. You do more research. You are more honest about uncertainty.

    That pressure is a feature, not a bug.

    This content is for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute financial advice. Always consult a qualified financial advisor before making investment decisions. Past performance does not guarantee future results.

    Want full access to all picks and AI reasoning?

    Join the beta to unlock the full track record, conviction scores, and weekly digests. Free while it lasts.

    This content is for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute financial advice. Always consult a qualified financial advisor before making investment decisions. Past performance does not guarantee future results.