Risk disclosure
Last updated: 2026-04-26 · Placeholder — not legal advice.
You can lose more than you put in.
Cryptocurrency futures are leveraged derivatives. A position with 10× leverage moves 10× as fast as the underlying asset — both up and down. A 10% adverse move on a 10× position liquidates your margin entirely. Liquidation can be partial or total depending on the exchange's risk-engine and your account-level cross-margin settings.
Past results don't predict future ones.
The backtester inside this Service replays historical signals against historical price candles. Real fills are not historical fills. Slippage, partial fills, exchange outages, network latency, signal-provider delays, and adverse selection all degrade live performance versus backtest. Treat backtest output as a research tool, not a forecast.
Things outside our control that can hurt you.
- The signal provider can change its strategy, miss signals, send duplicate signals, or stop publishing.
- Your exchange can halt trading on a pair, change margin rules, throttle API, or suspend your account.
- Network outages can prevent the bot from monitoring an open position; the exchange-side stop-loss is your only protection during such windows.
- A regulatory change in your jurisdiction can make crypto futures unavailable to you with no notice.
- An exchange-side bug, hack, or insolvency event can result in loss of funds we cannot help recover.
Things you control that we strongly suggest.
- Use API keys scoped to trade only — never withdraw permissions.
- Set the API IP-allowlist on the exchange to our public egress IP only.
- Keep position sizes in line with what you can afford to lose. Default risk caps in the Strategy Builder are starting points, not endorsements.
- Enable two-factor authentication on this Service and on your exchange account.
- Watch your funded balance. If it drops below the minimum margin to keep open positions safe, fund or de-risk before the bot is forced to.
By using the Service you acknowledge that you have read this disclosure and understand the risks involved.