Crypto Radar is built for a very specific trading scenario: short-term pullbacks that create brief, tradable rebounds.
These opportunities unfold quickly and leave little room for hesitation, which makes precise entry, disciplined exits, and strict risk control essential.
To illustrate how Crypto Radar is used in real market conditions, let’s walk through one completed trade, exactly as it appeared in the signal card.
A real Crypto Radar trade example: XLM / USDT
On January 3, Crypto Radar identified a short-term long opportunity in XLM / USDT on Binance after a pullback that began to stabilize near intraday lows.
This setup was intended to be traded over a short time horizon, with clearly defined risk and a fast exit plan.
Market context first
Before entering any trade, Crypto Radar evaluates the overall market environment.
At the top of the dashboard, traders can see:
Market Strength score (0–100) indicating whether conditions favor risk-taking or caution
30-Day Win Rate, reflecting recent signal performance
Annualized Return, used as a reference for recent signal effectiveness, not a guarantee
These metrics help traders decide when to engage and when to stay selective, instead of trading blindly in all conditions .
Select a Signal and Make Trading Plan
At the time the signal was issued, the Crypto Radar card specified the following details:
Price entered the suggested level around 0.219, and the position was opened accordingly.
Downside risk was strictly capped at 0.208, limiting potential loss to approximately five percent on the underlying price.
This predefined risk allowed the trade to be executed without the need for adjustments under pressure.
Profit locking first, flexibility later
As price rebounded, XLM moved steadily higher and reached Target 1 at 0.226 later that day.
At 19:55 PM, Crypto Radar indicated that 50 percent of the position should be closed, securing partial profits and reducing exposure.
At this stage, the trade objective was achieved.
The remaining position was no longer about recovery, but about managing opportunity.
Trend-based exit for the remaining position
After partial profits were secured, Crypto Radar continued monitoring short-term momentum and price behavior.
When signs of weakening appeared, a take-profit signal was issued to exit the remaining position.
The final 50 percent was closed at 0.2285 at 04:42 AM on January 4, while price was still holding near its rebound highs.
What this case demonstrates
This XLM trade highlights how Crypto Radar is meant to be used:
Leverage is applied conservatively and only with predefined risk
Profits are locked early through partial exits
Remaining exposure is managed dynamically
Positions are closed decisively when momentum weakens
The edge does not come from holding longer. It comes from precision, speed, and strict exit discipline.
Who Crypto Radar is built for
Traders comfortable using moderate leverage
Users targeting short-term, high-efficiency trades
Traders who prefer fast execution and clear exits
Active traders who value structure over impulse
Get started
Crypto Radar updates continuously and can be accessed directly from the Home page.
