How Razalith’s Track Record Works
Most analytics platforms make claims about their accuracy. Few offer any way to verify those claims. Razalith is built differently: every alert the platform generates is publicly tracked and measured against real market outcomes.
This page explains exactly how Razalith’s track record works — what gets tracked, how success is measured, and why full transparency matters.
What Gets Tracked
Razalith monitors 250+ cryptocurrencies and assigns each a 0–100 anomaly score. When an asset’s score reaches 75 or higher (Extreme level), an alert is generated. Every single extreme alert is automatically added to the public Track Record. No manual selection. No filtering.
For each alert, the Track Record records:
- The asset name and ticker symbol
- The exact date and time the alert fired
- The anomaly score at the moment of the alert
- The asset’s price at alert time
How Success Is Measured
After each alert, Razalith tracks the real market price of the asset for 7full days. During that window, the platform records the largest price move — in either direction — from the alert price.
An alert is classified as a “success”if the asset moved at least ±5% from the alert price within the 7-day window.
This measurement is deliberately non-directional. Razalith’s anomaly score detects that something unusual is happening, not which direction the price will go. The track record therefore measures whether the anomaly correctly identified a significant upcoming move, regardless of whether it was bullish or bearish.
Why ±5%?
The ±5% threshold strikes a balance: it’s large enough to represent a meaningful market event (filtering out normal daily fluctuations) while being achievable enough to serve as a fair benchmark. Smaller thresholds would inflate hit rates artificially; larger ones would penalize the system for detecting real anomalies that happened to precede moderate (but still significant) moves.
No Cherry-Picking
The most important property of Razalith’s track record is that it is fully automatic and non-selective:
- Every extreme alert is tracked — there is no option to exclude alerts
- Both successful and unsuccessful alerts are displayed
- Results cannot be edited, deleted, or hidden retroactively
- Pending alerts (still within the 7-day window) are clearly marked and visible
This means Razalith’s accuracy claims are verifiable by anyone at any time. You don’t have to take Razalith’sword for it — you can check the numbers yourself.
What the Track Record Is Not
- It is not trading performance. Razalith does not execute trades, recommend buys or sells, or manage portfolios. The track record measures anomaly detection accuracy, not investment returns.
- It is not a guarantee. Past detection accuracy does not guarantee future results. Markets evolve, and anomaly detection is inherently probabilistic.
- It is not financial advice. The track record is provided for informational and transparency purposes only.
View the Track Record
The full public Track Record is available at Razalith Track Record. Every alert, every result, every pending evaluation — nothing hidden.
Learn more about how the anomaly scoring works in the Whitepaper.