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CTI > Subscription to the CTI Service for the Tesla Asset (TSLA) Stock

CTI > Subscription to the CTI Service for the Tesla Asset (TSLA) Stock

This product covers the subscription to the Continuous Trading Insights (CTI) Service for the Tesla (TSLA) Stock.
Once subscribed, you will receive the periodic messages with the trading Insights.
This service is based on a profit-sharing schema. You will be charged every month with 10% of the profits you will have by using our Insights. No profits, no charges.
You must self-declare the AUM in your trading operations

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Explore CTI Features

Discover the flexibility, profit potential, and precision of the Continuous Trading Insights (CTI) Service for Tesla (TSLA), Apple (AAPL), Ford (F), and Nvidia (NVDA) stocks.

Service Description
How to subscribe?
What's next after subscription?
How To Buy Credits?!
Operative Instructions
Trading Tips & Tricks
Glossary of terms
Legal Disclaimer
Trader Examination

Subscription to the Continuous Trading Insights Service (CTI) for trading insights on Tesla (TSLA), Apple (AAPL), Ford (F), and Nvidia (NVDA)—pay only 10% of monthly profits via Credits.

Once subscribed, you will receive the periodic CTI messages with the trading orders suggested to be placed to your broker and other insights.

  • You don't have to pay anything in advance to receive our Insights because this service is based on a profit-sharing schema. You will be charged every month with 10% of the profits you will have by using our insights. No profits, no charges.
  • Profits will be calculated by multiplying the Assets Under Management (AUM) amount you will be trading every month by the yield percentage obtained by the trades done using the CTI Insights.
  • The AUM amount to be used in the profits calculations will be based on your self-declaration. By default, we will assume €10,000. We will have the right to confirm your AUM declaration by requesting you to provide the corresponding broker's report where the volume of the operations you have done with the Asset are reported.
  • The monthly yield percentage obtained by the trades done using the CTI Insights will be calculated by simulating the trading operations suggested by the CTI Insights.
  • The 10% profit-share will be paid by consuming Credits. We will maintain a Credit balance between the Credits you will buy and the credits you will consume. Every month we will discount the corresponding 10% profit-share amount of Credits from your Credits balance.
  • The first Credit consumption charge will be done at the end of the first month of receiving the CTI Insights. If you are not satisfied with the service, just don't buy Credits, and the CTI Service will be interrupted.
  • At any time, you can cancel your CTI Service subscription by simply doing an unsubscription or just by not buying additional Credits anymore. In case your Credits balance will be exhausted and no more Credits would be purchased, we will simply interrupt the service. No claims, no charges.

In no case can you consider the Insights, Signals, Orders, Limits Prices, or any other information received from our CTI Service as a recommendation, advice, nor a suggestion to trade with the corresponding Asset in any way.

Any trading action you may take based or not on our Insights is under your strictly sole responsibility.

How To Subscribe?

1. Select Your Asset:

Browse our Trading Collection and choose your desired CTI subscription:

2. Complete Your Purchase:

  • Add the CTI subscription to your cart.
  • Proceed to checkout—no upfront fees.
  • You’ll only pay 10% of monthly profits (calculated via our credit system).

3. Immediate Access:

  • After checkout, you’ll receive a welcome email with:
    • Instructions to access your daily CTI insights.
    • Details about profit-sharing and credit management.

If you have any doubts about how to proceed with the Credits buying process, please, send an email to finance@proceedit.com.

What's Next After Subscription?

After having subscribed to the Continuous Trading Insights (CTI) Service, you will receive regularly by email the trading Insights* for the Asset you have subscribed to, and you can start with your trading operations.

To take profit of our insights you must follow this procedure:

  1. Open the CTI email you will receive every day: If you haven't received your email, please check your spam folder. If it is not there, send an email to support.
  2. Have a look at the Orders and Stop Loss: Check the Orders and Stop Loss indicated in the email for the Assets you have subscribed to.
  3. Place the corresponding Orders to your broker: Execute the trades based on the insights provided.

Welcome to our CTI community!

In no case can you consider the Insights, Signals, Orders, Limits Prices, or any other information received from our CTI Service as a recommendation, advice, nor a suggestion to trade with the corresponding Asset in any way.

Any trading action you may take based or not on our Insights is under your strictly sole responsibility.

How to Buy Credits for CTI Service?

1. Go to the 100 Credits product page

Select the quantity you need (100 Credits minimum)

2. Agree to Terms

Check the box to accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy

3. Click "Buy it now"

This will take you directly to checkout

4. Complete Your Purchase

  • Enter your contact information (email required)
  • Choose your preferred payment method
  • For EU customers: Provide VAT number if applicable
  • Complete payment

5. Confirmation

Credits will be automatically added to your CTI account. You'll receive a confirmation email with your updated balance.

If you have any questions about buying credits, please contact finance@proceedit.com.

Operative Instructions

When using our Continuous Trading Insights (CTI) Service, please, take into account that:

  • As our Insights are updated every day according to the new financial data received from the Markets, in case you eventually miss to analyze one of our daily Insights at due time, it is better you wait to obtain any conclusion or take any action till receiving the new tomorrow’s daily Insight.
  • When for a determined financial Asset there is no Market session in the current period, you will receive a Signal = N.A. and an Order = Keep.
  • When for a determined financial Asset it was not possible to retrieve new financial data corresponding to the latest market session, you will receive a Signal = N.A. and an Order = Keep. In those cases, a new email will be sent as soon as the new financial data could be retrieved.
  • This trading Insights information is provided to you only for your personal use. It is strictly forbidden that you share that information with any third party in any way. A breach on this rule will suppose the immediate cancellation of your CTI Service without being entitled to any claim on your part.

In no case can you consider the Insights, Signals, Orders, Limits Prices, or any other information received from our CTI Service as a recommendation, advice, nor a suggestion to trade with the corresponding Asset in any way.

Any trading action you may take based or not on our Insights is under your strictly sole responsibility.

Trading Tips and Tricks

If you are a beginner in trading or you want to improve your trading experience, you have two ways to follow:

Option A:

Just follow the CTI trading Insights you will receive every day and place the Buy or Sell orders to your broker or simply Hold, as suggested.

Simple, smart, profitable and affordable, no time involved, no mistakes no risks. Don't you think so?

Option B:

Learn to become a professional successful trader by following and practicing the following tips & tricks that can help you to avoid common mistakes done when trading and to avoid some typical trading risks:

  1. Always Use a Trading Plan. A trading plan is a written set of rules that tell you about a trader's entry, exit, and money management criteria on every purchase. It is easy to test a share market trading plan in today's time before risking your money in real-time. Known as backtesting, this practice allows you to apply your trading idea using historical data and determine if it is viable. Once you have tested the plan developed and backtesting shows good results, that is the time to go full throttle investing in the stock market. Sometimes your trading plan won't work. Bail out of it and start over. The key here is to stick to the plan. Taking trades outside of the trading plan, even if they turn out to be winners, is considered poor strategy. The starting point is the impetus for the trade. If it's from a fundamental development, such as an economic data report or a comment by a Fed official, your trade is based on those fundamental factors, and your trading plan should reflect that. If your trading plan relies on technical analysis, such as remaining above the 50 day moving average, again your strategy should rely on that. The key is to adjust your position size so that you give yourself enough room to stay within the stop loss and not risk everything on a single position.
  2. Start Small. One of the best assets you can get with a small trading account is experience. Although you should start with demo trading first to get acquainted with your trading platform and understand the basics of trading, look to switch to a real account as soon as you're ready. Don't spend too much time demo trading. Traders need to minimize their fear of the markets. Trading on a demo account doesn't trigger the same range of emotions as trading on a real account. Emotions like fear and greed are best understood once you start risking real money, which will in turn make you a better trader by learning how to control those emotions. Traders need to minimize their fear of the markets, and the best way to achieve this is by gaining trading experience and defining trading rules. When you have rules, you know exactly when to enter and exit a position, which should significantly reduce your fear.
  3. Treat Trading Like a Business. First, do not treat share market trading as a hobby or a job. It is serious business here and requires precision, patience, commitment, in-depth analysis and cold-blooded research. Unlike in a hobby, wherein there is no real commitment, trading counts as a lot is involved and committed. To be successful, you must approach trading as a full- or part-time business, not as a hobby or a job. If it's approached as a hobby, there is no real commitment to learning. If it's a job, it can be frustrating because there is no regular paycheck. Trading is a business and incurs expenses, losses, taxes, uncertainty, stress, and risk. As a trader, you are essentially a small business owner and you must research and strategize to maximize your business's potential.
  4. Use Technology. Today, technology has changed the way share market trading is performed on the exchanges. Everything is mobile, swift, intelligent and real-time. In such a scenario, a trader must be up-to-date on the happenings in the trading world and use technology to know about stock movements, new products, new trading schemes and pre-empt market movements. Trading is a competitive business. It's safe to assume that the person sitting on the other side of a trade is taking full advantage of all the available technology. Charting platforms give traders an infinite variety of ways to view and analyze the markets. Backtesting an idea using historical data prevents costly missteps. Getting market updates via smartphone allows us to monitor trades anywhere. Technology that we take for granted, like a high-speed internet connection, can greatly increase trading performance. Using technology to your advantage, and keeping current with new products, can be fun and rewarding in trading.
  5. Protect Your Trading Capital. It is vital as a trader that you look at protecting your trading capital. This does not mean you do not take risks at all. However, it would help if you did not take unnecessary risks that could adversely impact your trading capital and overall performance in the stock market. Saving enough money to fund a trading account takes a great deal of time and effort. It can be even more difficult if you have to do it twice. It is important to note that protecting your trading capital is not synonymous with never experiencing a losing trade. All traders have losing trades. Protecting capital entails not taking unnecessary risks and doing everything you can to preserve your trading business.
  6. Study the Markets. Be a learner. Think of it as continuing education. Traders need to remain focused on learning more each day. It is important to remember that understanding the markets, and all of their intricacies, is an ongoing, lifelong process. Hard research allows traders to understand the facts, like what the different economic reports mean. Focus and observation allow traders to sharpen their instincts and learn the nuances. World politics, news events, economic trends—even the weather—all have an impact on the markets. The market environment is dynamic. The more traders understand the past and current markets, the better prepared they are to face the future. In share market trading, every day is a new day. It would help if you took it as it comes. Be a learner and practice share market trading as a new entrant, even if it has been decades of trading for you. Look at share market trading as a classroom with much to offer and to be taken one thing at a time.
  7. Risk Only What You Can Afford to Lose. Knowing one's risk-taking ability is not a discount. Instead, it is a strength. It enables you to plan well and not overexpose yourself to the risks in share market trading. Here comes again the importance of a well-thought-out share market trading plan. Before you start using real cash, make sure that all of the money in that trading account is truly expendable. If it's not, the trader should keep saving until it is. Money in a trading account should not be allocated for the kids' college tuition or paying the mortgage. Traders must never allow themselves to think they are simply borrowing money from these other important obligations. Losing money is traumatic enough. It is even more so if it is capital that should have never been risked in the first place. Position size is the primary determinant of the outcome of any trading strategy. You want to be sure your stop loss can tolerate a minor loss relative to your trading capital. If your stop is $1.50 away from the current market, for instance, you'll want a position size relative to your stop loss that does not consume too much of your trading capital.
  8. Develop a Trading Methodology Based on Facts. Share market trading is a long term investment and involves hard work. Traders should have the discipline and patience to follow specific rules while exposing themselves and the capital to stock trading. Taking the time to develop a sound trading methodology is worth the effort. It may be tempting to believe in the "so easy, it's like printing money" trading scams that are prevalent on the internet. But facts, not emotions or hope, should be the inspiration behind developing a trading plan. Traders who are not in a hurry to learn typically have an easier time sifting through all of the information available on the internet. Consider this: if you were to start a new career, more than likely you would need to study at a college or university for at least a year or two before you were qualified to even apply for a position in the new field, earning how to trade demands at least the same amount of time and fact-driven research and study.
  9. Be open to new strategies. A trading plan is good, but that does not mean you do not evolve or adapt to new trading strategies. Never in stock trading should there be a time that you follow a trading plan that is outdated or rigid to change. Since the trading world is fast-paced, your strategies should also be agile and adaptive.
  10. Do not lose confidence. The key to successful trading is not losing confidence, even in the shakiest economic environments. A failure at the share market trading should not at any time be taken as a personal loss. Instead, it should be taken at all times as a learning experience and a valuable asset to be kept alongside the share market trading journey.
  11. Always Use a Stop Loss. A stop-loss can help you take off some trading stress. It is a predetermined level of risk a trader is ready to take in stock trading. The stop loss can be a dollar amount or percentage, but either way, it limits the trader's exposure during a trade. Irrespective of its presentation, it limits a trader's exposure to the bourses and helps in limiting the losses and risks. Not having a stop loss is a lousy trading practice and should be avoided. It should be a hygiene feature in your trading plan and be exercised diligently in a trading cycle. Remember, exiting a trading cycle with stop loss and eventually having a losing trade is still suitable trading if it falls into your trading plan. A stop loss is a predetermined amount of risk that a trader is willing to accept with each trade. Using a stop loss can take some of the stress out of trading since we know that we will only lose X amount on any given trade. Not having a stop loss is bad practice, even if it leads to a winning trade. Exiting with a stop loss, and therefore having a losing trade, is still good trading if it falls within the trading plan's rules. The ideal is to exit all trades with a profit, but that is not realistic. Using a protective stop loss helps ensure that losses and risks are limited, and that you have preserved enough capital to trade another day. First off, the answer to that question should already be part of your trading plan in the form of a stop loss. As a stop loss, you can use a financial stop, e.g., $500 or go with a technical stop price, such as if the 50 day moving average is broken, or new highs are made. The key is to remember that you always need a stop loss as part of your trading plan.
  12. Don't fall for rumours. The trading world has plenty of room for rumours that often even go ahead to represent the trading environment. It is essential to differentiate between what is data and what is rumoured data as a trader. In addition to this, do not fall for feelings or suppositions but facts. All your moves in the stock market should be based on facts and research.
  13. Know When to Stop Trading. There are two reasons to stop trading: an ineffective trading plan, and an ineffective trader. An ineffective trading plan shows much greater losses than were anticipated in historical testing. That happens. Markets may have changed, or volatility may have lessened. For whatever reason, the trading plan simply is not performing as expected. Stay unemotional and businesslike. It's time to reevaluate the trading plan and make a few changes or to start over with a new trading plan. An unsuccessful trading plan is a problem that needs to be solved. It is not necessarily the end of the trading business. An ineffective trader is one who makes a trading plan but is unable to follow it. External stress, poor habits, and lack of physical activity can all contribute to this problem. A trader who is not in peak condition for trading should consider taking a break. After any difficulties and challenges have been dealt with, the trader can return to business. In bull markets, it can be easy to make money in the market. Knowing when to take profits takes practice. One way to take the emotion out of closing a profitable position is to use trailing stops. The vast majority of the rules outlined above have one thing in common: attention to risk, or losing money. That's because you're in the business of making money in the markets. Losses will inevitably occur. The trick is to keep the losses small enough so that you can keep trading until you find more winning trades. Experienced traders know when it's time to take a loss and they have incorporated that into their trading strategy. Experienced traders also know when it's time to take profit, so they may move their stop loss in the direction of the trade to lock in some profit or simply take profit at the current market price. Either way, rest assured there will always be another trade set-up coming down the road.
  14. Keep Trading in Perspective. Stay focused on the big picture when trading. A losing trade should not surprise us; It's a part of trading. A winning trade is just one step along the path to a profitable business. It is the cumulative profits that make a difference.

    Once a trader accepts wins and losses as part of the business, emotions will have less of an effect on trading performance. That is not to say that we cannot be excited about a particularly fruitful trade, but we must keep in mind that a losing trade is never far off.

    Setting realistic goals is an essential part of keeping trading in perspective. Your business should earn a reasonable return in a reasonable amount of time. If you expect to be a multi-millionaire by next Tuesday, you're setting yourself up for failure.

  15. Never stop learning. Here below you have a selection of good resources where you can find additional useful information for achieving a successful trading experience:
    1. Trading skills and essentials.
    2. Learn how to trade the market in 5 steps.
    3. 10 Important Tips & Tricks To Improve Trading Skills.
    4. Top ten rules for trading.

Maybe this Option B looks like to be a little bit too complicate and, to be honest, results are not guaranteed. In fact this is what happens:

In the stock exchange market, 90% of traders fail to be profitable yearly. Based on significant brokers' statistics, 80 percent of traders lose, 10 percent of traders are break-even, and 10 percent make money consistently.

Glossary of Terms

Here below you have the clues to interpret the Insights given by the Continuous Trading Insights (CTI) Service:

  1. AI: Artificial Intelligence technology.
  2. Asset: Contains the symbol, ISIN code, common name, and the type of the financial Asset.
  3. Credit: The basic fees unit used by proceedit to define the cost and to pay our Products and Services.
    • You can always renew / elongate your DTI subscription, increase its Level of Service, increase the daily operations Volume, or increase the number of Users by subscribing the corresponding number of Credits Packs.
    • The number of Credits you have consumed is calculated every day by the CTU System, and a message is sent to you when there is a need to subscribe additional Credits to continue receiving the desired CTI Service.
  4. CTI: Acronym of the proceedit's Continuous Trading Insights Service.
  5. Currency: Acronym of the currency that the Asset is traded with.
  6. Insights: A set of information related with the situation of the financial Market for some particular Assets. In no case this Information represents any recommendation, advice, or suggestion of what our Subscribers may or not do when trading with these Assets.
  7. ISIN: Acronym for International Securities Identification Number.
  8. Last Data Time: Indicates the UTC Date Time of the latest financial data obtained used to calculate the Signals, Orders, and Prices for the corresponding Asset.
  9. Leveraged trading: In a leveraged trading way, you borrow money from your broker to buy financial assets and sell them later and return the money borrowed to your broker; profit from increases and risks are limited.
  10. Long-term trading: Long trades involve buying then selling assets to profit from an increase in the asset's price.
  11. Market: Acronym of the financial Market where the financial Asset is traded.
  12. Order: Indicates the best trading operation derived from the predictions made by our AI and Trading Engines for the corresponding Asset:
    • Buy (buy the Asset),
    • Hold (maintain the position on the Asset, not buy, not sell),
    • Quit (abandon any position on the Asset),
    • Sell (sell the Asset),
    • Keep (the former Order* indicated in the Insight* of the last period is still valid for that particular Asset).
    In no case this information represents any recommendation, advice, or suggestion of what our Subscribers and / or their final Users may or not do when trading with this Asset.
  13. Price: Indicates the maximum or minimum prices to limit the Buy or Sell Orders that our AI and Trading Engines have found as optimum to maximize the expected yield when trading with the corresponding Asset.
    • It is possible to receive high limit Price for buying and low limit Price for selling.
    • In no case this Information represents any recommendation, advice, or suggestion of what our Subscribers or their Users may or not do when trading with this Asset.
  14. Short-term trading: Short trades involve selling a borrowed security and buying it back at a lower price to profit from the decrease in its price. Short trades can be much riskier than long trades, so they should be left to experienced investors. Profit from decreases and risks are unlimited.
  15. Signal: Contains the intensity or power of the variable that is used to determine which trading Order would be optimum for the corresponding Asset for the next trading period.
    • If for a certain Asset the Signal is N.A. (Not Available), it means that for the corresponding date the CTI System has not received new financial data yet. That could be due to the fact that there was no Market session for that period for that particular Asset or because, for any reason, it was not possible to retrieve the new financial data, most probably due to an operative issue with the APIs used to retrieve financial data from the Markets.
    • The Signal values correlate with the power of the Orders. As higher is the Signal value, higher is the power of the buying Order. As lower is the Signal value, lower is the power of the selling Order.
    • In no case this Information represents any recommendation, advice, or suggestion of what our subscribers may or not do when trading with this Asset.
  16. Stop-loss: A special type of buy order where you fix a limit on the potential losses you can suffer. Your broker will reverse the operation by selling the asset when the loss limit is reached.
  17. Subscriber: Person or entity that has subscribed to any of the different CTI Service products and services.
  18. UTC: Acronym applying for Coordinated Universal Time.
  19. Volume: Refers to the maximum allowed of daily operations amount the Subscriber is doing related to the Insights received from the CTI Service. Also called Assets Under Management (AUM).

In no case can you consider the Insights, Signals, Orders, Limits Prices, or any other information received from our CTI Service as a recommendation, advice, nor a suggestion to trade with the corresponding Asset in any way.

Any trading action you may take based or not on our Insights* is under your strictly sole responsibility.

Legal Disclaimer

In the relations between Expertel SL - proceedit and the Subscriber and Users of the CTI* Service the following legal provisions apply. When subscribing to the product you declare to be aware and accept the following terms:

  1. Expertel SL - proceedit is not a fiduciary by virtue of any person's use of or access to this content. Any information, materials, statements, data set out herein is subject to change anytime without notice, and as such, no reliance must be placed on the fairness, accuracy, completeness, or correctness of any information and materials contained on this website, application, webinar, meeting, course, document, image, video, video recording, blog, post, news, email, message, or whatever media you may have access to.
  2. You alone assume the sole responsibility of evaluating all merits and risks that are or may be associated with any use of any information or material provided to you by Expertel SL - proceedit by any means (websites, applications, webinars, meetings, courses, documents, images, videos, video recordings, blogs, posts, news, emails, messages, etc.) or coming to any conclusion based on the information and content found on any of the documents of any type published by Expertel SL - proceedit. You agree not to hold Expertel SL - proceedit, its affiliates, its distributors, or any third party service provider(s) liable for any possible claim for damages arising from any decisions you may or have made based on the information or content made available to you on this website, in an application, webinar, meeting, course, document, image, video, video recording, blog, post, news, email, or message to which you may have access, or on any other source of information published by Expertel SL - proceedit. In any event, Expertel SL - proceedit and/or its employees, advisors, and representatives are not liable for any loss, loss of profit, or damage whatsoever arising or incurred from any use or reliance of any information provided by Expertel SL - proceedit, its contents, or otherwise arising in connection with.
  3. There are risks associated with investing in securities, commodities, and property. Investing in securities and commodities such as stocks, bonds, exchange-traded funds, mutual funds, money market funds, currency pairs, commodities, futures, derivatives, cryptocurrencies, or any other financial asset of any type involves risk of loss. A loss of principal is possible. Past benefits reported from our backtest analysis are not a guarantee of future profits. Past performance is no guarantee of future results - any investment carries a potential for loss. Our CTI service does not take account of your objectives or your financial situation and Expertel SL does not offer any personalized investment advice. Expertel SL is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or investment adviser or investment bank.
  4. To better provide you with information, Expertel SL - proceedit may provide hyperlinks to websites operated by and/or snapshots of the information provided, or links to documents created by or derived from third parties. By selecting these hyperlinks, you are no longer on Expertel SL - proceedit's operated site. As Expertel SL - proceedit has no control over such sites or content, it will not assume any responsibility for the availability of such external sites, documents, or their content. Expertel SL - proceedit does not adopt, endorse, or be responsible or liable for any such sites, documents, or content, including advertising, products, or other materials, on or is made available through such third parties' sites or resources. Other websites may offer links to our site and/or content with or without our prior authorization. Expertel SL - proceedit does not endorse any such sites and shall not be responsible or liable for any links from those sites to our site and content, or for any content, advertising, products, or other materials made available on or through such other sites, or for any loss or damages incurred in connection therewith. Expertel SL - proceedit may, in our sole discretion, block links to the site and its content without any prior notice.
  5. The periodic Insights (Signals, Orders, Limit Prices, Portfolio Compositions, etc.) provided by Expertel SL - proceedit to its clients through different means (websites, applications, webinars, meetings, courses, documents, images, videos, video recordings, blogs, posts, news, emails, messages, etc.) are just reflecting our opinions about the potential evolution of the market and the financial Assets marketed there, and in no case can you consider our Insights as recommendations, advice or suggestions on what to trade with and how to trade with any of the Assets mentioned there. Our Insights are based on different financial market information obtained periodically from third party suppliers. Expertel SL - proceedit is not responsible in any case for any incidents that may occur in relation to the Insights provided to our customers, whether caused or not by possible inaccuracies or delays in the information provided by the respective suppliers of the financial information used by Expertel SL - proceedit to generate the Insights, nor for any eventual loss, damage, or loss of profit eventually caused to our customers by said circumstance.

Take into account that when buying QCBs Packs, you are accepting the following terms and conditions.

If you have any doubts on how to proceed with the above procedure, don't hesitate to ask for help by emailing finance@proceedit.com or by filling out this form: Contact us!

Trader Examination

If you are a beginner in trading, you should try to respond to this quiz, just some easy questions / answers that will help you to understand the risk assumed when trading.

Obtaining a high score here means that you have understood the risk you will assume when trading with financial assets. And, of course, if you are not comfortable with the risks inherent to trading, we would strongly recommend you not to continue.

1. Are there risks involved when trading with financial assets?

A. Not at all

B. Yes, but limited

C. Yes, even loss of principal is possible

2. Can CTI Insights be considered as recommendations to do investments?

A. Not at all

B. Yes

3. Who is responsible for using CTI Insights as investing recommendations?

A. You are the sole responsible

B. proceedit

C. Your broker