PrintRate grades every call they make. After enough data, we tell you straight: real edge, fade, or jury's still out. So you know who to actually listen to.
Every account on PrintRate lands in one of three states. The numbers below are illustrative — handles masked. You see real names + live numbers on the scorecard.
Their picks beat their sector by 4.3% per call on average. Listen when they post.
Their picks lose to their sector by 3.1% per call. The opposite trade is a real thing.
Most accounts live here for ~30 days. We don't trust a hot streak — we wait for 100 calls.
A curated list of stock-pickers on X. Every hour, we pull every ticker call they make — buy, sell, hold, trim, fade.
Every call gets compared to its sector ETF over the next 5 trading days. Did it beat XLK, XLE, XLF, the rest? By how much?
After ~100 graded calls, the verdict locks: FOLLOW, FADE, or measuring. No hot-streak hype. No nice-to-them bias.
What mattered today. Who said it first. Which calls are heating up across the whole tracked roster.
Per-handle verdicts, ranked by edge. Beat rate. Sample size. Signal confidence. The deliverable.
Per-account profile. Track record. Sample size. Their last 50 calls, scored. The whole résumé in one page.
Loudest bull. Loudest bear. Conviction badges. Price chart with sentiment overlay. Where the smart money sits.
The macro backdrop. Regime label, sector breadth, the lens every verdict gets read through. Risk-on, risk-off, narrow rally — we tag it.
Two accounts. Same axis. Edge, beat rate, sample size, signal strength. Numbers don't lie.
No formulas on this page. Want them? Read the methodology. Otherwise, here's the short version.
A tech call is graded vs XLK. An energy call vs XLE. We strip out "everyone rode the same rally" before we score.
Not 1 day (pump-distorted). Not 21 days (drifts into the market). 5 trading days from the call.
If the call itself could move the price, the score is fiction. Sub-$10M ADV gets dropped before we measure.
5 wins out of 5 isn't an edge — it's noise. Every account stays in "measuring" until we've got the sample to know.