Are trading bots a scam?

The short answer: a bot is just software โ€” the scam, when there is one, is the unverifiable performance claim attached to it. Here's how to tell the difference.

"Make 5% a day on autopilot." If you've shopped for a trading bot, you've seen the pitch โ€” and your instinct to be suspicious is correct. The trading-bot space is full of grift, but the bots aren't the problem. The problem is that almost every performance number you're shown is impossible to verify.

The four fake-performance red flags

What a real track record looks like

A trustworthy record has one property the fakes can't copy: it's recorded by someone other than the seller, from the exchange's own data. That means the trades were actually placed, the prices are the exchange's real fills, and the seller never touched the number. It also shows the bad with the good โ€” losing trades, drawdowns, and an honest win rate.

This is exactly the standard CodeVaultEx is built on. Bots run sealed on our servers and can only trade through our gateway, so we observe every order; we then compute each bot's profit and loss from the exchange's own settlement ledger and attribute it to the orders we actually placed. The creator can't inject hand-picked winning trades, and the number is never self-reported. Here's the full methodology โ†’

How to protect yourself

โš  Even a verified track record is a record of the past, not a prediction. Past performance does not guarantee future results, and all trading carries substantial risk of loss. CodeVaultEx is software and hosting โ€” not investment advice. See our risk disclaimer.

Browse bots with verified track records โ†’