How our system really trades through drops
Use this page like a flight simulator. You’ll see the same market played two ways: Kronos vs passive buy & hold. Watch how the first 90–120 days of drops, rebounds and flat periods build your profit cushion, then see what happens over 1, 2 and 5 years.
Kronos buys a small amount lower. Passive just falls with the market.
Kronos sells a small amount higher to lock wins. Passive only “comes back”.
Kronos keeps stacking tiny gains. Passive often does almost nothing.
We want you to expect a rough patch first. Most clients go through:
- • A drawdown early in the journey
- • Bounces that feel “too small”
- • A moment where you think “is this working?”
That 90–120 day window (you’ll see it highlighted in yellow) is where your profit cushion is built. After that, new drops mostly hit open P&L, not the money already taken off the table.
By the end of this page, you should be able to say:
- • “I see how this system makes money.”
- • “I know why I can be in a drawdown and still be on track.”
- • “I understand why giving it 90–120 days is key, then letting it run for years.”
Yellow band on the main chart = typical 90–120 day “rough patch”. This is where most clients feel the pain first — and where the profit cushion is usually built.
Day 0: Setup
Press play to watch a full cycle of drops, rebounds and quiet days. Kronos and buy & hold start at the same point.
This is money the system has already taken off the table. The goal is for this to grow bigger than your next drop.
A drop is not “broken system” – it is raw material. Kronos is buying lower and setting up the next bounce.
Checklist for rough patches (first 90–120 days)
- • Stay connected. Cutting the system mid-cycle kills the effect.
- • Remember the job of drawdowns: they set up future wins.
- • Focus on the cushion, not only the balance.
- • Give it at least one full “drop & rebound” cycle (~60 days) – ideally 90–120 days.
