Fast answer
Crypto signal market-order checks separate fast execution from price certainty.
Before accepting a market-order signal result, record the alert timestamp, exchange, pair, side, expected price, spread, executed fill, order size, liquidity, fees, slippage, and final close record.
If a provider reports a market-order entry without fill price, spread, venue, and order-size context, followers may not be able to copy the posted outcome.
Execution checks
What to inspect in crypto signal market-order records.
Best available price
A market order seeks immediate execution at available prices, so the final fill can differ from the alert price.
Spread and depth
Wide spreads or shallow order books can make a small alert look cleaner than a real follower fill.
Alert delay
A few seconds can matter when a signal relies on market execution during fast candles or news moves.
Close realism
Exit market orders need the same fill evidence as entries, especially near stops or liquidation cascades.
Source context
Market orders prioritize execution over exact price control.
Coinbase describes a market order as executing immediately at the current best available market price. Investor.gov also warns that market orders generally execute but do not guarantee the execution price. Crypto signal reviews should preserve the alert price, fill price, venue, spread, and size so readers can judge copyability.
Review standard
A reviewable market-order signal shows both the alert and the executed fill.
For CSR evidence review, market-order records should include original alert, exchange, pair, expected price, executed fill, spread, order size, timestamp, fees, slippage, update trail, and final status.