Fast answer
Take-profit targets need a counting method.
A provider should explain whether a signal is counted after first target, full close, average exit, or manual closure. Without that rule, a single wick into target can make a result summary look cleaner than follower reality.
If a room marks a call complete after one small target but keeps advertising the largest target, ask for the full exit record.
Target checklist
What to inspect in take-profit reporting.
Target sequence
TP1, TP2, and final target should have fixed meaning before the signal is posted.
Partial exits
Result sheets should say what portion was closed, held, stopped, or manually exited.
Fill realism
Thin markets and fast wicks can make target screenshots hard for followers to reproduce.
Open remainder
If a trade hits one target and leaves a remainder open, the final status still matters.
Claim quality
Target hits can be cherry-picked.
Investor.gov tells investors to understand how performance claims are calculated and whether relevant costs or weaker periods are excluded. For signal rooms, the equivalent is checking whether target-hit claims include missed fills, stop outcomes, fees, and the calls that never reached target.
Review standard
Targets and stops should be reviewed together.
A take-profit page without stop context is incomplete. The real signal record should show entry, targets, stop, updates, closure, and whether the displayed result is a partial or full outcome.