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My eToro Testingrabbit Stats, and Why I Trade This Way
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My eToro Testingrabbit Stats, and Why I Trade This Way

QUANT42·

My eToro Testingrabbit stats tell a pretty clear story. On my public eToro profile, the account shows a 155.6% return in 2024, a 10.79% return over two years, an average risk score of 6 over the last seven days, and 55.36% profitable weeks on the stats page. That mix matters to me because it says I'm not trying to run a sleepy portfolio. I'm taking calculated swings, and I'm doing it in a market that's still moving fast, with the S&P 500 recently closing above 7,100 and the Nasdaq pushing fresh highs, according to CNBC and MarketWatch.

If you look at my recent activity on eToro, you'll see the style right away. I've closed profitable positions in oil, silver, volatility, and single names like CoreWeave. eToro's public profile feed shows recent wins including oil trades above 10%, a CoreWeave trade around 11.76%, and several silver short trades with triple-digit percentage gains on leveraged positions on the platform's display. You can see that directly on my eToro profile.

What my eToro stats say about how I actually trade

I'm not pretending to be a low-volatility dividend guy. My risk score sitting around 6 says I'm comfortable trading momentum, macro headlines, and sharp reversals, but I'm still trying to stay out of reckless territory. eToro's own help documentation explains that the stats tab tracks performance, portfolio risk, drawdowns, diversification, and other metrics that copiers use to judge a trader's consistency, not just headline returns. That framework matters because one big year means nothing if the risk is out of control, and eToro is pretty explicit about that on its stats help page.

For me, the interesting number isn't just the 2024 gain. It's the combination of return, risk score, and profitable weeks. A 55.36% profitable-week rate isn't perfection, and I don't want to sell it that way. It tells you I lose sometimes, which is normal, but I'm trying to make the winning periods count more than the losing ones.

Why commodities and volatility have been a big part of my edge

A lot of my recent results came from reading macro swings better than the crowd. Silver has been wild. The iShares Silver Trust, a common proxy for the metal, was recently at $72.15, with a 144.16% one-year gain, according to MarketWatch and Yahoo Finance. Gold has also stayed strong, with SPDR Gold Shares showing a 11.55% year-to-date gain and trading around $442.09 on April 20, 2026, based on MarketWatch data.

That kind of backdrop creates real trading opportunities, especially if you're willing to fade crowded moves or press momentum when the tape confirms it.

Oil has been just as important. The United States Oil Fund has posted a stunning 67.78% year-to-date total return, according to Yahoo Finance, even as broader headlines turned on ceasefire hopes and Middle East diplomacy. The International Energy Agency said in its April 2026 oil market report that the market remains highly sensitive to supply expectations and geopolitical shocks, which is exactly the kind of environment I like to trade when price action starts overrunning the narrative, per the IEA.

How I see the broader market right now

I'm trading in a market that looks strong on the surface, but still feels jumpy underneath. The Invesco QQQ was recently around $646.79 with a 5.29% year-to-date gain, while SPY showed a 4.43% year-to-date return, according to Yahoo Finance and Yahoo Finance. CNBC reported last week that the S&P 500 and Nasdaq hit fresh records as traders leaned into easing geopolitical fears and a reopening of risk appetite there.

That's bullish, obviously. But I don't think this is a market for lazy positioning. Volatility products are still alive, with ProShares VIX Short-Term Futures ETF, VIXY, up about 10.73% year to date in recent data from MarketWatch and Yahoo Finance. So yes, risk assets are climbing, but hedging demand hasn't disappeared.

What I want copiers and traders to understand about my account

If you're looking at my Testingrabbit account, I'd want you to understand one thing first: I trade opportunistically. I'm not married to one asset class, one sector, or one macro view. If silver is stretched, I'll trade silver. If oil is mispriced, I'll trade oil. If volatility is too cheap or too expensive, I'll go there too.

My edge is flexibility, and the stats reflect that.

The actionable takeaway is simple. In this market, I'm staying selective, keeping position sizing honest, and focusing on instruments that still have real movement in them. For traders watching my account, the best use of my stats isn't to chase old returns. It's to decide whether my mix of moderate-to-high risk, active macro trading, and opportunistic entries fits your own tolerance. If you can't handle swings, don't copy a swing trader. If you can, this is exactly the kind of tape where disciplined aggression still pays.