Common questions

FAQ

Last updated: May 23, 2026
Audience
Authorized internal users
Public access
Information only
AI role
Read-only explanations

Is Mooney Trading open to the public?

  • No. Mooney Trading is currently a private trading operations platform for authorized internal users.
  • The public site is informational and does not provide account access, signup, public trading signals, or investor onboarding.
  • The private internal console remains behind authenticated access and is not linked from the public website.

What does the platform do?

  • The platform supports a trading workflow with live market scouting, account monitoring, copied-order oversight, latency tracking, and review reports.
  • It is built to help operators see the state of the trading system, account snapshots, copied executions, and post-trade review context in one place.
  • It is not presented as a public advisory service or a public investment product.

Does the system trade by itself?

  • The current design keeps the human trader responsible for master-account decisions.
  • Copy execution is controlled by operator settings, launch-readiness gates, account validation, and risk monitoring.
  • AI features are read-only helpers for explanation, research context, trade journals, recaps, and learning summaries.

Why does the public site mention risk?

  • Trading involves real financial risk, including possible loss of principal.
  • Software, brokers, market data, external APIs, and network connections can fail or behave unexpectedly.
  • The risk and privacy pages are included so public visitors understand the boundaries before any future product direction is considered.

What would need to happen before a public product?

  • A public product would require separate legal, regulatory, brokerage, privacy, security, support, and operational review.
  • Customer onboarding, billing, account permissions, disclosures, agreements, and data handling would need to be designed before launch.
  • Nothing on the current public site should be treated as an offer to manage money, provide advice, or give public access to trading activity.