Research, not advice.
Discipline, not prediction.

LOGOS is a research instrument. It is not a financial advisor, a trading strategy, or a source of investment recommendations. Understanding its limitations is essential to using it responsibly.

Important Disclosures

  • LOGOS is a research tool — it does not provide financial advice, trading recommendations, or investment services of any kind.
  • No outcome is guaranteed. All market analysis involves uncertainty, and no analytical method can eliminate the risk of being wrong.
  • Trading and investing carry inherent risk of financial loss. Past analytical accuracy does not guarantee future results.
  • Human oversight is required for every significant decision. LOGOS is an assistant to human judgment, not a replacement for it.
  • LOGOS does not execute trades autonomously without explicit human approval and supervision.
  • All research outputs are provisional — they represent the system's best interpretation of available data at a point in time, not infallible predictions.
  • This system is under active development and is not commercially available. Features, capabilities, and outputs may change without notice.

What LOGOS is designed for — and what it is not.

Designed for

Structured market research, thesis formation, scenario analysis, decision documentation, outcome review, and systematic improvement of analytical reasoning over time.

Not designed for

Unsupervised trading, financial advice, guaranteed returns, market timing signals, or any use case where human judgment and oversight are absent.

Strengths

Disciplined reasoning, structured record-keeping, explicit invalidation logic, scenario-based analysis, and auditable decision trails.

Limitations

Cannot predict unforeseen events, cannot guarantee outcomes, requires skilled human supervision, and depends on the quality and completeness of available data.

The human supervisor remains central.

LOGOS is designed around a core principle: AI assists, humans decide. Every research output is a recommendation to be reviewed. Every proposed action requires human approval. The final authority — and the final responsibility — always rests with the human supervisor.

This is not a limitation to be overcome. It is a design choice. Markets are complex, uncertain, and influenced by factors no model can fully capture. Human judgment — exercised carefully, informed by structured research, and held accountable by recorded decisions — is not a weakness in the system. It is the system's foundation.