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All Posts (Page 6)

  • Published on
    Backtests are a core tool in trading — but they often create false confidence. This article explains why strategies that look strong in the past can fail in live markets, and why continuous evaluation is more reliable.
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  • Published on
    The Sharpe Ratio helps describe how stable a trading model's returns are relative to their volatility. Instead of looking at profit alone, it reveals whether performance comes from consistent behavior or unstable swings. In darwintIQ, Sharpe Ratio is one of several metrics used to evaluate how robust a model currently behaves under evolving market conditions.
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  • Published on
    Calmar Ratio measures how efficiently a trading model generates returns relative to its maximum drawdown. Instead of focusing purely on profit, it highlights the relationship between reward and downside risk. In darwintIQ, the metric contributes to evaluating the structural robustness of models, helping distinguish strategies that produce stable returns from those that rely on unstable or high-drawdown behavior.
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  • Published on
    In quantitative trading, profit alone rarely tells the full story. Two models can generate similar returns while behaving very differently in terms of stability, drawdowns, and consistency. Fitness metrics help evaluate the structural quality of a trading model by looking beyond raw profit and capturing how stable and robust its behaviour is. In adaptive systems like darwintIQ, Fitness contributes to identifying models that are not only profitable, but also resilient under changing market conditions.
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  • Published on
    Markets constantly change their behavior. This article explains why trading models lose effectiveness over time and why adapting to regime shifts is more important than optimizing for the past.
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