Strategy Leaderboard
Every ByKaranteli signal is produced by one of several named strategies: breakout, trend-follow, mean-reversion, and a few research-tier variants. Each strategy runs the full evaluation pipeline independently, and we publish a live ranking of their performance so you can see which approaches are carrying the aggregate numbers and which are underperforming. Composite score = profit factor × √sample × winness, so a strategy needs both a positive edge and enough closed signals before it ranks highly.
What makes this list different from typical "top strategies" marketing is that strategies can sit at the bottom of the leaderboard for long stretches and we leave them there. A mean-reversion strategy will struggle in a strong trending market; a breakout strategy will take drawdowns in a range market. We do not rotate strategies in and out of the public record to flatter current results. The full roster stays on, and the composite score tells you who is working right now.
How to read this leaderboard
- Trades: total closed signals across the window. A strategy with 200+ closed signals is statistically far more reliable than one with 30.
- Win rate: wins divided by wins + losses. Excludes TIMEOUT outcomes so it reflects decided trades only.
- Profit factor (net): total net wins divided by total net losses, after fees, slippage, and funding. Above 1.5 is strong, above 2.0 is exceptional on a meaningful sample.
- Composite score: the ranking key. Penalizes small samples (√sample multiplier) so a 10-trade 80% win rate does not outrank a 200-trade 60% win rate.
- Max drawdown: largest peak-to-trough equity decline inside the window. A strategy with a solid net PnL but a 25% drawdown is uncomfortable to hold through; watch this as much as the PnL.
How the Score Works
Composite Score = Profit Factor (net) × √(trades / 25) × winness weight. Strategies with more samples get a √-normalized bonus. Fewer than 25 trades disqualifies from ranking, those strategies are listed at the bottom, greyed out. See methodology.
Not investment advice. Past performance does not guarantee future returns.