Salcedo runs one strategy: trend-filtered short-horizon mean reversion on liquid US equities, holding one to five days. Every rule is published below. Every trade lands in the ledger automatically. The drawdown is printed as large as the return, because that is the half of trading every other site hides.
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| Symbol | Qty | Entry | Last | Open P/L |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| No open positions. | ||||
| Symbol | Qty | Entry | Exit | P/L |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| No closed trades yet. | ||||
These parameters are published before the fact and any change to them will be logged on this page with a date. A rule that can be bent after a losing week is not a rule, it is a mood.
High win rate. Large average win. Smooth equity curve.
No method holds all three, because anything that did would be arbitraged out of existence. This system picks a high win rate and a smoother curve, and pays for them with small average wins and occasional sharp losses when a pullback keeps falling. That bill always arrives. The only choice is which currency you pay it in.
At a 65% win rate over 300 trades, a five-loss run is near certain. A six-loss run is a coin flip.
That is not bad luck, it is arithmetic that arrives on time. Position sizing decides whether the streak is a dent or the end of the account. It is why R4 and R7 exist, and why this account risks slots of 20% notional rather than leverage.
The most profitable fund in history won about 50.75% of its trades.
Renaissance's Medallion fund earned its famously smooth returns from millions of small bets and industrial diversification, not per-trade certainty. Smoothness is a property of bet count. A $1,000 account has a tiny bet count, so this equity curve will be lumpy even if the edge is real. Judge it after 100 trades, not after a good fortnight.
| Compounding rate | Time to 100× |
|---|---|
| 20% a year (excellent) | 25 years |
| 39% a year (best fund in history, net) | 14 years |
| 10% a month (fantasy land) | 4 years |
This site is not attempting any of those. It is attempting something rarer: proving in public, with timestamps, that a small edge exists at all.
Sources for the figures above: Medallion's long-run net returns and trade statistics are documented in Gregory Zuckerman's “The Man Who Solved the Market” and Bradford Cornell's published analysis of the fund. Streak probabilities follow directly from the binomial distribution.