Il test definitivo per capire se la tua strategia è solida

▷ Want to know how we can help you improve your trading approach? Watch the free Masterclass: https://oneyeartarget.it/webinarit?ut... ▷ Want to discover the scientific trading method of the 4-time world champion? Order the free book: https://metodounger.it/bookq4ny1ni3?u... Many people think that systematic trading only works on past data. And it's a criticism that, at least in part, makes sense. Achieving excellent backtesting results isn't particularly difficult: just keep adapting rules, filters, and parameters to historical data until you build seemingly perfect strategies. The problem is that, in this way, you're often not measuring the true statistical validity of the strategy, but simply how well it adapts to the data used to build it. And this is precisely where one of the most common mistakes in trading system development comes into play: overfitting. In this video, we delve into this very topic and see: 👉What overfitting really is 👉Why many strategies stop working once they're live 👉How to recognize overly optimized systems 👉Why a robust strategy shouldn't depend on "magic" parameters 👉How to develop trading systems based on more solid and realistic market logic 👉Why simplicity and robustness often matter more than perfect backtest performance In the video, we also analyze practical examples and tests on different markets to understand what can really add value to historical testing and how to build strategies with a greater likelihood of maintaining effectiveness in the future. Enjoy 😉 00:00 What is Overfitting in Systematic Trading? 01:15 Backtest Trading: Why Results Can Be Deceiving 03:12 Why Financial Markets Are Different from the Real World 05:06 How to Avoid Overfitting in Trading Systems 06:03 Practical Trading Example on MultiCharts 07:48 Testing on a Diversified Portfolio 10:41 Is This Strategy Really Overfitting? 12:03 The Most Important Rule for Creating Robust Strategies 14:12 How to Recognize a True Statistical Advantage in the Markets