
How to Read and Interpret Backtest Results Like a Pro
Your backtest just finished. You see a green number — positive total return. Great. But that single number tells you almost nothing about whether this strategy will actually work with real money. The difference between amateur and professional backtesting isn't the software — it's how you read the results.
Let me walk you through every metric that matters, what it actually means, and the red flags that signal trouble.
The Metrics That Actually Matter
Most backtesting platforms display 20-30 metrics. You don't need all of them. Here are the ones I check first, in order of importance:
| Metric | What It Tells You | Good Range | Red Flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| Net Profit % | Total return on investment | 10-100% annually | > 200% annually |
| Max Drawdown % | Worst peak-to-trough decline | < 20% | > 40% |
| Sharpe Ratio | Risk-adjusted return | > 1.0 | > 3.0 (overfitting) |
| Profit Factor | Gross profit / gross loss | 1.3-2.5 | > 3.0 (too few trades) |
| Win Rate | % of profitable trades | 40-65% | > 80% (see below) |
| Avg Win / Avg Loss | Reward-to-risk per trade | > 1.0 | < 0.5 |
| Total Trades | Statistical significance | > 100 | < 30 |
| Recovery Factor | Net profit / max drawdown | > 3.0 | < 1.0 |
Maximum Drawdown: The Reality Check
Maximum drawdown is the single most important risk metric. It answers the question: "What's the worst that happened?"
If your backtest shows a 35% maximum drawdown, here's what you need to internalize: at some point during the testing period, your account dropped 35% from its peak. In real trading, that feels like your account is collapsing. Most traders abandon their strategy during drawdowns of 15-20%.
A rule of thumb I use: your real-world maximum drawdown will be 1.5-2x your backtested maximum drawdown. If the backtest shows 20%, plan for 30-40% in reality. Market conditions the backtest didn't capture, execution differences, and psychological pressure all make real drawdowns worse.
Win Rate: The Most Misunderstood Metric
A 35% win rate sounds terrible. But if your average winner is 3x your average loser, a 35% win rate produces a profit factor of 1.62 — solidly profitable.
Conversely, an 85% win rate sounds amazing. But if your average winner is $50 and your average loser is $500, you're losing money. One bad trade erases eight winners.
The relationship between win rate and reward-to-risk ratio is what matters:
| Win Rate | Min R:R Needed | Profit Factor | Strategy Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| 35% | 2.0:1 | 1.08 | Trend following |
| 45% | 1.3:1 | 1.06 | Breakout |
| 55% | 0.9:1 | 1.10 | Mean reversion |
| 65% | 0.6:1 | 1.11 | Scalping |
| 75% | 0.4:1 | 1.00 | High-probability scalp |
Reading the Equity Curve
The equity curve is the most information-dense chart in your backtest report. A raw metric like "net profit 47%" tells you the endpoint. The equity curve tells you the journey.
What to look for:
Smoothness. A smooth, steadily rising curve indicates consistent performance across market conditions. An equity curve that looks like a heart monitor — sharp spikes up and down — indicates high variance and potential issues with position sizing or strategy robustness.
Slope consistency. The curve should rise at a roughly constant rate. If 80% of your profits came from a single three-week period, you don't have a strategy — you have a lucky trade. Check whether the curve's slope is similar in the first half and second half of the testing period.
Drawdown duration. Not just depth but duration. A 15% drawdown that recovers in 2 weeks is psychologically manageable. A 15% drawdown that takes 4 months to recover will test your conviction beyond what most traders can handle.
For a deeper exploration of equity curve analysis, see interpreting the equity curve. Understanding why strategies fail also provides context for what healthy results look like.
"If you can't explain your backtest results to a skeptical friend in two minutes, you don't understand them well enough to trade the strategy." — David Aronson, Evidence-Based Technical Analysis
When to Reject a Backtest
Not every positive backtest deserves your capital. Reject the results when:
- Total trades under 50 — insufficient statistical significance
- Maximum drawdown exceeds 2x your risk tolerance
- Sharpe ratio above 3.0 (almost certainly overfitted)
- More than 50% of profits come from fewer than 10% of trades
- Out-of-sample performance is less than 40% of in-sample performance
- The strategy only works on one instrument or one timeframe
Get comprehensive backtest reports with all key metrics. StratBase.ai calculates Sharpe ratio, profit factor, drawdown, recovery factor, and renders interactive equity curves — everything you need to make informed decisions.
FAQ
What is a good Sharpe ratio for a trading strategy?
Above 1.0 is acceptable, above 1.5 is good, above 2.0 is excellent. Be skeptical of Sharpe ratios above 3.0 — they often indicate overfitting.
What is profit factor and what should it be?
Profit factor = gross profits / gross losses. Above 1.5 is solid, above 2.0 is strong. Profit factors above 3.0 may indicate overfitting or too few trades.
Further Reading
About the Author
Quantitative researcher with 8+ years in algorithmic trading and strategy backtesting. Specializes in technical indicator analysis and risk-adjusted performance metrics.
FAQ
What is a good Sharpe ratio for a trading strategy?▾
A Sharpe ratio above 1.0 is considered acceptable, above 1.5 is good, and above 2.0 is excellent. Most retail strategies fall between 0.5 and 1.5. Be skeptical of strategies showing Sharpe ratios above 3.0 in backtesting — they're often overfitted.
What is profit factor and what should it be?▾
Profit factor is gross profits divided by gross losses. A profit factor of 1.0 means breakeven. Above 1.5 is solid, above 2.0 is strong. Be cautious of profit factors above 3.0 as they may indicate overfitting or insufficient trade count.
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