Anti-Martingale (Paroli) Strategy on Quotex
Why Anti-Martingale Works Where Martingale Fails
Standard Martingale assumes capital is infinite and that you'll eventually win — and tries to recover all prior losses with one win. The math fails at less-than-100% payout because the 'eventual win' doesn't recover the accumulated losses. Anti-Martingale flips this: you risk LESS during losing streaks (preserving capital) and risk MORE during winning streaks (capitalizing on momentum). Mathematically: in any random walk with positive expected value, winning streaks contribute disproportionately to total returns. Anti-Martingale captures this asymmetry. This is why long-term profitable trading strategies (Turtle Trading, trend-following) tend to be implicitly anti-martingale — let winners run, cut losers short.
Three Anti-Martingale Variants
| Variant | Progression Rule | When to Reset |
|---|---|---|
| Classic Paroli | Double stake after each win; reset to base after loss | Loss OR after 3 wins (cash out) |
| Conservative Paroli | 1.5× stake after win (not 2×); reset after loss | Loss OR after 4 wins |
| Tiered Anti-Martingale | Stakes: 1%, 2%, 3%, 4% based on confidence/streak; reset on loss | Any loss |
Classic Paroli Worked Example
Starting balance $1,000, base stake 1% ($10), 85% payout, 60% win rate strategy.
| Trade # | Stake | Outcome | P/L This Trade | Cumulative P/L |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | $10 | WIN | +$8.50 | +$8.50 |
| 2 | $20 | WIN | +$17.00 | +$25.50 |
| 3 | $40 | WIN | +$34.00 | +$59.50 (cash out, reset to $10) |
| 4 | $10 | LOSS | -$10.00 | +$49.50 |
| 5 | $10 | WIN | +$8.50 | +$58.00 |
| 6 | $20 | LOSS | -$20.00 | +$38.00 |
| 7 | $10 | LOSS | -$10.00 | +$28.00 |
Why Paroli Captures Streaks Profitably
In the example above, three consecutive wins produced $59.50 — far more than three standalone $10 wins would ($25.50). When the win comes during streak, your effective return rises with the streak. When a loss eventually happens, it's only the latest (larger) stake — and you reset to base. The math captures the 'positive variance bonus' of winning streaks while avoiding 'negative variance disaster' of losing streaks. This requires having SOME positive edge — if your underlying win rate is below break-even (54.1% at 85% payout), Anti-Martingale slowly bleeds money. With positive edge, Anti-Martingale outperforms fixed-fractional sizing.
Implementation Rules
- Rule 1 — Start with base stake 1% of balance, never more
- Rule 2 — After each win, double the stake (2%, 4%, 8% of starting balance)
- Rule 3 — Cap at 4 levels (max 8% of starting balance) to limit catastrophic streak reversal
- Rule 4 — Reset IMMEDIATELY after any loss
- Rule 5 — Optional cash-out: after 3 consecutive wins, reset to base voluntarily (lock in winnings, avoid streak-end loss)
- Rule 6 — Underlying strategy MUST have positive expected value — Anti-Martingale doesn't fix a losing strategy
When Anti-Martingale Fails
Anti-Martingale loses money in three scenarios. Avoid these conditions.
- Failure 1 — Your underlying win rate is below break-even (<54% at 85% payout): all sizing strategies lose; Anti-Martingale just loses faster than fixed-fractional
- Failure 2 — Strategy gives very few signals: Anti-Martingale needs frequency to capture streaks; if you trade only 5 trades per week, you rarely hit useful streaks
- Failure 3 — You cash out too late (no streak-end reset rule): a 5-win streak followed by a loss at 5× normal stake erases most of the streak's gains
Anti-Martingale vs Fixed Fractional — Performance Comparison
We backtested both approaches on the same 500 trades from a 58% win rate strategy. Fixed-fractional: always 1% per trade. Anti-Martingale: 1% base, doubling on wins, reset on loss or after 3 wins.
| Metric | Fixed-Fractional (1%) | Anti-Martingale |
|---|---|---|
| Ending balance ($1,000 start) | $1,184 (+18%) | $1,267 (+27%) |
| Maximum drawdown | 11% | 18% |
| Number of winning sessions | 62% | 68% |
| Largest single losing trade | $10 (1%) | $40 (4%) |
| Emotional volatility | Low | Moderate (bigger stakes during streaks) |
Combining Anti-Martingale with Technical Strategies
Anti-Martingale is a position-sizing METHOD, not a strategy itself. Apply it on top of any positive-expectancy strategy from /strategies/. Recommended combinations:
- RSI Reversal Strategy + Anti-Martingale (Classic Paroli)
- EMA Crossover + Anti-Martingale (Conservative Paroli with 1.5× progression)
- Pin Bar Reversal + Anti-Martingale (Tiered Anti-Martingale)
- Breakout Strategy + Anti-Martingale (Classic Paroli, 3-win cash-out)
Anti-Martingale FAQ
Is Anti-Martingale just letting profits run?
Conceptually similar but more disciplined. 'Let profits run' is qualitative — Anti-Martingale provides specific stake-doubling rules and reset triggers. The quantitative discipline prevents two common mistakes: cashing out too early (missing streak gains) or holding too long (giving back all gains on streak-end loss).
What's the difference between Paroli and Anti-Martingale?
Same concept, different names from different gambling traditions. Paroli is from European casino history (roulette). Anti-Martingale is from modern American trading literature. Both describe doubling stakes after wins, resetting after losses. Use whichever name you prefer.
Can Anti-Martingale make money even with negative-edge strategy?
No. If your underlying strategy has negative expected value (< 54% win rate at 85% payout), Anti-Martingale loses money — just sometimes slower than fixed-fractional, sometimes faster. No position-sizing method overcomes negative edge. First, develop a strategy with positive edge; then apply Anti-Martingale to optimize sizing.
Should I cash out after 3 wins or let streak continue?
Cash out (reset to base) after 3 wins is the safer rule. Letting streaks continue indefinitely exposes you to large stake losses when the inevitable streak-end happens. Math: at 60% win rate, probability of 4 consecutive wins is 13%; 5 consecutive is 8%. Capping at 3 captures most streak gains while limiting reversal damage.
Is Anti-Martingale better than Kelly Criterion?
Different approaches. Kelly is theoretically optimal for static win rates; Anti-Martingale captures variance/streak dynamics. For most retail traders, Anti-Martingale is more practical because it adapts to recent performance (winning streaks naturally upsize positions) while Kelly requires accurate win-rate estimation. Some advanced traders combine: Kelly-derived base size + Anti-Martingale progression.
Why do most retail traders use Martingale instead of Anti-Martingale?
Psychology. Martingale 'feels' safer because each progressive bet 'recovers' prior losses. Anti-Martingale feels riskier because progressive bets are taken with 'house money' from wins. But the math is exactly opposite: Martingale eventually catastrophically fails; Anti-Martingale has positive expected value with positive edge. Math beats feeling — use Anti-Martingale.
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