Validate Your Edge Before You Trade
See exactly how BitThor audits every simulated exit before you commit live capital.
See exactly how BitThor audits every simulated exit before you commit live capital.
BitThor records every simulated trade in SimulatedTradesLog, attributes realized P&L to the sell-side signals that closed each position, and summarizes the result as a Signal Impact Score. This page explains that audit trail in plain language so you can decide whether a strategy deserves further review.
Every Buy, Sell, and Hold decision is persisted with entry price, exit price, P&L, signal name, and signal confidence. Nothing is discarded or averaged away; every row is available for post-mortem review.
BitThor groups the logged exits by signal family, calculates how often each signal appeared, and computes a weighted confidence score per side. The result is a historical heatmap showing which sell-side signals contributed the most realized P&L.
Signal Impact Score is a proprietary educational visualization metric that summarizes the weighted average confidence of the top recorded buy and sell signals on a normalized 0.000 to 1.000 scale. It is derived entirely from historical simulation data and does not predict future performance or guarantee results.
What are Signal Impact Score, SignalName & SignalConfidence?
Dive deeper into the three audit values BitThor surfaces after every simulation run — plain-language definitions with full legal context.
Read the full definitionsDisclaimer: All analysis shown on this page is based on historical simulation data and user-defined strategy parameters. Past performance, including simulated results, does not guarantee future results. Cryptocurrency trading involves substantial risk of loss and is not suitable for every user. Signal Impact Score is a proprietary educational visualization metric and does not predict future performance or constitute a recommendation to trade. BitThor provides software tools only and does not provide investment advice. Users should only trade with capital they can afford to lose and should always conduct thorough due diligence.