Live Backtest Results
This backtest analyzes the performance of the Directional Movement strategy on BTC/USDT over the 1 Minute timeframe using historical market data. The Directional Movement System, developed by J. Welles Wilder, measures the strength and direction of a trend using the Positive Directional Indicator (+DI), the Negative Directional Indicator (-DI), and the Average Directional Index (ADX). The results provide insight into profitability, risk exposure, and consistency.

ROI
-88.5%
Win Rate
18.2%
Max DD
88.68%
Sharpe
-12.98
Profit Factor
0.42
Total Trades
4380
Backtest insights
The Directional Movement strategy generated a total return of -88.5% over the 1 Minute timeframe. With a maximum drawdown of 88.68% and a win rate of 18.2% across 4380 trades, the DMI approach aims to enter when +DI crosses above -DI with ADX confirming trend strength, and step aside when -DI takes over, favouring participation in strong directional moves.
Performance may vary depending on market conditions. During trending periods, the strategy may behave differently compared to ranging markets, impacting both returns and drawdowns.
How the BTC Directional Movement Strategy Works
What It Is
The Directional Movement System, developed by J. Welles Wilder, consists of three lines: the Positive Directional Indicator (+DI), the Negative Directional Indicator (-DI), and the Average Directional Index (ADX). +DI measures upward directional pressure, -DI measures downward pressure, and ADX measures how strong the prevailing trend is regardless of direction. This BTC Directional Movement strategy goes long only when +DI is above -DI and the ADX confirms a strong trend, using a 14-period DMI on the 1 Minute timeframe.
How Signals Are Generated
A long entry triggers when the +DI crosses above the -DI while the ADX is above 25 on the 1 Minute timeframe, signalling that upward directional movement is dominant and the trend is strong enough to trade. The position exits when the -DI crosses above the +DI, signalling that downward directional momentum has taken control and the bullish trend has faded.
When It Works Best
This strategy performs best during clean, persistent trends where the ADX stays elevated and +DI remains above -DI. The 1 Minute timeframe captures a specific market rhythm where a confirmed directional move, once the ADX filter is satisfied, can persist long enough to be profitable.
When It Performs Poorly
The strategy struggles in choppy, sideways markets where the ADX stays below 25 and +DI and -DI cross repeatedly, producing many small losing trades. This whipsaw effect is severe on very low timeframes (minutes), where noise dominates and trading costs and false crossovers accumulate quickly. Sharp reversals can also give back open profit before the exit triggers.
Strengths
ADX filter helps avoid trading weak, directionless markets
Clear, rule-based +DI / -DI cross entry and exit reduce emotional trading
Three-line logic gives a direct read on both trend direction and trend strength
Limitations
Prone to whipsaws when ADX hovers near the threshold in ranging markets
Whipsaw damage compounds badly on very low (minute) timeframes
As a lagging trend system, it enters after a move begins and exits after it ends
Why Use CoinQuant Instead of Manual Trading or Other Platforms
Choosing the right way to test and execute trading strategies is critical. Below is a comparison between CoinQuant, manual trading, and other platforms to highlight key differences in speed, accuracy, and usability.
CoinQuant is designed specifically for traders who want to validate strategies quickly and reliably without coding. Unlike manual trading or traditional platforms, it allows you to test multiple scenarios, analyze performance instantly, and iterate faster using real data.
Frequently asked questions
How does the Directional Movement strategy perform on BTC/USDT in the 1 Minute timeframe?
In this backtest the Directional Movement strategy on the 1 Minute timeframe generated a return of -88.5% with a maximum drawdown of 88.68% and a win rate of 18.2% across 4380 trades. These results are based on historical backtest data and actual performance may vary.
What is the Directional Movement System (DMI/ADX)?
The Directional Movement System, created by J. Welles Wilder, uses three lines, the +DI, the -DI, and the ADX. The +DI and -DI measure upward and downward directional pressure, while the ADX measures the overall strength of the trend. When +DI is above -DI and ADX is high, a strong uptrend is in control; the crossover between +DI and -DI is used to time trend entries and exits.
Why is backtesting important for trading strategies?
Backtesting evaluates how a strategy would have performed on historical data before risking real capital. It reveals metrics like ROI, drawdown, and win rate that show whether a strategy has a genuine edge. Without backtesting, traders are flying blind.
How can I test the Directional Movement strategy on CoinQuant?
Describe the strategy in natural language, select BTC/USDT and the 1 Minute timeframe, and CoinQuant instantly generates a full backtest with all performance metrics, no coding required.
What are the best settings for the Directional Movement strategy on the 1 Minute timeframe?
Optimal settings depend on the DMI length and the ADX threshold. A shorter DMI length reacts faster to new trends but whipsaws more; a longer length confirms trends more reliably but lags. A lower ADX threshold trades more often, a higher one is more selective. The 14-period DMI with an ADX of 25 is a common default. CoinQuant lets you test multiple parameter combinations to find the best fit for the 1 Minute timeframe.