Apex makes the index work harder. Delta does something rarer. It holds equal bets for and against, so its returns come from picking winners and losers, not from the market going up. When stocks fall, Delta can still rise. That independence is exactly what makes a portfolio smoother, and the two strategies far stronger together than alone.
Every month, an AI engine sorts hundreds of the largest US companies into those most likely to outperform and those most likely to lag, then backs the winners and bets against the laggards in equal measure. No headlines, no hunches, no single stock gambles.
The engine studies two decades of market history to recognise the patterns that have separated future winners from losers.
Each month it scores hundreds of the most liquid US companies and sorts them from most to least promising.
It backs the top names and bets against the bottom ones in equal amounts, so the overall market exposure cancels out.
It refreshes on a fixed schedule with total discipline. No human second guessing, ever.
Most strategies rise and fall with the market. Delta is designed to stand apart, which is exactly what makes it valuable next to everything else you hold.
Equal long and short positions cancel out market direction, so Delta can perform in up years and down years alike.
Its returns barely move with equities, so adding Delta smooths the ride for the whole platform.
The edge is captured across roughly a hundred positions at once, never riding on a single company.
Because it is market neutral, Delta's best moments often arrive when everything else struggles. The contributor that shows up precisely when a portfolio needs it.
Compounding, independent of the market. One dollar grew into thirty six over the test period. Hover the curve to explore any month.
Apex compounds the index. Delta keeps it steady. Reach out for the full story, the numbers, or a walk through.