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strategy-callbacks.md

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Strategy Callbacks

While the main strategy functions (populate_indicators(), populate_entry_trend(), populate_exit_trend()) should be used in a vectorized way, and are only called once during backtesting, callbacks are called "whenever needed".

As such, you should avoid doing heavy calculations in callbacks to avoid delays during operations. Depending on the callback used, they may be called when entering / exiting a trade, or throughout the duration of a trade.

Currently available callbacks:

!!! Tip "Callback calling sequence" You can find the callback calling sequence in bot-basics

Bot loop start

A simple callback which is called once at the start of every bot throttling iteration (roughly every 5 seconds, unless configured differently). This can be used to perform calculations which are pair independent (apply to all pairs), loading of external data, etc.

import requests

class AwesomeStrategy(IStrategy):

    # ... populate_* methods

    def bot_loop_start(self, **kwargs) -> None:
        """
        Called at the start of the bot iteration (one loop).
        Might be used to perform pair-independent tasks
        (e.g. gather some remote resource for comparison)
        :param **kwargs: Ensure to keep this here so updates to this won't break your strategy.
        """
        if self.config['runmode'].value in ('live', 'dry_run'):
            # Assign this to the class by using self.*
            # can then be used by populate_* methods
            self.remote_data = requests.get('https://some_remote_source.example.com')

Stake size management

Called before entering a trade, makes it possible to manage your position size when placing a new trade.

class AwesomeStrategy(IStrategy):
    def custom_stake_amount(self, pair: str, current_time: datetime, current_rate: float,
                            proposed_stake: float, min_stake: float, max_stake: float,
                            entry_tag: Optional[str], side: str, **kwargs) -> float:

        dataframe, _ = self.dp.get_analyzed_dataframe(pair=pair, timeframe=self.timeframe)
        current_candle = dataframe.iloc[-1].squeeze()

        if current_candle['fastk_rsi_1h'] > current_candle['fastd_rsi_1h']:
            if self.config['stake_amount'] == 'unlimited':
                # Use entire available wallet during favorable conditions when in compounding mode.
                return max_stake
            else:
                # Compound profits during favorable conditions instead of using a static stake.
                return self.wallets.get_total_stake_amount() / self.config['max_open_trades']

        # Use default stake amount.
        return proposed_stake

Freqtrade will fall back to the proposed_stake value should your code raise an exception. The exception itself will be logged.

!!! Tip You do not have to ensure that min_stake <= returned_value <= max_stake. Trades will succeed as the returned value will be clamped to supported range and this action will be logged.

!!! Tip Returning 0 or None will prevent trades from being placed.

Custom exit signal

Called for open trade every throttling iteration (roughly every 5 seconds) until a trade is closed.

Allows to define custom exit signals, indicating that specified position should be sold. This is very useful when we need to customize exit conditions for each individual trade, or if you need trade data to make an exit decision.

For example you could implement a 1:2 risk-reward ROI with custom_exit().

Using custom_exit() signals in place of stoploss though is not recommended. It is a inferior method to using custom_stoploss() in this regard - which also allows you to keep the stoploss on exchange.

!!! Note Returning a (none-empty) string or True from this method is equal to setting exit signal on a candle at specified time. This method is not called when exit signal is set already, or if exit signals are disabled (use_exit_signal=False). string max length is 64 characters. Exceeding this limit will cause the message to be truncated to 64 characters. custom_exit() will ignore exit_profit_only, and will always be called unless use_exit_signal=False, even if there is a new enter signal.

An example of how we can use different indicators depending on the current profit and also exit trades that were open longer than one day:

class AwesomeStrategy(IStrategy):
    def custom_exit(self, pair: str, trade: 'Trade', current_time: 'datetime', current_rate: float,
                    current_profit: float, **kwargs):
        dataframe, _ = self.dp.get_analyzed_dataframe(pair, self.timeframe)
        last_candle = dataframe.iloc[-1].squeeze()

        # Above 20% profit, sell when rsi < 80
        if current_profit > 0.2:
            if last_candle['rsi'] < 80:
                return 'rsi_below_80'

        # Between 2% and 10%, sell if EMA-long above EMA-short
        if 0.02 < current_profit < 0.1:
            if last_candle['emalong'] > last_candle['emashort']:
                return 'ema_long_below_80'

        # Sell any positions at a loss if they are held for more than one day.
        if current_profit < 0.0 and (current_time - trade.open_date_utc).days >= 1:
            return 'unclog'

See Dataframe access for more information about dataframe use in strategy callbacks.

Custom stoploss

Called for open trade every throttling iteration (roughly every 5 seconds) until a trade is closed.

The usage of the custom stoploss method must be enabled by setting use_custom_stoploss=True on the strategy object.

The stoploss price can only ever move upwards - if the stoploss value returned from custom_stoploss would result in a lower stoploss price than was previously set, it will be ignored. The traditional stoploss value serves as an absolute lower level and will be instated as the initial stoploss (before this method is called for the first time for a trade).

The method must return a stoploss value (float / number) as a percentage of the current price. E.g. If the current_rate is 200 USD, then returning 0.02 will set the stoploss price 2% lower, at 196 USD.

The absolute value of the return value is used (the sign is ignored), so returning 0.05 or -0.05 have the same result, a stoploss 5% below the current price.

To simulate a regular trailing stoploss of 4% (trailing 4% behind the maximum reached price) you would use the following very simple method:

# additional imports required
from datetime import datetime
from freqtrade.persistence import Trade

class AwesomeStrategy(IStrategy):

    # ... populate_* methods

    use_custom_stoploss = True

    def custom_stoploss(self, pair: str, trade: 'Trade', current_time: datetime,
                        current_rate: float, current_profit: float, **kwargs) -> float:
        """
        Custom stoploss logic, returning the new distance relative to current_rate (as ratio).
        e.g. returning -0.05 would create a stoploss 5% below current_rate.
        The custom stoploss can never be below self.stoploss, which serves as a hard maximum loss.

        For full documentation please go to https://www.freqtrade.io/en/latest/strategy-advanced/

        When not implemented by a strategy, returns the initial stoploss value
        Only called when use_custom_stoploss is set to True.

        :param pair: Pair that's currently analyzed
        :param trade: trade object.
        :param current_time: datetime object, containing the current datetime
        :param current_rate: Rate, calculated based on pricing settings in exit_pricing.
        :param current_profit: Current profit (as ratio), calculated based on current_rate.
        :param **kwargs: Ensure to keep this here so updates to this won't break your strategy.
        :return float: New stoploss value, relative to the current rate
        """
        return -0.04

Stoploss on exchange works similar to trailing_stop, and the stoploss on exchange is updated as configured in stoploss_on_exchange_interval (More details about stoploss on exchange).

!!! Note "Use of dates" All time-based calculations should be done based on current_time - using datetime.now() or datetime.utcnow() is discouraged, as this will break backtesting support.

!!! Tip "Trailing stoploss" It's recommended to disable trailing_stop when using custom stoploss values. Both can work in tandem, but you might encounter the trailing stop to move the price higher while your custom function would not want this, causing conflicting behavior.

Custom stoploss examples

The next section will show some examples on what's possible with the custom stoploss function. Of course, many more things are possible, and all examples can be combined at will.

Time based trailing stop

Use the initial stoploss for the first 60 minutes, after this change to 10% trailing stoploss, and after 2 hours (120 minutes) we use a 5% trailing stoploss.

from datetime import datetime, timedelta
from freqtrade.persistence import Trade

class AwesomeStrategy(IStrategy):

    # ... populate_* methods

    use_custom_stoploss = True

    def custom_stoploss(self, pair: str, trade: 'Trade', current_time: datetime,
                        current_rate: float, current_profit: float, **kwargs) -> float:

        # Make sure you have the longest interval first - these conditions are evaluated from top to bottom.
        if current_time - timedelta(minutes=120) > trade.open_date_utc:
            return -0.05
        elif current_time - timedelta(minutes=60) > trade.open_date_utc:
            return -0.10
        return 1

Different stoploss per pair

Use a different stoploss depending on the pair. In this example, we'll trail the highest price with 10% trailing stoploss for ETH/BTC and XRP/BTC, with 5% trailing stoploss for LTC/BTC and with 15% for all other pairs.

from datetime import datetime
from freqtrade.persistence import Trade

class AwesomeStrategy(IStrategy):

    # ... populate_* methods

    use_custom_stoploss = True

    def custom_stoploss(self, pair: str, trade: 'Trade', current_time: datetime,
                        current_rate: float, current_profit: float, **kwargs) -> float:

        if pair in ('ETH/BTC', 'XRP/BTC'):
            return -0.10
        elif pair in ('LTC/BTC'):
            return -0.05
        return -0.15

Trailing stoploss with positive offset

Use the initial stoploss until the profit is above 4%, then use a trailing stoploss of 50% of the current profit with a minimum of 2.5% and a maximum of 5%.

Please note that the stoploss can only increase, values lower than the current stoploss are ignored.

from datetime import datetime, timedelta
from freqtrade.persistence import Trade

class AwesomeStrategy(IStrategy):

    # ... populate_* methods

    use_custom_stoploss = True

    def custom_stoploss(self, pair: str, trade: 'Trade', current_time: datetime,
                        current_rate: float, current_profit: float, **kwargs) -> float:

        if current_profit < 0.04:
            return -1 # return a value bigger than the initial stoploss to keep using the initial stoploss

        # After reaching the desired offset, allow the stoploss to trail by half the profit
        desired_stoploss = current_profit / 2

        # Use a minimum of 2.5% and a maximum of 5%
        return max(min(desired_stoploss, 0.05), 0.025)

Stepped stoploss

Instead of continuously trailing behind the current price, this example sets fixed stoploss price levels based on the current profit.

  • Use the regular stoploss until 20% profit is reached
  • Once profit is > 20% - set stoploss to 7% above open price.
  • Once profit is > 25% - set stoploss to 15% above open price.
  • Once profit is > 40% - set stoploss to 25% above open price.
from datetime import datetime
from freqtrade.persistence import Trade
from freqtrade.strategy import stoploss_from_open

class AwesomeStrategy(IStrategy):

    # ... populate_* methods

    use_custom_stoploss = True

    def custom_stoploss(self, pair: str, trade: 'Trade', current_time: datetime,
                        current_rate: float, current_profit: float, **kwargs) -> float:

        # evaluate highest to lowest, so that highest possible stop is used
        if current_profit > 0.40:
            return stoploss_from_open(0.25, current_profit, is_short=trade.is_short)
        elif current_profit > 0.25:
            return stoploss_from_open(0.15, current_profit, is_short=trade.is_short)
        elif current_profit > 0.20:
            return stoploss_from_open(0.07, current_profit, is_short=trade.is_short)

        # return maximum stoploss value, keeping current stoploss price unchanged
        return 1

Custom stoploss using an indicator from dataframe example

Absolute stoploss value may be derived from indicators stored in dataframe. Example uses parabolic SAR below the price as stoploss.

class AwesomeStrategy(IStrategy):

    def populate_indicators(self, dataframe: DataFrame, metadata: dict) -> DataFrame:
        # <...>
        dataframe['sar'] = ta.SAR(dataframe)

    use_custom_stoploss = True

    def custom_stoploss(self, pair: str, trade: 'Trade', current_time: datetime,
                        current_rate: float, current_profit: float, **kwargs) -> float:

        dataframe, _ = self.dp.get_analyzed_dataframe(pair, self.timeframe)
        last_candle = dataframe.iloc[-1].squeeze()

        # Use parabolic sar as absolute stoploss price
        stoploss_price = last_candle['sar']

        # Convert absolute price to percentage relative to current_rate
        if stoploss_price < current_rate:
            return (stoploss_price / current_rate) - 1

        # return maximum stoploss value, keeping current stoploss price unchanged
        return 1

See Dataframe access for more information about dataframe use in strategy callbacks.

Common helpers for stoploss calculations

Stoploss relative to open price

Stoploss values returned from custom_stoploss() always specify a percentage relative to current_rate. In order to set a stoploss relative to the open price, we need to use current_profit to calculate what percentage relative to the current_rate will give you the same result as if the percentage was specified from the open price.

The helper function stoploss_from_open() can be used to convert from an open price relative stop, to a current price relative stop which can be returned from custom_stoploss().

Stoploss percentage from absolute price

Stoploss values returned from custom_stoploss() always specify a percentage relative to current_rate. In order to set a stoploss at specified absolute price level, we need to use stop_rate to calculate what percentage relative to the current_rate will give you the same result as if the percentage was specified from the open price.

The helper function stoploss_from_absolute() can be used to convert from an absolute price, to a current price relative stop which can be returned from custom_stoploss().


Custom order price rules

By default, freqtrade use the orderbook to automatically set an order price(Relevant documentation), you also have the option to create custom order prices based on your strategy.

You can use this feature by creating a custom_entry_price() function in your strategy file to customize entry prices and custom_exit_price() for exits.

Each of these methods are called right before placing an order on the exchange.

!!! Note If your custom pricing function return None or an invalid value, price will fall back to proposed_rate, which is based on the regular pricing configuration.

Custom order entry and exit price example

from datetime import datetime, timedelta, timezone
from freqtrade.persistence import Trade

class AwesomeStrategy(IStrategy):

    # ... populate_* methods

    def custom_entry_price(self, pair: str, current_time: datetime, proposed_rate: float, 
                           entry_tag: Optional[str], side: str, **kwargs) -> float:

        dataframe, last_updated = self.dp.get_analyzed_dataframe(pair=pair,
                                                                timeframe=self.timeframe)
        new_entryprice = dataframe['bollinger_10_lowerband'].iat[-1]
        
        return new_entryprice

    def custom_exit_price(self, pair: str, trade: Trade,
                          current_time: datetime, proposed_rate: float,
                          current_profit: float, exit_tag: Optional[str], **kwargs) -> float:

        dataframe, last_updated = self.dp.get_analyzed_dataframe(pair=pair,
                                                                timeframe=self.timeframe)
        new_exitprice = dataframe['bollinger_10_upperband'].iat[-1]
        
        return new_exitprice

!!! Warning Modifying entry and exit prices will only work for limit orders. Depending on the price chosen, this can result in a lot of unfilled orders. By default the maximum allowed distance between the current price and the custom price is 2%, this value can be changed in config with the custom_price_max_distance_ratio parameter.
Example:
If the new_entryprice is 97, the proposed_rate is 100 and the custom_price_max_distance_ratio is set to 2%, The retained valid custom entry price will be 98, which is 2% below the current (proposed) rate.

!!! Warning "Backtesting" Custom prices are supported in backtesting (starting with 2021.12), and orders will fill if the price falls within the candle's low/high range. Orders that don't fill immediately are subject to regular timeout handling, which happens once per (detail) candle. custom_exit_price() is only called for sells of type exit_signal and Custom exit. All other exit-types will use regular backtesting prices.

Custom order timeout rules

Simple, time-based order-timeouts can be configured either via strategy or in the configuration in the unfilledtimeout section.

However, freqtrade also offers a custom callback for both order types, which allows you to decide based on custom criteria if an order did time out or not.

!!! Note Backtesting fills orders if their price falls within the candle's low/high range. The below callbacks will be called once per (detail) candle for orders that don't fill immediately (which use custom pricing).

Custom order timeout example

Called for every open order until that order is either filled or cancelled. check_entry_timeout() is called for trade entries, while check_exit_timeout() is called for trade exit orders.

A simple example, which applies different unfilled-timeouts depending on the price of the asset can be seen below. It applies a tight timeout for higher priced assets, while allowing more time to fill on cheap coins.

The function must return either True (cancel order) or False (keep order alive).

from datetime import datetime, timedelta
from freqtrade.persistence import Trade, Order

class AwesomeStrategy(IStrategy):

    # ... populate_* methods

    # Set unfilledtimeout to 25 hours, since the maximum timeout from below is 24 hours.
    unfilledtimeout = {
        'entry': 60 * 25,
        'exit': 60 * 25
    }

    def check_entry_timeout(self, pair: str, trade: 'Trade', order: 'Order', 
                            current_time: datetime, **kwargs) -> bool:
        if trade.open_rate > 100 and trade.open_date_utc < current_time - timedelta(minutes=5):
            return True
        elif trade.open_rate > 10 and trade.open_date_utc < current_time - timedelta(minutes=3):
            return True
        elif trade.open_rate < 1 and trade.open_date_utc < current_time - timedelta(hours=24):
           return True
        return False


    def check_exit_timeout(self, pair: str, trade: Trade, order: 'Order',
                           current_time: datetime, **kwargs) -> bool:
        if trade.open_rate > 100 and trade.open_date_utc < current_time - timedelta(minutes=5):
            return True
        elif trade.open_rate > 10 and trade.open_date_utc < current_time - timedelta(minutes=3):
            return True
        elif trade.open_rate < 1 and trade.open_date_utc < current_time - timedelta(hours=24):
           return True
        return False

!!! Note For the above example, unfilledtimeout must be set to something bigger than 24h, otherwise that type of timeout will apply first.

Custom order timeout example (using additional data)

from datetime import datetime
from freqtrade.persistence import Trade, Order

class AwesomeStrategy(IStrategy):

    # ... populate_* methods

    # Set unfilledtimeout to 25 hours, since the maximum timeout from below is 24 hours.
    unfilledtimeout = {
        'entry': 60 * 25,
        'exit': 60 * 25
    }

    def check_entry_timeout(self, pair: str, trade: 'Trade', order: 'Order',
                            current_time: datetime, **kwargs) -> bool:
        ob = self.dp.orderbook(pair, 1)
        current_price = ob['bids'][0][0]
        # Cancel buy order if price is more than 2% above the order.
        if current_price > order.price * 1.02:
            return True
        return False


    def check_exit_timeout(self, pair: str, trade: 'Trade', order: 'Order',
                           current_time: datetime, **kwargs) -> bool:
        ob = self.dp.orderbook(pair, 1)
        current_price = ob['asks'][0][0]
        # Cancel sell order if price is more than 2% below the order.
        if current_price < order.price * 0.98:
            return True
        return False

Bot order confirmation

Confirm trade entry / exits. This are the last methods that will be called before an order is placed.

Trade entry (buy order) confirmation

confirm_trade_entry() can be used to abort a trade entry at the latest second (maybe because the price is not what we expect).

class AwesomeStrategy(IStrategy):

    # ... populate_* methods

    def confirm_trade_entry(self, pair: str, order_type: str, amount: float, rate: float,
                            time_in_force: str, current_time: datetime, entry_tag: Optional[str], 
                            side: str, **kwargs) -> bool:
        """
        Called right before placing a entry order.
        Timing for this function is critical, so avoid doing heavy computations or
        network requests in this method.

        For full documentation please go to https://www.freqtrade.io/en/latest/strategy-advanced/

        When not implemented by a strategy, returns True (always confirming).

        :param pair: Pair that's about to be bought/shorted.
        :param order_type: Order type (as configured in order_types). usually limit or market.
        :param amount: Amount in target (quote) currency that's going to be traded.
        :param rate: Rate that's going to be used when using limit orders
        :param time_in_force: Time in force. Defaults to GTC (Good-til-cancelled).
        :param current_time: datetime object, containing the current datetime
        :param side: 'long' or 'short' - indicating the direction of the proposed trade
        :param **kwargs: Ensure to keep this here so updates to this won't break your strategy.
        :return bool: When True is returned, then the buy-order is placed on the exchange.
            False aborts the process
        """
        return True

Trade exit (sell order) confirmation

confirm_trade_exit() can be used to abort a trade exit (sell) at the latest second (maybe because the price is not what we expect).

from freqtrade.persistence import Trade


class AwesomeStrategy(IStrategy):

    # ... populate_* methods

    def confirm_trade_exit(self, pair: str, trade: Trade, order_type: str, amount: float,
                           rate: float, time_in_force: str, exit_reason: str,
                           current_time: datetime, **kwargs) -> bool:
        """
        Called right before placing a regular sell order.
        Timing for this function is critical, so avoid doing heavy computations or
        network requests in this method.

        For full documentation please go to https://www.freqtrade.io/en/latest/strategy-advanced/

        When not implemented by a strategy, returns True (always confirming).

        :param pair: Pair that's about to be sold.
        :param order_type: Order type (as configured in order_types). usually limit or market.
        :param amount: Amount in quote currency.
        :param rate: Rate that's going to be used when using limit orders
        :param time_in_force: Time in force. Defaults to GTC (Good-til-cancelled).
        :param exit_reason: Exit reason.
            Can be any of ['roi', 'stop_loss', 'stoploss_on_exchange', 'trailing_stop_loss',
                           'exit_signal', 'force_exit', 'emergency_exit']
        :param current_time: datetime object, containing the current datetime
        :param **kwargs: Ensure to keep this here so updates to this won't break your strategy.
        :return bool: When True is returned, then the exit-order is placed on the exchange.
            False aborts the process
        """
        if exit_reason == 'force_exit' and trade.calc_profit_ratio(rate) < 0:
            # Reject force-sells with negative profit
            # This is just a sample, please adjust to your needs
            # (this does not necessarily make sense, assuming you know when you're force-selling)
            return False
        return True

Adjust trade position

The position_adjustment_enable strategy property enables the usage of adjust_trade_position() callback in the strategy. For performance reasons, it's disabled by default and freqtrade will show a warning message on startup if enabled. adjust_trade_position() can be used to perform additional orders, for example to manage risk with DCA (Dollar Cost Averaging).

max_entry_position_adjustment property is used to limit the number of additional buys per trade (on top of the first buy) that the bot can execute. By default, the value is -1 which means the bot have no limit on number of adjustment buys.

The strategy is expected to return a stake_amount (in stake currency) between min_stake and max_stake if and when an additional buy order should be made (position is increased). If there are not enough funds in the wallet (the return value is above max_stake) then the signal will be ignored. Additional orders also result in additional fees and those orders don't count towards max_open_trades.

This callback is not called when there is an open order (either buy or sell) waiting for execution, or when you have reached the maximum amount of extra buys that you have set on max_entry_position_adjustment. adjust_trade_position() is called very frequently for the duration of a trade, so you must keep your implementation as performant as possible.

Position adjustments will always be applied in the direction of the trade, so a positive value will always increase your position, no matter if it's a long or short trade. Modifications to leverage are not possible.

!!! Note "About stake size" Using fixed stake size means it will be the amount used for the first order, just like without position adjustment. If you wish to buy additional orders with DCA, then make sure to leave enough funds in the wallet for that. Using 'unlimited' stake amount with DCA orders requires you to also implement the custom_stake_amount() callback to avoid allocating all funds to the initial order.

!!! Warning Stoploss is still calculated from the initial opening price, not averaged price.

!!! Warning "/stopbuy" While /stopbuy command stops the bot from entering new trades, the position adjustment feature will continue buying new orders on existing trades.

!!! Warning "Backtesting" During backtesting this callback is called for each candle in timeframe or timeframe_detail, so performance will be affected.

from freqtrade.persistence import Trade


class DigDeeperStrategy(IStrategy):
    
    position_adjustment_enable = True
    
    # Attempts to handle large drops with DCA. High stoploss is required.
    stoploss = -0.30
    
    # ... populate_* methods
    
    # Example specific variables
    max_entry_position_adjustment = 3
    # This number is explained a bit further down
    max_dca_multiplier = 5.5
    
    # This is called when placing the initial order (opening trade)
    def custom_stake_amount(self, pair: str, current_time: datetime, current_rate: float,
                            proposed_stake: float, min_stake: float, max_stake: float,
                            entry_tag: Optional[str], side: str, **kwargs) -> float:
        
        # We need to leave most of the funds for possible further DCA orders
        # This also applies to fixed stakes
        return proposed_stake / self.max_dca_multiplier
        
    def adjust_trade_position(self, trade: Trade, current_time: datetime,
                              current_rate: float, current_profit: float, min_stake: float,
                              max_stake: float, **kwargs):
        """
        Custom trade adjustment logic, returning the stake amount that a trade should be increased.
        This means extra buy orders with additional fees.
 
        :param trade: trade object.
        :param current_time: datetime object, containing the current datetime
        :param current_rate: Current buy rate.
        :param current_profit: Current profit (as ratio), calculated based on current_rate.
        :param min_stake: Minimal stake size allowed by exchange.
        :param max_stake: Balance available for trading.
        :param **kwargs: Ensure to keep this here so updates to this won't break your strategy.
        :return float: Stake amount to adjust your trade
        """
        
        if current_profit > -0.05:
            return None

        # Obtain pair dataframe (just to show how to access it)
        dataframe, _ = self.dp.get_analyzed_dataframe(trade.pair, self.timeframe)
        # Only buy when not actively falling price.
        last_candle = dataframe.iloc[-1].squeeze()
        previous_candle = dataframe.iloc[-2].squeeze()
        if last_candle['close'] < previous_candle['close']:
            return None

        filled_entries = trade.select_filled_orders(trade.entry_side)
        count_of_entries = trade.nr_of_successful_entries
        # Allow up to 3 additional increasingly larger buys (4 in total)
        # Initial buy is 1x
        # If that falls to -5% profit, we buy 1.25x more, average profit should increase to roughly -2.2%
        # If that falls down to -5% again, we buy 1.5x more
        # If that falls once again down to -5%, we buy 1.75x more
        # Total stake for this trade would be 1 + 1.25 + 1.5 + 1.75 = 5.5x of the initial allowed stake.
        # That is why max_dca_multiplier is 5.5
        # Hope you have a deep wallet!
        try:
            # This returns first order stake size
            stake_amount = filled_entries[0].cost
            # This then calculates current safety order size
            stake_amount = stake_amount * (1 + (count_of_entries * 0.25))
            return stake_amount
        except Exception as exception:
            return None

        return None

Leverage Callback

When trading in markets that allow leverage, this method must return the desired Leverage (Defaults to 1 -> No leverage).

Assuming a capital of 500USDT, a trade with leverage=3 would result in a position with 500 x 3 = 1500 USDT.

Values that are above max_leverage will be adjusted to max_leverage. For markets / exchanges that don't support leverage, this method is ignored.

class AwesomeStrategy(IStrategy):
    def leverage(self, pair: str, current_time: 'datetime', current_rate: float,
                 proposed_leverage: float, max_leverage: float, side: str,
                 **kwargs) -> float:
        """
        Customize leverage for each new trade.

        :param pair: Pair that's currently analyzed
        :param current_time: datetime object, containing the current datetime
        :param current_rate: Rate, calculated based on pricing settings in exit_pricing.
        :param proposed_leverage: A leverage proposed by the bot.
        :param max_leverage: Max leverage allowed on this pair
        :param side: 'long' or 'short' - indicating the direction of the proposed trade
        :return: A leverage amount, which is between 1.0 and max_leverage.
        """
        return 1.0