Quote from heech:
Increasing leverage will not increase your Sharpe. It will double both your gains and losses.
I thought the same thing before beginning my analysis. What the results indicated to me, however, was that due to what I believe is the difference in the magnitude of compounding upon the timing of the cashflows, drawdown and return did not increase/decrease equally. For example, at current leverage (no leverage to speak of) the max drawdown is 3.870% and the average monthly return is .327%. If these amounts are doubled, they would be a drawdown of 7.739% and a return of .655%. However, when I double the daily gains and losses as they occur and make the calculations based on these values, I get a drawdown of 7.796% but the return increases to .742%. The delta in the dwawdowns is less, in comparison to the delta between returns, proving favorable (.0009 for return, .0006 for drawdown). Small, but still favorable.