Quote from late apex:
qll, what exactly are you trying to do with your formula for z?
If you'd like to calculate the theoretically optimal fraction f of portfolio to risk in order to maximize expectancy, given reliability P (% wins, or probability of a win) and average win/loss ratio R, then your formula is incorrect.
The correct formula for (Kelly) optimal f is
f = ((R + 1) * P - 1) / R
In your examples, R = 1; P = 75% and 90%. Therefore, f = 50.00% and 80.00%, respectively, not ~34% and ~44%.
Yes, the optimal fraction f here is "too high". Its computation is intended strictly to maximize expectancy per trade and, thus, terminal wealth / portfolio value. It assumes a stationary distribution and a sufficiently large number of trades, among other things. It also ignores the whole notion of drawdowns on the yellow brick road to the aforementioned terminal wealth, unlike in the real world.