📓Oro Protocol Explained
The Oro Protocol is an autonomous execution and capital-routing system defined by hardcoded rules and algorithms. It is designed to operate continuously without discretionary intervention.
Execution parameters including trade timing, margin allocation, leverage limits, and profit routing are fixed in code and enforced through onchain and programmatic controls. These parameters cannot be modified during live operation, ensuring deterministic behavior and removing human decision risk.
Capital is deployed into a predefined gold trading algorithm executed via Ostium Labs infrastructure. Positions are opened and closed on a fixed schedule using rule-based logic that governs sizing, isolated margin usage, and leverage. All trades and balances are recorded onchain and are independently verifiable.
The protocol follows a closed capital loop. Trading activity generates realized profit or loss. When profits occur, a predefined portion is routed into open-market $ORO buybacks, while remaining capital compounds within the system. Losses are absorbed directly by the trading account, without emissions or guarantees.
The trading algorithm has been backtested across multiple gold market regimes using more than a decade of historical data, with a shorter public dataset disclosed for transparency. Live execution remains fully auditable onchain.
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