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How to Analyze Your Trading Performance Scientifically

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By Skeptic – Founder of Skeptic Lab
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Most traders know how to analyze charts — but few know how to analyze themselves.
A professional trader doesn’t just look at last month’s profit or loss; they examine consistency, volatility, and long-term stability.

Earlier today, as part of my usual routine, I was reviewing my trading performance and reflecting on my recent results. That’s when I decided to share my analysis process with you :) — a framework built from personal study and research that might help others turn raw data into real improvement.

In this tutorial , we’ll walk through a data-driven framework to evaluate your trading performance like a portfolio manager — using metrics such as cumulative return, volatility, Sharpe ratio, and trend analysis.

1. Data Collection: Turning Trades into Monthly Returns

Instead of focusing on single trades, record your monthly returns in percentage terms.
It can look as simple as this:
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This structure helps you see the bigger behavioral pattern behind your system — not just isolated results.

“If you can’t describe what you’re doing as a process, you don’t know what you’re doing.” – W. Edwards Deming


2. Cumulative Return: The Power of Compounding

Your total return isn’t the average of each month — it’s compounded over time:
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This shows whether your trading system has truly grown across time, not just fluctuated.
A positive total means your system is resilient; a negative one signals structural issues.

3. Key Statistical Metrics

Once your data is ready, calculate the following metrics — the backbone of every professional performance review:
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4. Coefficient of Variation (CV) – Stability Indicator
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A CV below 1 implies your returns are stable and predictable.
Above 1.5 suggests your system’s risk-to-reward profile is unstable — and may need adjustment.

5. Sharpe-like Ratio – Measuring Efficiency
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Assuming a zero risk-free rate, the Sharpe ratio measures how much return you generate per unit of volatility:
  • Sharpe > 0.5 → healthy performance
  • Sharpe > 1 → professional-level consistency
  • Sharpe < 0.3 → the system needs review

“It’s not about being right, it’s about being consistent.” – Mark Douglas


6. Trend Analysis – Detecting Growth or Decay

Run a simple linear regression between time (month number) and return.
  • Positive slope: system improving
  • Negative slope: decline in edge or discipline
  • Positive slope with high variance: profitable but unstable behavior

Combining this with the Sharpe ratio gives a complete health check of your strategy.

📝Summary Table
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Data without action is noise.
Use these insights to correct weaknesses and scale strengths:

Identified Issue: High volatility
→ Practical Fix: Reduce position size in range-bound markets

Identified Issue: Consecutive drawdowns
→ Practical Fix: Add trailing stops or break-even adjustments

Identified Issue: Low average return
→ Practical Fix: Reassess position sizing or strategy fit

Identified Issue: Overconfidence after wins
→ Practical Fix: Apply daily or weekly risk caps

🧩 Final Thoughts

Analyzing your performance is not just about profits — it’s about understanding your patterns.
By measuring Sharpe, CV, and trend, you can answer three crucial questions:
  • Is my growth consistent or random?
  • Is my risk proportional to my return?
  • Can I replicate this performance?

If the answer is yes, you’re not just improving your system —
you’re evolving as a trader :)

🩵If you found this tutorial helpful, give it a boost and share it with your fellow traders. Let’s grow together, not alone!

Happy trading, and see you in the next tutorial ! 💪🔥

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