Quote from HurricaneUS:
what do you mean..."why is it flatlining?"
the flat line is the law of large numbers kicking in...google it
Using random entries, the flat line would be flat at 50% ... and as the stop/target size increase, I do expect any directional signal to end-up reverting to "random", ie. 50%.
It took me a while yesterday to start doing proper measurement, because when I removed the exit signals, I was left with Long & Short trades opening simultaneously (a Long opening while a Short is still open, etc.), and at that point stupid Ninja pairs the first Buy after a SellShort in the trade log and that messes all up. I had to run Longs & Shorts on separate instruments (prior expiry for one of them) and calculate all entry/exit prices in the correct TF before I could get to usesul stats.
My understanding of those stats I initially shared, as the target/stop distance increase, there is more and more trades taken out on the exit signals, less and less on the target/stop, and that flat line at 56.5% is the system win% w/o any target/stop.
After clearing the mess with Ninja handling of concurrent Long / Short trades, I could analyze things better - using the trade log & detailed exit names.
My analysis: the signals I use for entry & exit have a lot of noise. As can be seen in the Stop/Target columns, increasing the size of the stop/target does improve the win% very significantly - but on a much decreasing fraction of the total trades. The other trades are taken out by the exit signals, and apparently those exit signals have a better win% when they happen "close" to the entry signal, before the trade reach either stop or target.