As we can winning ones for that matter - but would like to focus on the losing in particular
We hear it all the time - what did you learn from your losing trade(s) today
Well..., what exactly can one learn from their losing trades
imo - there is much we can - but would like to open this it up to Y'all before I interject
Thx
RN
If I understand you correctly, then you want do categorize your trades into winning vs losing. I think the challenge with the above categorization is that trading is not just about skill, but rather a
combination of skill plus luck, and I think the luck factor needs to be removed if you want to learn from your trades.
As you know, you can take a perfect setup and execute perfectly, yet it takes only one trader with more money than you to change the outcome of that trade (the luck factor). You can also take a FOMO trade, screw up everything you can, yet the trade ends up a winner (the luck factor).
Therefore, I’d suggest that you also classify trades into ‘mistake free trades’ (following your rules) vs ‘trades with mistakes’ (not following your rules).
Then you can start tracking how many ‘Risk-multiples’ are your mistakes costing you, and also tracking (in %) how you’re efficient in in terms of mistake-free trading.
Let’s say your technical edge makes you 10 Risk-Multiples per month, but if you make some mistakes during the month, then instead of 10R, you might end up with only 6R. If you'll focus on improving trading efficiency (which has nothing to do with reading charts) and focusing on trading mistake-free (following your rules), then the increase in returns can be phenomenal.
If you want to improve your TA edge, then I think you should manually scroll through historical charts and capture each of your set-ups and paste it into your set-ups library and annotate each chart with before/after comments (including market conditions). That way you’ll be far more objective than doing it with live trading.
Nevertheless, I want to make it clear that journaling your live trade with all kinds of metrics is very beneficial, regardless of whatever approach you're using, it comes down to individual preferences.
