Strategy Performance Section

2 min. readlast update: 05.26.2025

The Strategy Performance section in the Accounts Tab helps you evaluate how effective and efficient your trading strategy really is.

It breaks down important metrics that show how you’re winning, how much you’re risking, and how fast you bounce back from losses.

 

🔷 P/L Calendar

The Daily P/L Calendar gives you a full-month view of your daily profit and loss (P/L), displayed in a simple calendar format. It shows your daily performance, not just overall results.

Helps you spot patterns, like:

  • Which days do you trade best?
  • When do you tend to lose most?
  • How consistent are you throughout the month?

The Growth Performance tab shows your overall account growth, balance, and equity.

The Daily P/L Calendar breaks it down day by day, so you can see exactly how each trading session impacted your account.

 

🔷 Key Performance Metrics

🔷 Average RRR (Reward to Risk Ratio)

It shows the average profit you make compared to the average loss.

RRR > 1: Your average profits exceed your average losses.

RRR < 1: Your average losses are bigger than your average profits.

The higher the RRR, the better you are at managing risk.

 

🔷 MRT (Max Recovery Time)

It's the longest time it took you to recover from a drawdown (loss) back to your highest balance.

It shows how fast your strategy can bounce back from tough drawdowns.

MRT = 23 hours → You recovered from your biggest drawdown in 23 hours.

 

🔷 Return / RDD (Recovery Factor) or Recovery Factor 

It's the ratio of your net profit to your biggest drawdown.

It's a good measure of strategy efficiency.

The Higher the ratio the better the strategy.

Return/RDD = 3 → Your profit is 3 times bigger than your largest loss.

 

🔷 WL Ratio (Win vs Loss Ratio)

Tells you the ratio of your winners vs losers.

WL Ratio > 1: You win more often than you lose.

WL Ratio < 1: You lose more often than you win.

Combine this with Average RRR to see the full picture.

For example: WL > 1 and RRR < 1 means you win often, but your losses are too big.

In this case, you'd need to reduce the size of your losing trades to become more profitable.

 

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