Derek27 wrote: ↑Wed Oct 21, 2020 3:39 am
There are different ways of calculating P/L ratios and strike rates. I've honestly never understood what's relevant about strike rates. You can win 99% of the time and lose it all and more the other 1%!
I calculate my P/L ratio by profits / (profits + losses), so it's on a 0-100% scale where 50% is break-even. I calculate it on a meeting by meeting basis because that's all that's relevant. I want to know what areas work best for me. It's all relative to a particular trader. One trader might make millions with a P/L ratio of 52% whereas another could make 80% but struggle to get his bets match, due do different trading styles and markets.
agree of course strike rate is useless without average win/loss
depending on strategy or if your a beginner letting losing trades run etc you might have a good strike rate but overall loss
i dont get why dont you just divide your wins by your losses instead of your wins+losses that way you get a percentage of how much bigger your wins are compared to your losses
say you won 1000 and lost 800 in a time period youd have a ratio of 1.25 or in percentage won 25% more than you lost
by your calculation youd get 55.5% but why would you want a percentage compared to your turnover rather than your losses
generally if you have a long term ratio of 2 or 3 to 1 you should think about increasing your stakes and adding more marginal trades your not maximising your profits
have to be careful though if your having many trades in one market your edge can be much less than youd think say you were trading in and out every service game or every changeover in tennis or trading many runners at the same time your prof loss ratio for each trade will be a lot worse.
you average 20 trades in a tennis match or horse racing market you could have a ratio of 40% even though per trade its just a couple percent