Daily Trading Summary
The Annual, Monthly, Weekly, and Daily tabs expand on the
analysis provided in the Performance Summary section shown in the Summary tab.
The Performance Summary evaluates the strategy's performance over the entire
test period. The next step is to examine the strategy over various time periods
to ensure consistent performance. The available time periods are annual,
monthly, weekly and daily.
A Mark-to-market is performed at the end of each day,
resulting in a complete and thorough performance evaluation. This attention to
detail will cause certain evaluation tools to reflect number that differ from
the Performance Summary. The Rolling Period analysis of the
same time periods show the progression between the periods.
The fields that will differ are listed below:
Total Net Profit
This field calculates the total number of dollars made or
lost by the trading strategy during the test period.
Notes
If you are trading an investment instrument on leverage, Return
on Account is a more important field.
When viewing the TradeStation
Strategy Performance Report, this field calculates and displays a value for all
trades (long and short), long trades (buying long and exiting), and short
trades (selling short and exiting).
% Gain
The percentage by which your initial capital investment
gained in value for the period tested.
Profit Factor
The gross profit divided the gross loss, which represents
how much money was made for every dollar lost.
# Trades
The number of trades signaled in
the designated period.
Percent profitable
This field calculates the
percentage of profitable trades generated by a strategy. Percent profitable is
calculated by dividing the number of winning trades by total trades generated
by a strategy.
Percent profitable can be
misleading by itself because there are different approaches to profitability. A
strategy could have many small winning trades, in which case the percent
profitable would be high with a small average winning trade, or a few big
winning trades, which would produce a low percent profitable and a big average
winning trades.
Many successful strategies have a
percent profitability below 50% but are still profitable because their losses
are limited.
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1987, 1999 Omega Research, Inc. ** }