tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6579146808262144709.post3370392692764687052..comments2023-09-09T08:10:21.317-04:00Comments on Grove Trades: Glossary: Tradervue tagsGrove Underhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11996363914551744557noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6579146808262144709.post-64506865590379541392011-09-28T19:00:54.228-04:002011-09-28T19:00:54.228-04:00Hi NereusProject:
Great question, and right now fo...Hi NereusProject:<br />Great question, and right now for me, it's a manual process so it takes a while to calculate...which means I don't usually calculate it.<br /><br />TradeStation calculates those P&L values for every open trade, but as soon as the trade is closed, the info is gone forever. <br /><br />They do have something in their reports that works halfway decent for daily/position trades so that you can see how effective you were at capturing profits, but the data is not valid for daytrades. Too bad they just don't capture the proper info for daytrades.<br /><br />...which gives me an idea, maybe I'll just have to manually write these P&L values down and update it later in my journal. You're right, it's valuable info to know. Thanks for the feedback!Grove Underhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11996363914551744557noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6579146808262144709.post-83479039963776969832011-09-28T17:26:45.408-04:002011-09-28T17:26:45.408-04:00"One question I would like to ask, but am not..."One question I would like to ask, but am not currently able to answer, is the maximum amount of actual profit (and loss) did I have at one time during a trade, vs. how much did I actually close." --- this is the most critical element of trade review imo. I fill this information gap in my trade blotter. Its in development now. -NereusProjectAnonymousnoreply@blogger.com