Every closed trade, turned into the numbers that actually tell you whether you have an edge — win rate, expectancy, profit factor, streaks, drawdown, an equity curve and per-coin and long/short breakdowns. Auto-synced from your Paper Trade history, private to your browser.
This journal builds itself automatically from the free Paper Trade terminal. Open a few positions, close them on a take-profit or stop, and your full performance analytics appear here — no signup, stored privately in your browser.
Most traders never find out whether they actually have an edge — they remember the big wins, forget the slow bleed of small losses, and trade on a feeling. A trading journal removes the guesswork. By recording every position and turning it into hard numbers, it answers the only question that matters: over many trades, does your approach make money or lose it?
The metrics here are the ones professionals watch. Expectancy tells you the average outcome of taking your setup once. Profit factor shows how many dollars you keep for every dollar you lose. Win streaks, loss streaks and drawdown reveal how much pain the strategy puts you through to get there. Seen together — across coins, directions and time — they expose exactly where your edge is and where it leaks.
A trading journal is a record of every trade you take, turned into performance metrics. Instead of guessing whether you are profitable, it shows your win rate, average win and loss, profit factor, expectancy per trade, streaks and drawdown — so you can see objectively whether your strategy has a real edge and where it leaks money.
It reads the trades you make in the free Paper Trade terminal, which are stored locally in your browser. Nothing is uploaded — your trade history is private to you. Every time you close a position, this page recomputes your stats automatically from that local history.
Expectancy per trade and profit factor matter most. Expectancy is your average profit or loss per trade — if it is positive, the strategy makes money over many trades. Profit factor (gross wins divided by gross losses) above 1 means you keep more than you lose. Win rate alone is misleading: a 40% win rate can be highly profitable if your wins are much larger than your losses.