blog · ~6 min read

Identifying Personal Trading Strengths and Weaknesses

Identifying your personal trading strengths and weaknesses through journal data — not self-image — is the foundation of building an edge you can sustain.

T By tradernewbie · Curated for beginners
#trading-plan#journal
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Identifying Personal Trading Strengths and Weaknesses

Ask a trader their strengths and they'll list what they wish were true. Ask their journal, and it will tell you the truth. Identifying your real strengths and weaknesses — through data, not self-image — is the foundation of a sustainable edge.

Why self-assessment fails

The brain protects the ego. Most traders believe they're great at trend-following and bad at patience — until the data shows their trend trades bleed and their range trades carry the account. Without journal data, your self-assessment is mostly fantasy.

The data-driven approach

Pull your last 50-100 trades and slice the data along several axes. By setup type: which named setup has the highest expectancy? Which has the worst? Your edge concentrates in one or two setups. Trade those more, retire the weak ones. By market and timeframe: are you profitable in EUR/USD but losing in gold? Better in the London session than New York? By market regime: some traders kill it in trending markets and bleed in ranges. Split trades by regime (trend vs. range vs. high-volatility). By direction: many traders are asymmetrical — great at longs, terrible at shorts. By emotional state: what's your win rate at state 1-3 vs. 7-10? Most traders find their edge collapses above 6.

The strengths audit

Once you've sliced the data, list your genuine strengths — the cells where expectancy is clearly positive: "My pullback-to-EMA setup in EUR/USD during London, when calm, has 1.8R expectancy over 40 trades." That's a real strength. Build around it. Trade it more. Protect the conditions that produce it.

The weaknesses audit

List the cells where expectancy is clearly negative: "My breakout trades in ranging markets lose money 70% of the time," or "My shorts when emotional state > 6 have negative expectancy." Now you have three options: stop trading them entirely (simplest, often best), add filters to improve them (e.g., "no breakout trades unless ATR is rising"), or reduce size when you do trade them.

The improvement path

Once you know your strengths and weaknesses: double down on your top 1-2 setups, eliminate your bottom 1-2 setups, build rules to protect against your weaknesses (e.g., "no trading when emotional state > 7"), and re-audit every quarter — edges evolve, and so do you.

The bottom line

Your trading strengths and weaknesses live in your journal data, not your self-image. Slice your trades by setup, market, regime, direction, and emotional state. Build around your genuine edge, eliminate your bleeding setups, and protect against your recurring weaknesses. Most traders never do this audit — and most traders never improve.

Related market data, powered by TradingView.

Educational content · Not financial advice · Trade at your own risk