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What is a Good Win Ratio?

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by , 08-07-2014 at 04:07 AM (1593 Views)
      
   
As I’ve traveled and given FX strategy presentations around the world, one question that frequently comes up from the audience is an inquiry about the strategy’s win and loss ratio. In essence, the listener is attempting to judge the quality of the strategy by its win ratio.
(The win ratio is simply the number of winning trades divided by the total number of trades. For example, a trader who won on 15 of 20 trades would have a 75% win ratio.)



When confronted with the question about a strategy’s win ratio, I’ll provide the audience of my opinion and then follow up with another question.

“Do you think that a 45% win ratio is a good win percentage?”

I can tell by the gazed looks of most attendees that they are not sure how to respond.

On the one hand, if the win percentage is not good enough, why would the DailyFX EDU team teach the strategy?

IF that previous statement was true, then where is the line drawn between a good strategy’s win ratio and the poor strategy’s win ratio?
I then follow up with another question, “I have a strategy that wins on 90% of its trades. Are you interested in seeing the strategy’s buy and sell rules?” Inevitably, I will get several interested parties who raise their hand.

I’ve seen too many traders drawn to higher win ratios thinking they are better strategies when in fact the ratio is not giving insight about the strategy profitability. The point here is that judging a strategy solely based on its win ratio is like judging a book solely based on its cover. You don’t get the whole story and a win ratio in isolation could be misleading.

How can a strategy that wins on 90% of its trades be a losing strategy?

How can a strategy that wins on 45% of its trades be a winning strategy?

The answer lies in analyzing the strategy’s win ratio alongside the risk-to-reward ratio. The result of the analysis provides us with an expectancy of the strategy.

For example, the reason the 90% win ratio loses money is because it wins a lot of small trades, and then loses big.

You can do the math yourself to see if a strategy is expected to produce positive results over time. Simply take the average number of winning trades multiplied by the average size of the winner in pips. Then, subtract the average number of losing trades multiplied by the average size of loser in pips. The result is your expectancy.

Let’s compare two hypothetical examples of Strategy ‘A’ that wins 90% of the time and strategy ‘B’ that wins only 45% of the time.
Forex Education: Strategy ‘A’ wins 90% of Trades



Notice how even though strategy won on 90% of the trades, it still lost over the long haul as the 10 losers lost more ground than the 90 winners made.

Now, let’s look at Strategy ‘B’.

Forex Education: Strategy ‘B’ wins 45% of Trades



On the other hand, this strategy with a 45% win ratio and 1-to-2 risk-to-reward ratio has a positive expectancy. Over the long run, this type of strategy is expected to show net profits. (A 1-to-2 risk-to-reward ratio means that for every pip of risk, there are at least 2 pips of potential reward.)

In the first example above (Strategy A), clearly the trader is risking a lot while profiting a small amount. Although they might feel good about being on the winning side of the trade frequently, they are blind-sided when the strategy is negative after a basket of 20 or 50 trades.

Many traders fall into this camp because they get emotionally tied to a trade and take profits too quickly or hang onto losing trades too long. There are many reasons for getting emotionally attached from lacking confidence in their trading knowledge or perhaps over leveraging their account. Regardless of the reason, the outcome has a negative bias associated with taking profits too quickly while exposing your account to relatively larger losses.

On the other hand, Strategy B wins on fewer trades, but the trader is confident in their approach in that their edge is the risk management on the trade. They are not as concerned about winning on each trade and are more concerned about progress being made over a basket of trades.
Whether you are analyzing your own trading performance or the performance for choosing a Forex automated strategy, take a minute and run through the calculations above to see if the strategy yields a positive expectancy.

---Written by Jeremy Wagner, Head Trading Instructor, DailyFX Education

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