Levrix End-of-Day Review: Analyzing Your TradesBitcoin / U.S. dollarBITSTAMP:BTCUSDCryptoPublishmentOfficialMost traders focus entirely on execution: entries, exits, position sizing. But the traders who consistently improve are the ones who close the session and ask a simple question: what actually happened today, and why? An end-of-day review isn't about beating yourself up over losses or celebrating wins. It's a structured habit that turns raw trading activity into usable data about your own behavior and decision-making. On Levrix, this process is built into the natural rhythm of the platform: the tools are there, you just need a framework to use them. 1. Pull Your Trade History for the Session Before you analyze anything, get the full picture. Open your closed positions log for the day and record the basics for each trade. You need the asset traded, the entry and exit price, position size, time in trade, and the result in both points and percentage. Don't skip the losers, don't round up the winners. You need raw numbers. On Levrix, the order history panel gives you a clean chronological view of every execution. Export or note the key figures before you do anything else. 2. Go Back to the Chart This is where most traders skip a step: they look at P&L and stop there. Instead, go back to each trade on the chart and mark exactly where you entered and where you exited. Ask yourself whether the entry was at the level you planned or whether you chased. Consider whether you exited at your target or moved it mid-trade, where your stop was and whether you respected it, and what the risk/reward looked like at the moment of entry, not in hindsight. On TradingView, you can use the Long Position and Short Position drawing tools to visually map each trade on the chart. This is one of the most underrated review techniques, seeing your trades plotted on price action tells you more than a spreadsheet ever will. 3. Categorize Each Trade Not all trades are equal. After mapping them on the chart, put each one into a category based on what it actually was. An A-setup is one where everything aligned, you followed your plan, the entry was clean, and you managed the trade correctly. This is the benchmark. A B-setup means conditions were roughly right but something was off, perhaps the entry was slightly late or the context wasn't fully confirmed, but it still falls within your system. A revenge trade is one taken after a loss without a valid setup, if you see one of these in your log, mark it clearly. A boredom trade is entered because the market was moving, not because there was a real reason to be in. A FOMO trade is entered after a move was already well underway. Categorizing removes emotion from the review. You stop asking "why did I lose?" and start asking "what type of mistake was this?" 4. Measure Execution Quality Separately from Outcome This is a critical distinction that separates developing traders from experienced ones: a trade can be well-executed and still lose, and a trade can be poorly executed and still win. If you only judge trades by outcome, you'll reinforce bad habits that happened to work and abandon good processes that temporarily didn't. For each trade, score execution on its own. Ask whether you followed your entry criteria, whether you sized the position according to your risk rules, whether you managed the trade without interference, and whether you exited according to the plan. If the answer to all four is yes, that was a good trade regardless of the result. On Levrix, tools like trailing stops and predefined order brackets help enforce execution discipline in real time, making the post-session review less about damage control and more about refinement. 5. Identify the One Thing After going through all your trades, identify a single takeaway for the session. Not five things. One. It might be that you entered two trades before the level was confirmed and need to wait for the close next time. Or that your winners averaged 1.2R while your losers averaged 2.1R, which means you're cutting winners too early. Or that you took three trades in the first 15 minutes of the session despite having a low win rate in that window. One specific, actionable observation. Write it down. Review it before your next session opens. Building the Habit Over Time A single end-of-day review gives you a snapshot. Thirty of them give you a pattern. Ninety of them give you a genuine statistical edge: not from the market, but from understanding your own tendencies. Over time you'll start to see which setups perform best for you, which sessions drain your account, which emotional states lead to overtrading, and where your actual edge is versus where you think it is. Levrix provides the execution environment. TradingView provides the visual replay. Your journal provides the continuity. Together, these three form a review loop that compounds — not just your capital, but your judgment. --- *The market gives you raw experience. The end-of-day review turns it into knowledge.*