Win/Loss Ratio
What it is
The win/loss ratio compares the number of winning trades to losing trades over a chosen period. It’s a simple measure of how often a trading strategy produces winners versus losers, but it does not measure how much is won or lost per trade.
Formula and related metrics
- Win/Loss ratio = Wins ÷ Losses
- Win rate (probability of success) = Wins ÷ Total trades
Example notation: a ratio of 2.0 means two winning trades for every losing trade (2:1).
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How to interpret
- Ratio > 1.0: more winning trades than losing trades.
- Ratio = 1.0: equal numbers of wins and losses.
- Ratio < 1.0: more losing trades than winning trades.
- If losses = 0, the ratio is mathematically undefined; report as “no losses” or consider alternative summaries (e.g., win rate and average profit).
Example
If you make 30 trades with 12 winners and 18 losers:
– Win/Loss ratio = 12 ÷ 18 = 0.67
– Win rate = 12 ÷ 30 = 40%
A ratio of 0.67 indicates more losses than wins.
Why it matters — and its limits
- Use: It quickly highlights whether a strategy produces more winners than losers and can flag the need to review a strategy.
- Major limitation: It doesn’t account for trade size or dollar value per win/loss. A high win/loss ratio can still be unprofitable if losing trades are much larger than winning trades.
- Complementary metrics needed: average profit per winning trade, average loss per losing trade, and the risk/reward ratio.
Risk/Reward and how it fits
The risk/reward ratio compares potential loss to potential gain on a trade:
– Example: Buy at $5.50, stop-loss $5.00 (risk = $0.50), target $6.50 (reward = $1.00) → risk/reward = 0.50.
– Even with a low win/loss ratio, a favorable risk/reward can produce profit; conversely, a high win/loss ratio can still lose money if rewards are small relative to risks.
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Practical tips
- Always combine win/loss ratio with win rate, average win, average loss, and risk/reward ratio.
- Track these metrics over consistent timeframes and trade types (e.g., intraday vs swing) to avoid misleading comparisons.
- Use adequate sample sizes before judging a strategy—small samples can be noisy.
- Review position sizing and stop-loss discipline; controlling loss magnitude is often more important than increasing the number of wins.
Key takeaways
- The win/loss ratio shows how often you win versus lose but not how much you gain or lose.
- Interpret it together with risk/reward and average profit/loss per trade.
- A profitable strategy requires both a sensible win rate and favorable reward relative to risk; neither metric alone is sufficient.