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TraderSync

Most traders can tell you what they made last month. Fewer can tell you why, and that gap is usually where the real money is being left on the table. TraderSync exists to close it.

The idea is simple but the discipline is hard: log everything, then let the data argue with your assumptions. TraderSync syncs directly with over 700 brokers, tags every trade by time, sector, and mistake type, and starts surfacing patterns you'd never catch just glancing at your P&L. Finding out you lose three times more on trades placed after 2pm isn't a fun discovery. It's an actionable one.

What stands out is how far past "journal" this goes. The replay feature is the one we point people to first, watching a trade unfold again at close to real speed teaches you something a spreadsheet row never will. And Cypher, the built-in AI layer on the higher tiers, will surface a pattern you didn't know to look for, the kind of thing a coach catches and a spreadsheet never will.

This is built for traders who are already placing real volume and want to know if their edge is actually an edge, or a lucky stretch. If you're making a handful of trades a month, the honest answer is you probably don't need this yet. A notebook and some discipline will get you most of the way there. Wait until volume and complexity make manual review genuinely painful.

The drawback worth naming: TraderSync will not fix poor discipline. It will just show you the receipts, in detail, over and over, until you either change something or get tired of seeing the same mistake tagged every week. That part is still on you.

The natural comparison is a plain spreadsheet, and for very light trading, that's a completely reasonable choice. What you give up is the automatic broker sync and the pattern detection that catches things you wouldn't think to search for yourself. Once you're trading enough that manually updating a spreadsheet feels like a chore, that's usually the sign TraderSync earns its keep.

A common mistake: journaling hard for two weeks after a rough stretch, then quietly stopping once results improve. The data only means something if you keep logging through the boring, profitable weeks too, not just the painful ones.

Don't buy it to feel serious about trading. Buy it once you already are, and you're ready to look at what the data says, even when it's uncomfortable.

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Do I need TraderSync if I already use a spreadsheet?

Only if the spreadsheet is starting to feel like a burden rather than a habit.

What makes it different from a basic journal?

The automated broker sync and the pattern detection are the real differentiators, not the journaling itself.