The Most Important Rule: Deposits ≠ Profit

This is the most critical concept in the Private Accounts module. Understanding it ensures accurate tracking of your trading performance.

The Rule

Deposits and withdrawals do not represent profit or loss by themselves.

When you take money out of your trading account, that withdrawal is not automatically profit. When you put money in, that deposit is not automatically replacing losses.

Why This Matters

Many traders make this mental mistake:

"I withdrew $5,000 this month, so I made $5,000 profit!"

This might be true. But it might not be. Consider:

  • What if your account balance went down by $3,000?

  • What if you deposited $10,000 and only withdrew $5,000?

  • What if you were just moving money between accounts?

A withdrawal tells you money moved out. It doesn't tell you if you earned that money through trading.

The Correct Formula

To calculate true trading profit or loss:

Net Trading P&L = (Ending Balance − Starting Balance) − Deposits + Withdrawals

Let's break this down:

  • Ending Balance − Starting Balance = Raw change in account value

  • − Deposits = Subtract money you put in (it wasn't from trading)

  • + Withdrawals = Add back money you took out (it was in the account before)

This isolates the change in value that came purely from trading.

Examples

Example 1: Simple Profit

  • Starting balance: $10,000

  • No deposits or withdrawals

  • Ending balance: $12,000

P&L: $12,000 − $10,000 − $0 + $0 = $2,000 profit

Simple case—balance increased from trading.

Example 2: Profit with Withdrawal

  • Starting balance: $10,000

  • No deposits

  • Withdrawal: $3,000

  • Ending balance: $9,000

P&L: $9,000 − $10,000 − $0 + $3,000 = $2,000 profit

You made $2,000. You withdrew $3,000, so your balance shows $1,000 less than the start, but your trading actually added $2,000.

Example 3: Deposit Masks Loss

  • Starting balance: $10,000

  • Deposit: $5,000

  • No withdrawals

  • Ending balance: $13,000

P&L: $13,000 − $10,000 − $5,000 + $0 = $2,000 loss

Your balance went up, but you deposited $5K. If you'd made money, the balance should be above $15K. You actually lost $2,000.

Example 4: Mixed Activity

  • Starting balance: $10,000

  • Deposit: $2,000

  • Withdrawal: $4,000

  • Ending balance: $10,000

P&L: $10,000 − $10,000 − $2,000 + $4,000 = $2,000 profit

Balance is unchanged, but you deposited $2K and withdrew $4K. You made $2,000 through trading.

Common Misconceptions

"I withdrew money, so I must be profitable"

Not necessarily. You might be:

  • Taking out losses before they get worse

  • Accessing capital for another purpose

  • Moving funds to a different account

  • Withdrawing some profit mixed with some capital

"My balance went up, so I'm doing well"

Not if you deposited money. The balance increase might just reflect what you put in.

"My balance went down, so I'm losing"

Not if you withdrew money. The balance decrease might just reflect what you took out.

Why the Platform Enforces This

The platform is designed to show you the truth about your trading performance. It:

  • Never labels a withdrawal as "profit withdrawn"

  • Never assumes a deposit replaces losses

  • Always calculates P&L using the correct formula

  • Keeps deposits and withdrawals as neutral capital movements

This prevents you from deceiving yourself about how well (or poorly) your trading is going.

Correct Language Examples

The platform uses language like:

Instead of...

The platform says...

"Profit withdrawn: $5,000" ❌

"Withdrawal: $5,000" ✓

"Deposited to cover losses" ❌

"Deposit: $3,000" ✓

"Earnings this month" ❌

"Net Trading P&L: $2,000" ✓

How to Think About It

Deposits = Adding capital to the account (neutral movement) Withdrawals = Removing capital from the account (neutral movement) Net Trading P&L = The only measure of trading success

When you see your Net Trading P&L:

  • Positive = Your trading made money

  • Negative = Your trading lost money

  • Zero = Your trading broke even

Everything else is just money movement.

Summary

  1. Withdrawals are not automatically profit

  2. Deposits are not automatically replacing losses

  3. Only Net Trading P&L shows true performance

  4. The formula accounts for all capital movements

  5. Trust the P&L number, not your intuition about deposits/withdrawals

Understanding this principle is essential for accurate self-assessment as a trader.


Next: Adding a New Private Account →