New here, and I’m curious how everyone tracks their Kalshi performance after they’ve accumulated a few hundred trades. Do you mostly rely on Kalshi’s built-in stats, use spreadsheets, or something else?
New here, and I’m curious how everyone tracks their Kalshi performance after they’ve accumulated a few hundred trades. Do you mostly rely on Kalshi’s built-in stats, use spreadsheets, or something else?
I use pp.tools.
I use pp.tools.
What does pp.tools provide that Kalshi’s built-in stats don’t?
What does pp.tools provide that Kalshi’s built-in stats don’t?
I use https://resolvemarkets.com/trade-analysis
I use https://resolvemarkets.com/trade-analysis
Earlier today I asked this group how everyone tracks their Kalshi performance after they’ve built up a decent trading history. The responses were really helpful and gave me a better idea of what people are actually using. The reason I asked is because I’ve been building my own analytics dashboard for Kalshi called MarketPilot, and I’d love to get some feedback on it.
I’ve attached a few screenshots of the current version. Right now it includes performance statistics, win/loss analysis, streak tracking, price bucket analysis, biggest winners and losers, and several other breakdowns of trading performance. I’m still actively adding features and refining the experience.
A few questions:
1. Is this something you could see yourself using?
2. Are there any analytics, reports, or insights you wish existed that current tools don’t provide?
3. Would you be interested in participating in a small private beta once it’s ready?
One thing that makes MarketPilot a little different from the other tools I’ve seen is that it uses Kalshi’s read-only API keys instead of requiring a CSV upload every time you want updated stats. You still have to generate the key yourself and paste it into the dashboard, but it allows for much smoother syncing and opens the door to automatic updates in the future.
I’d appreciate any honest feedback, Thanks!
Earlier today I asked this group how everyone tracks their Kalshi performance after they’ve built up a decent trading history. The responses were really helpful and gave me a better idea of what people are actually using. The reason I asked is because I’ve been building my own analytics dashboard for Kalshi called MarketPilot, and I’d love to get some feedback on it.
I’ve attached a few screenshots of the current version. Right now it includes performance statistics, win/loss analysis, streak tracking, price bucket analysis, biggest winners and losers, and several other breakdowns of trading performance. I’m still actively adding features and refining the experience.
A few questions:
1. Is this something you could see yourself using?
2. Are there any analytics, reports, or insights you wish existed that current tools don’t provide?
3. Would you be interested in participating in a small private beta once it’s ready?
One thing that makes MarketPilot a little different from the other tools I’ve seen is that it uses Kalshi’s read-only API keys instead of requiring a CSV upload every time you want updated stats. You still have to generate the key yourself and paste it into the dashboard, but it allows for much smoother syncing and opens the door to automatic updates in the future.
I’d appreciate any honest feedback, Thanks!
Asking people to put in API keys is sketchy, that's why people use csvs
Asking people to put in API keys is sketchy, that's why people use csvs
Anyone reading this post should be alert in case they're scamming you
Anyone reading this post should be alert in case they're scamming you
That’s fair and I expected to get that in the feedback. The main thing is the key is read-only so it can’t do anything like place trades, move money, or make any changes to your account. I went the API route because it allows for direct syncing instead of a CSV import every time. But the concern is valid, and I plan on adding a CSV option eventually for the people that aren’t comfortable with it. But that’s one of the main reasons I made the post here. Is to see how people feel about it.
That’s fair and I expected to get that in the feedback. The main thing is the key is read-only so it can’t do anything like place trades, move money, or make any changes to your account. I went the API route because it allows for direct syncing instead of a CSV import every time. But the concern is valid, and I plan on adding a CSV option eventually for the people that aren’t comfortable with it. But that’s one of the main reasons I made the post here. Is to see how people feel about it.
Still anyone reading this who is looking to use it should be wary
Still anyone reading this who is looking to use it should be wary
The fact that you suggest this as a general tool with any kind of api access is immediately very sketchy regardless if your intentions are good or bad
The fact that you suggest this as a general tool with any kind of api access is immediately very sketchy regardless if your intentions are good or bad
And either way I have no reason to give away my orders/positions/balance etc to someone I don’t really know
And either way I have no reason to give away my orders/positions/balance etc to someone I don’t really know