Discovery without follow-up teaches nothing
Most scanner users never find out whether the setups they flagged actually worked. Saved-contract tracking keeps the original row and its context so the review is against what you actually saw, not memory.
ConvexRadar closes the loop between finding a contract and learning from it: star any scanner row to save it, watch its follow-through over time, and record the outcome in a P/L journal that lives beside the scanner.
Most scanner users never find out whether the setups they flagged actually worked. Saved-contract tracking keeps the original row and its context so the review is against what you actually saw, not memory.
The P/L journal attaches outcomes to the same workflow that produced the idea, which makes patterns — overpaying on IV, chasing late entries, exiting early — visible over time.
Tracking a contract is not a recommendation to hold or trade it. The tracker exists so traders can audit their own decision quality with real records.
The exact contract — ticker, call or put, strike, and expiration — plus the scanner context it was saved with, so later review compares like for like.
Yes. The P/L journal records entries, sizes, and outcomes beside the saved contracts, so discovery and results stay connected.
Yes. Any US-listed contract reachable through the chain lookup can be saved and tracked, whether or not the scanner surfaced it first.
Trading options involves risk. ConvexRadar is research software and does not provide financial advice or guarantee trade outcomes.