Brokers

Turn your FYERS order book into a trading journal you can actually learn from.

FYERS gives you trades. Arthveda gives you insights and analytics. See how you can turn your FYERS order book, equity and F&O in one file, into a journal with performance analytics, insights that tell you where and why you lose or make money, and a trade-level feedback loop in less than five minutes.

A P&L statement is what your accountant needs. A journal is what you need to get better.

  • Cash · stocks, etfs
  • Options · index, stocks, commodity
  • Futures · index, stocks, commodity

Not on FYERS? See all supported brokers.


Arthveda trade view with chart, PnL, duration, details, and journal notes

See the full trade, not just the execution.

PnL, charges, duration, chart context, executions, notes, and tags, all tied to the same FYERS trade.

If you trade on FYERS and your history lives in order book exports, this guide shows how to turn that file into a journal you can actually learn from.

You have a couple of hundred trades sitting in your FYERS account. You roughly know last quarter was green. You can't tell which setup delivered most of that PnL, which trades you held too long, or whether your "high conviction" trades actually outperformed your gut-feel ones.

The problem isn't your trading. The problem is that an order book and a journal solve completely different problems.

What FYERS actually shows you

FYERS' reports, in the Reports section on FYERS Web and in the app, are solid for what they cover:

  • Order book and trade book — your executed orders and trades across equity and F&O, exportable as a file
  • P&L statement — realized profit and loss, sorted for ITR filing
  • Holdings — current portfolio with average cost
  • Charges and contract notes — per-day trade confirmations with brokerage and taxes broken out

Useful, but notice the shape. FYERS' reports are optimised for the document your accountant needs, because that's what most retail traders explicitly ask for. The other artifact, the one that actually moves your edge, is the one most FYERS users end up building themselves in Excel, Google Sheets, Notion, or a custom spreadsheet. Usually for two months. Usually it stops.

What FYERS' reports are not built for

Pull up your last hundred closed trades in your head and try to answer these:

  1. What's my win rate over the last quarter?
  2. What's my average winner versus my average loser, in R-multiples?
  3. Are my breakout trades more profitable than my mean-reversion trades, or am I just remembering the dopamine ones?
  4. Do trades I hold overnight outperform my intraday ones after charges?
  5. Which setup is dragging my overall PnL down, even though it feels good when it works?

None of these are answerable from FYERS' reports without exporting your order book, opening Excel, writing formulas, and tagging every trade by hand. Most traders never make it to step three. Arthveda answers them in a few clicks.

How to import your FYERS trades

1

Download your report from FYERS

Log in to FYERS on the web or in the app, open Reports, and select Order Book (recommended, it carries more detail) or Trade Book. Choose your instruments and date range, then download the report as CSV or Excel. Equity and F&O come down together in the same export.

2

Create your FYERS broker account

Sign up or log in to Arthveda. Follow onboarding and select FYERS, or go to /accounts and create a FYERS broker account.

3

Click Import and upload the file

Choose Import on the FYERS broker account, upload the report file, review the parsed trades, and confirm the import. Arthveda groups your executions into trades automatically: one round trip becomes one trade with entry, scaling, exit, holding period, and after-charges PnL computed for you. Futures and options contracts are read straight from the file, with the right underlying, expiry, and strike.

4

Explore your journal

Open Trades, Dashboard, Insights, and Reports. Then pick your first ten trades, add a tag like breakout, earnings, or support-bounce, and add a one-line note on what you were actually thinking when you entered. That's the work. It compounds from here.

The whole flow is about five minutes the first time. FYERS doesn't offer trade sync yet, so when you want to add fresh trades, download a new report for the date range since your last import and upload it again. Same five clicks, no spreadsheet.

What you see after your first import

Once your FYERS trades are in, Arthveda becomes the operating system around your trading history.

  • Dashboard — know if you are actually improving. Track net PnL, gross PnL, charges, win rate, average win/loss, expectancy, profit factor, streaks, and cumulative performance over time.
  • Trades — see your complete trading history in one place. Arthveda preserves every trade separately, then lets you search, filter, sort, and inspect detailed breakdowns, so nothing gets merged away, lost, or overlooked.
  • Insights — see what is actually hurting your trading. Understand the patterns behind your wins, losses, timing, behaviour, setups, mistakes, and outcomes.
  • Reports — find what is consistently working. Break performance down by symbols, instruments, timeframes, tags, and trading patterns, with after-charges PnL and R-factor included.
  • Tagging — spot patterns you would otherwise miss. Tag trades by setup, mistake, market condition, emotion, behaviour, or any trading lens you want to measure.
  • Journal notes — understand the why behind every trade. Attach notes and chart screenshots directly to the actual trade, so your thinking stays connected to the outcome.

You do not set any of this up manually. Arthveda computes it from the trades it builds out of your report the moment you upload it.

For example, you may discover that your breakout trades have a +2.8R expectancy while reversal trades are net negative after charges. That is the kind of feedback a raw order book will never volunteer.

What to actually journal

If you want the journal to do its job, every trade needs a little human input. The number is small on purpose:

  1. Setup tag — what kind of trade was it? Keep the set small and reusable (eight to twelve tags is plenty).
  2. Entry reason — one sentence on the trigger. "50 DMA reclaim with above-average volume" is good. "Looked strong" is not.
  3. Exit reason — stop hit? target hit? time stop? fear? Be honest about the last one.
  4. R-multiple (optional, high-value) — risked ₹2,000 and made ₹6,000 is a +3R. Track it and after fifty trades you stop arguing with yourself about whether you're positive expectancy.

You can also attach chart screenshots at entry and exit and a note on what you'd do differently. After a month of consistency you'll see at least one pattern you didn't know existed.

Arthveda is more than a journal

Most trading journals stop after the trade. Arthveda connects the workflow before and after it: discovery, watchlists, symbol research, execution, journaling, review, and your public trading record.

The same stock you discovered in a screener can later appear in your watchlist, trade journal, review reports, and symbol history, all connected in one workflow.

Screeners — scan NSE and BSE stocks using price, volume, technical, and candlestick filters. Arthveda remembers the source of every idea, so if a screened stock becomes a trade, you can later see which screeners are actually leading to better results.

Watchlists and symbol pages — track the stocks you care about before and after you trade them, so your research and journal are part of the same workflow.

Public profile — build a public trading identity around your process, not just PnL. Publish selected screeners, watchlists, notes, and trade reviews so others can understand how you find ideas, track them, and learn from them over time.

Frequently asked

Arthveda imports your FYERS order book (or trade book), groups executions into trades, calculates after-charges PnL, and gives you a dashboard, trade list, journal notes, tags, insights, and reports.
Yes. Your FYERS report exports equity, futures, and options in one file, and Arthveda parses all three. Arthveda reads the segment and contract on each row, so a NIFTY option or a stock future comes in as the right instrument with the right expiry and strike. The journal itself handles everything you trade, and the one stock-only surface is the screener (NSE/BSE equities).
Either works, but the Order Book is recommended because it carries more detail. In FYERS, open Reports, pick Order Book or Trade Book, choose your instruments and date range, and download as CSV or Excel. Arthveda parses both.
File upload, for FYERS. Export your report from FYERS and import it into Arthveda. FYERS doesn't offer trade sync yet, so to add fresh trades later you export a new report for the recent date range and import it again.
Yes. Arthveda supports Zerodha, Upstox, Groww, Angel One, FYERS, Kotak Securities, and INDmoney. Import from each and the journal aggregates across all of them so you see your real performance picture.
No. Everything is private by default. You explicitly choose what to publish (screeners, watchlists, public-profile fields). Individual trades are never auto-published.
Handled natively. If you bought 100 shares of RELIANCE in three tranches and exited in two, that's one trade with five executions inside it: average cost computed, partial PnL on each exit, full PnL on close.
Brokerage, STT, GST, stamp duty, SEBI charges, and exchange transaction charges are computed from the standard FYERS rate card. The PnL Arthveda shows you is after charges, which is the only PnL that actually matters.
There is no fixed rule. A weekly or monthly export keeps your journal current. A good habit is to download your report every weekend and tag the week's trades while the reasoning is still fresh. Since FYERS has no sync, just export the new date range since your last import and upload it again.

Turn your FYERS order book into a journal you can actually learn from.