Understanding Risk Management

Learn essential risk management concepts: position sizing, stop losses, take profits, risk-reward ratios, and maximum drawdown protection.

knowledge.readTimeUpdated 2026-04-09

Risk management turns random trades into a survivable process. Before you follow any signal, decide how much of your account you can lose on one idea and stick to it. Stops and position size matter more than picking the perfect provider. The concepts below show how to size trades, set exits, and cap drawdowns so one bad week does not wipe out months of progress.

The five core risk management concepts for signal traders are: (1) Position sizing — never risk more than 1-2% of account per trade, calculated as (Account × Risk%) ÷ (Entry − Stop Loss); (2) Stop loss orders — always set before entering, placed at logical support/resistance levels, never widened; (3) Take profit levels — set realistic targets, scale out at multiple levels, use at least 1:2 risk-reward; (4) Risk-reward ratios — 1:1 needs >50% win rate, 1:2 needs >34%, 1:3 needs >25%; (5) Maximum drawdown — set account-wide stop limits (10% conservative, 20% moderate, 30% aggressive). Never trade with money you cannot afford to lose.

Important Warning

Trading involves significant risk of loss. Never trade with money you cannot afford to lose.

  • Position Sizing

    Determine how much of your capital to risk on each trade.

    Do not risk more than one to two percent of your account on one trade. That is a common rule for new traders.

    Formula

    Position Size = (Account Balance × Risk %) ÷ (Entry Price - Stop Loss)

    With $10,000 account, 1% risk ($100), and a 50-pip stop loss worth $10/pip, your position size would be 1 lot.

    Use the free position size calculator
  • Stop Loss Orders

    Automatically exit losing trades at a predetermined level.

    A stop loss closes the trade if price moves against you. It limits how much you can lose on that trade.

    Best Practices

    • Always set a stop loss before entering a trade
    • Place stops at logical levels (support/resistance)
    • Never move your stop loss further away from entry
    • Consider using trailing stops to lock in profits
  • Take Profit Levels

    Set targets to capture profits before the market reverses.

    Take profit closes the trade at your target gain. Many traders aim to gain at least twice what they risk.

    Best Practices

    • Set realistic profit targets based on market conditions
    • Consider scaling out of positions at multiple levels
    • Use technical analysis to identify resistance/support for targets
  • Risk-Reward Ratio

    Compare potential profit to potential loss on each trade.

    Risk reward compares what you might lose to what you might gain. One to two means you risk one dollar to seek two.

    1:1

    Requires >50% win rate

    1:2

    Profitable with >34% win rate

    1:3

    Profitable with >25% win rate

    Use the risk-reward calculator
  • Maximum Drawdown

    Set limits on total account losses to preserve capital.

    Max drawdown is the biggest drop from a peak in your account. Set a limit so you pause before deep losses.

    10%

    Conservative

    20%

    Moderate

    30%

    Aggressive


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