Risk Management
Position sizing frameworks, trailing stops, hedging, portfolio allocation, drawdown management, and capital preservation.
Overview
Risk management is the single most important factor separating consistently profitable traders from the rest. Without a systematic approach to sizing positions, setting stops, and managing drawdowns, even the best strategy will eventually fail. This section covers the quantitative and psychological sides of protecting your trading capital.
Topics Covered
Fixed-Fractional Position Sizing
Fixed-fractional position sizing risks a fixed percentage of your account on every trade (commonly 1-2%). This ensures that a string of losses reduces position sizes proportionally, protecting capital during drawdowns. It's the most widely recommended position sizing method for discretionary traders because it's simple, sustainable, and mathematically sound.
Kelly Criterion
The Kelly Criterion is a mathematical formula for determining the optimal bet size to maximise long-term growth rate. Kelly = (bp - q) / b, where b = odds received, p = probability of winning, q = probability of losing. While theoretically optimal, full Kelly is too aggressive for most traders — half-Kelly or quarter-Kelly is more practical.
Risk-Reward Ratios
The risk-reward ratio (R:R or RRR) compares the potential loss (distance to stop loss) to the potential gain (distance to target) for each trade. A 1:2 R:R means you risk $1 to potentially make $2. By maintaining favourable risk-reward ratios, a trader can be profitable even with a win rate below 50%.
Maximum Drawdown Limits
A maximum drawdown limit is a predefined loss threshold that triggers mandatory action — reducing size, stopping trading, or reviewing strategy. Common limits: daily max loss (e.g., 3%), weekly max loss (e.g., 5%), monthly max loss (e.g., 10%), and total max drawdown (e.g., 20%). Professional trading firms and prop firms enforce strict drawdown rules.
Portfolio Diversification
Portfolio diversification reduces risk by spreading capital across multiple uncorrelated or negatively correlated assets, strategies, and timeframes. True diversification requires correlation analysis — holding 10 tech stocks is not diversified. The goal is to generate returns from multiple independent sources rather than relying on a single trade or strategy.
Correlation-Aware Allocation
Correlation-aware allocation goes beyond simple diversification by mathematically measuring how assets move together and sizing positions accordingly. Two highly correlated positions (e.g., ES and NQ) effectively concentrate risk. By adjusting allocation based on measured correlations, traders build portfolios with better risk-adjusted returns.
Trailing Stop Strategies
Trailing stop strategies dynamically adjust your stop-loss level as a trade moves in your favour, locking in progressively more profit while still giving the trade room to develop. Unlike fixed stops, trailing stops adapt to market volatility and price action, allowing traders to capture the majority of a trend move without exiting prematurely on normal pullbacks.
Hedging Fundamentals
Hedging is the practice of taking offsetting positions to reduce exposure to adverse price movements in your primary holdings. Rather than closing a profitable position or accepting full downside risk, hedging allows traders to protect capital during uncertain periods while maintaining their core exposure. Effective hedging balances protection cost against the risk being mitigated.